|
Ceremonies and Dance
Tribal Ceremonies. In addition to the above
ceremonial practices, there are a number of procedures deserving special
mention. Most tribes had a series of ceremonies for calling the buffalo and
inducing them to enter the pound or to permit themselves to be easily taken by
the hunters. These have not been satisfactorily investigated but seem to have
varied a great deal probably because this function was usually delegated to a
few tribal shamans each of whom exercised his own special formulae. The Crow,
the Blackfoot, and perhaps a few other tribes had elaborate tobacco planting
ceremonies. The Pawnee formerly sacrificed a captured maiden in a ceremony to
the Morningstar, the procedure showing close parallels to Aztec practices, and
some of the maize-growing tribes in this area are credited with a "green corn"
or harvest dance, a characteristic of the tribes east of the Mississippi. The
Pawnee also maintained some curious ceremonies in which shamans performed
remarkable tricks and demonstrated their magical powers. Turning from these
rather exceptional practices, we find certain highly typical ceremonies.
The Sun Dance. One of the most important tribal
ceremonies is the so-called sun dance. The name as used in literature is
probably derived from the Dakota w r ho speak of one phase of the ceremony as
sun-gaze-dancing: i. e., the worshipper gazes steadily at the sun while dancing.
To a less extent, this is one of the objective features of the ceremony wherever
performed and is occasionally associated with a torture feature in which skewers
are thrust through the skin of the breast and back and the devotee suspended or
required to dance until the skin gives away, all the time supplicating the sun
for divine guidance.

Fig. 41. Arapaho Sun Dance. Model in the
Museum
Another feature is that in
the center of the ceremonial place is set up
a tree, or sun pole, which is scouted for,
counted coup upon, and felled, as if it were
an enemy. Upon this, offerings of cloth are
made to the

Fig. 42. Digging Stick and Case for
Blackfoot Sun Dance Bundle.

Fig. 43. Sun Dance Headdress. Blackfoot.
sun. In the fork at the top
is usually a bunch of twigs, in some cases
called the nest of the thunderbird. With in
the enclosure on the left side an altar is
made.
The time of the sun dance is in midsummer.
It is usually initiated by the vow of a man
or woman to make it as a sacrifice in return
for some heeded prayer in time of great
danger. The soldier societies, the women s
society, and other organizations, generally
take turns dancing at the sun pole after the
above named rites have been concluded. As a
rule all who perform important functions in
the sun dance are required to spend several
days in fasting and other purification
ceremonies.
Some form of sun dance has been reported for
all the tribes of this area except the
Comanche, Omaha, Iowa, Kansa, Missouri,
Osage, Oto, Pawnee, Wichita, Ban nock, and
Nez Perce: that even some of these formerly
practiced it, is probable. The Mandan had an
elaborate ceremony known as the Okipa, fully
described by George Catlin who visited that
tribe in 1832. This is not a sun dance, but
contains the self-torture practiced by the
Dakota.
When we consider the total distribution of
the sun dance it appears that its ceremonial
complex, like that for soldier societies,
presents several features variously combined
and distributed. These are the torture, the
circular shelter of poles, the use of a
sacred bundle, the altar, the erection of a
sun pole, and the dancing ceremonies. The
form of shelter shown in the Arapaho model
has been observed among the Arapaho, Gros
Ventre, Kiowa, Ute, Shoshoni,
Plains-Ojibway, Cheyenne, Blackfoot, Sarsi,
Plains-Cree, and Hidatsa. With the possible
exception of the Plains-Cree all used a
sacred bundle of some form. (For examples
see the Blackfoot and Crow collections.) The
Crow used a bundle containing an image, but
a different form of shelter. The Ponca and
Dakota used no bundles but a shelter of
another type from that shown in the model,
but both had the torture, sun-gaze-dancing,
and the sun pole.
Ghost Dance Ceremonies.
Even within historic times, there have been
several interesting religious developments
among the Plains Indians. The most noted of
these was the ghost dance. This was a
religious ceremony founded upon the belief
in the coming of a Messiah, which seems to
have originated among the Paviotso Indians
in Nevada (Plateau area) about 1888 and
which spread rapidly among the Indians of
the Plains. The prophet of the religion was
a young Paiute Indian (Plateau Area) who
claimed to have had a revelation while in a
delirious condition caused by an attack of
fever. The Teton-Dakota seem to have first
heard of the new religion in 1889 and in a
council held by Red-cloud, appointed a
committee to visit the prophet and
investigate. On this committee were
Short-bull and Kicking-bear, who returned
very enthusiastic converts and began
preaching the new religion among the Dakota.
The principal belief was that an Indian
Messiah was about to appear to destroy the
white race, and restore the buffalo with all
former customs. As in all Indian ceremonies,
dancing played a large part, but in this
case the dancers usually fell into a
hypnotic trance and upon recovering
recounted their visions and supernatural
experiences. All participants were provided
with decorated cloth garments bearing
symbolic designs which were believed to have
such relation with the coming Messiah that
all who wore them would be protected from
all harm. Among white people these garments
were generally known as "bullet proof
shirts" (see Dakota collections).

Fig. 44. Peyote Button
The enthusiasm over the new
ghost dance religion spread over the several
Dakota Indian reservations, resulting in the
attempted arrest and killing of the famous
Sitting-bull by the Indian police and
hostile demonstrations on the Pine Ridge
Reservation, under the leadership of
Short-bull and Kicking-bear. In consequence,
United States troops were concentrated on
the Pine Ridge Reservation under the command
of General Nelson A. Miles. The hostility of
the Indians increased until December 29,
1890, when there was an engagement between
Big-foot's band and the command of Colonel
Forsyth on Wounded Knee Creek, in which
thirty-one soldiers and one hundred
twenty-eight Indians were killed. In a short
time after this decisive engagement,
practically all the Indians laid down their
arms and abandoned the ghost dance religion.
It is probable, however, that some of the
ceremonies connected with the ghost dance
religion are performed even to this day,
since several of the leaders are still
living.
Practically all of the typical tribes took
up the new beliefs about the same time but
no where else did the excitement lead to
violence. Among the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and
Gros Ventre, the ceremonies still exist in a
modified form, apparently combined with the
Omaha or grass dance.
Peyote Worship.
There are curious ceremonies connected with
the eating or administering of the dried
fruit of a small cactus (Anhalonium
or Laphophora) , native of the lower
Rio Grande and Mexico. The name "mescal" is
wrongly applied to this fruit by many white
observers. Long ago, these ceremonies seem
to have been known to the Kiowa and Comanche
of the Plains and widely distributed in the
Southwest and Mexico. The rites begin in the
evening and continue until the following
dawn, and are restricted to men. There is a
definite ritual, a small drum and rattle of
special form being essential. Within the
last few years, this worship has become
general among the Arapaho, Cheyenne, Omaha,
Dakota, and Kiowa, and threatens to supplant
all other native ceremonies. It is even
found among the Winnebago, Sauk and Fox, and
Menominie of the Woodlands. This diffusion
in historic times, makes it one of the most
suggestive phenomena for students of Indian
life, since it affords an indisputable
example of culture diffusion.
Dancing Associations.
There are a number of semi-religious
festivals or ceremonies in which a large
number of individuals participate and which
seem to have been handed on from one tribe
to another. The best known example of this
is the Omaha or Grass dance which has been
reported for the Arapaho, Pawnee, Omaha,
Dakota, Crow, Gros Ventre, Assiniboin, and
Blackfoot. The various tribes agree in their
belief that this dance, and its regalia
originated with the Pawnee. The Dakota claim
to have obtained it directly from the Pawnee
about 1870. The Arapaho and Gros Ventre
claim to have learned it from the Dakota.
The Gros Ventre taught it to the Blackfoot
about 1883. Though these statements of the
Indians are not to be taken as absolutely
correct, they indicate that this dance is a
modern innovation. Recently, the Blackfoot
have carried the dance to the Flathead and
Kootenai tribes to the west.
The meetings are held at night in large
circular wooden buildings erected for that
purpose. Some of the dancers wear large
feather bustles, called crow belts, and
peculiar roached headdresses of hair. A
feast of dog's flesh is served at which many
members formally give away property to the
poor. They even go so far now and then, as
to formally put away a wife as the greatest
act of self-denial.
In the same class may be mentioned the
kissing or hugging dance, sometimes called
the Cree dance. This seems to have come from
the north and resembles a form of dance once
common among the half-breed Canadians. In
the Plains, however, it has Indian songs and
other undoubtedly native features. To this
list may be added the tea dances, the
horseback dances, etc.
Among these Indians each distinct ceremony
or dance has its own peculiar set of songs
to which additions are made from time to
time.
War and Scalp Dances.
The scalp or some other part of the foe was
often carried home and given to the women of
the family who made a feast and danced in
public with songs and cheers for the
victors. A party about to go to war would
gather in the evening, sing, dance, and
observe certain religious rites to ensure
success. In all of these there seems to have
been little that was distinctive or peculiar
to the Plains.
Ceremonial Procedure. It is rather difficult
to characterize satisfactorily the many
detailed ceremonies of the Plains, but some
points are clear. Inmost we find an
inordinate amount of singing, often
extending over an entire day and night,
interspersed with prayers and the handling
of sacred objects or bundles and occasional
dancing. The sweat house is used for
preliminary purification and incense is
burned at intervals during the ceremony. The
participants usually sit in a circle with a
fire at the center. A man leads and has the
entire direction of the ritual, other men
and perhaps women assisting him. A kind of
altar or earth painting is common. This is
usually a small square of fresh earth
between the leader and the fire upon which
symbols are made by dropping dry paint,
suggesting the sand painting of the Navajo,
but otherwise highly individual in
character. In the manipulation of ceremonial
objects we often observe four movements, or
three feints before anything is done. Again,
many objects are not put down directly but
moved around in a sunwise direction. All
such manipulations are likely to be common
to all ceremonies and therefore not
distinctive or significant. It is not far
wrong to say that all these ceremonies are
demonstrations of the ritual associated with
some bundle or objects and represent the
original visions or experiences in which the
whole was handed down. The demonstration
seems to be ordered on the theory, that, as
in the original revelation, the divine
element will be present in the objects and
appurtenances thereto. The persons
participating are rather passive. We have
practically no attempts to impersonate and
to act out in detail the parts played by
supernatural beings. This is shown in the
almost entire absence of masks and
ceremonial costume. Thus, among the Indians
of the North Pacific area, the Pueblos of
the Southwest, and the Iroquois of the
Woodlands, we find persons in ceremonies
dressed and masked to represent the various
gods or supernatural creatures and who act
out parts of the ritual. Even among the
Navajo and the Apache of the Southwest,
these costumes play a conspicuous part. All
this is rare in the strictly religious
ceremonies of the Plains and brings out by
contrast what is perhaps one of their most
characteristic features.
Painting the face and body and the use of a
pipe are also highly developed elements. In
most cases, there is a distinct painting for
each ceremony, again supposed to be
according to the directions of the initial
revelation. A lighted pipe is not only
frequently passed during a ceremony but is
also filled to the accompaniment of
ceremonial movements and offered with
prayers to many or all of the recognized
sources of the higher powers.
The only musical instruments used in these
ceremonies are rattles, drums, and whistles.
North American Indians of
the Plains
This site
includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied .
North American Indians Of The Plains, Clark Wissler, 1920
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
North American Indians of the Plains |
|