Yokahu Lodge


Yokahu Lodge 506 is the Order of the Arrow Lodge of the Puerto Rico Council of the Boy Scouts of America. Yokahu Lodge is part of Section NE-5 of the Northeast Region of the Order of the Arrow. The Lodge's totem is the Three-Point Taíno Cemí.

History

In 1953, the very first delegation of Scouts from the Puerto Rico Council attended the National Scout Jamboree at Irving Ranch, California. Among the activities, the delegation witnessed an Order of the Arrow ceremony that caught the attention of some adults among the delegation. Having the ceremony concluded, the adults approached the OA members and asked them about the ceremony and its meanings. Upon the delegation's return to Puerto Rico, the idea of the Order of the Arrow was taken to the Puerto Rico Council.
With the necessary requirements in hand provided by the OA National Office, the council commended the founding of the Order of the Arrow in Puerto Rico to its executive Luis Matías Ferrer in 1954. Having no knowledge of the organization, he sought the help of Dr. Frank H. Wadsworth, who at the time was the only OA member in Puerto Rico. The first Ordeal ceremony took place on April 10–15, 1954 at Guajataka Scout Reservation with Dr. Wadsworth acting as the first Ordealmaster. Because of this role in the first Ordeal ceremony, Wadsworth has been wrongfully recognized as the Yokahu Lodge's main, or sometimes only, founder throughout its history with not enough credit given to Luis Matías Ferrer.
After the establishment of the Order of the Arrow in Puerto Rico, the Lodge was named Yukiyú later renamed to Yokahu, a variant of the name proposed by archaeologist, anthropologist and historian, Dr. Ricardo Alegría. In the beginning, the Lodge translated the ceremony scripts from English to Spanish and used Native American regalia, but decided later to slightly modify the ceremonies by assimilating the Taíno heritage with the Lenni Lennape culture, incorporating Taíno-based regalia and adapting the scripts to the Taíno culture. Yokahu Lodge is the only Order of the Arrow Lodge that uses Spanish as its main language.

Headquarters

The Lodge's office headquarters, where sectional and national business are managed, are within the Puerto Rico Council while field headquarters are at Guajataka Scout Reservation, considered as the official home of Yokahu Lodge. Most of the Lodge activities are celebrated in the camp and for years the Order has given service to the facilities. The OA has its own campsite, called "The Cabin", which occupancy has been discontinued due to structural damages, but still remains standing. In the past, the Paquito Joglar campsite area was considered the official gathering place for the Lodge, later becoming a campers area due to the need of space for the many Scouts that attended camp.

Chapters

Initially divided into eight chapters, the Lodge is now divided into six chapters, as of 2018, that are organized based on the geographical regions on the island, like the Council's districts. Each Chapter's named is based on the Taíno name of each chapter's base area, which in turn, are named after Caciques who ruled in each area. The chapters and the cities belonging to each one are:

Executive

Every new Executive Board of Yokahu Lodge assumes office after the annual Convention, early December, and just before the end of the year. Any youth Arrowmen, not turning 21 during the upcoming year, of any level is eligible to run for a position in the Executive Board, which is composed of:
Committee chairmen are appointed by an Executive Board member in charge of its supervision. The operational committees are:

Activities

Main

There are four main activities in the Lodge's calendar. The Retorno is celebrated on a weekend between March and April; its purpose is to reunite the Lodge's Arrowmen to lay out and distribute the year's activities and the chapters in charge of running each one, it also serves as a chance to meet the new Lodge Executive Board for the year. Halfway through the year, the Lodge celebrates its high adventure activity between August and September, in order to challenge each Arrowmen's outdoor skills. In October, the Lodge celebrates its Guateke, a fellowship event in which chapters participate in various competitions such as ceremony, regalia, dialogue, sports, triathlon and trivia; the highlight of the Guateke is the youth nominations for the positions of the Lodge Executive Board during the Fall Assembly. Finally in December, the annual Convention serves as the conclusion of the Lodge's year, similar to a "Court of Honor", in which different recognitions and awards are handed out based on service during the year and the youth elections for the Executive Board are held.
Other activities include the start-of-the-year Lodge Leadership Seminar followed by the First Executive Meeting, both taking place the same day early January, the Second Executive Meeting between March and April, the third and final Executive Meeting between late August and early September and a service project.

Inductions

Inductions are celebrated four times a year, usually once a month from May to August. The induction weekends are called Ordeal/Bros, which began in 1993, since both Ordeal and Brotherhood ceremonies take place at the same time. The Vigil Honor is celebrated as an independent activity from Saturday evening to midday Sunday on the weekend of Thanksgiving, strictly open to Vigil Honor members and candidates.

2008 Section Conclave

The 2008 NE-2A Section Conclave took place at Guajataka Scout Reservation, marking the first time that the Yokahu Lodge hosted such event and the first to be held outside the United States. The event had a record attendance of 500 Arrowmen including the National Chief and Vice-Chief, Northeast Region Chief and many Section Chiefs. In this Conclave, the Section changed from NE-2A to NE-5A with the Section losing and acquiring other Lodges. At his event, a Yokahu Arrowman became the second Puerto Rican to become a Section officer, winning his candidacy for Section Vice-Chief.

2016 Section Conclave

Yokahu hosted the NE-5A Section Conclave on August 2016 at Guajataka Scout Reservation for the second time in its Lodge history. More than 350 people from New Jersey and Puerto Rico attended the event, including the Order of the Arrow's National Chief, Northeast Region Chief and NE-5B Section Chief. In this Conclave, the outgoing Section Chief from Yokahu Lodge, who became the third Puerto Rican to become a Section officer, passed on his position to another fellow Yokahu Arrowman elected as Section Chief of NE-5A and, subsequently, NE-5 Section Co-Chief. He became the fourth Puerto Rican to become a Section officer, the second to become Section Chief and the first back-to-back for the same position for a Yokahu Arrowman. This Conclave marked the final one as Section NE-5A before its merger with NE-5B to form one NE-5, acquiring an additional six Lodges to the five that NE-5A already had.

National Leadership Seminar

In 2002, Yokahu Lodge hosted the Order's National Leadership Seminar for the first time which included visits from the National Chief and Northeast Region Chief. Yokahu again hosted the NLS for their membership's attendance in October 2014 and included visits from the Northeast Region Chief and the National Vice-Chief.

Awards

The Lodge has its own recognitions for distinguished service to the Lodge. The Cemí de Bronce is awarded to youth and the Premio del Alegre Servicio or the Three W's for short, which consists of three pins with the letter W on each one, is awarded by adults. Like the Vigil Honor, these awards cannot be earned by a set of requirements, but instead are awarded on a specific number of requirements set by a recognitions committee composed of youth Arrowmen. These awards have their own quota and are given during the Convention.
Yokahu Lodge co-founder Dr. Frank H. Wadsworth is the Lodge's only recipient of the Distinguished Service Award, which was awarded in 1965 in recognition of his service to the Order of the Arrow. The Lodge was recipient of the Journey To Excellence Gold Award for the first time in 2013.

Media

Yokahu Lodge publishes a newsletter called El Cemí, named after its totem, four times each year on March, September, October and December. On January 2012, the Lodge launched their Facebook page and Twitter accounts, integrating the era of social media to their communications, establishing a more efficient interaction with their Arrowmen. On January 2013, they integrated Instagram to their social media and, later, Snapchat in August 2015. The publication, social platforms and email are all managed by the Chairman of the Communications Committee.