Top Banner
With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected in the earth, the tree will become the focus of a days long spiritual ceremony. Sun dances and other traditional ceremonies have undergone a resurgence since the 1970s.
9

With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

Dec 25, 2015

Download

Documents

Vanessa Bond
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected in the earth, the tree will become the focus of a days long spiritual ceremony. Sun dances and other traditional ceremonies have undergone a resurgence since the 1970s.

Page 2: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

Scars on Lyle LeBeaux's chest are from sacred piercings during sun dance ceremonies. Le Beaux belongs to the Thunder Valley community, a group of traditional-minded Oglala Lakota who live on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

Page 3: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

Remains of clothing donations from churches in Colorado in Oglala, S.D.

Page 4: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

C. J. Shot, 3, bathes among dishes. The Oglala concept of tiospaye—the unity of the extended family—means that homes are often overcrowded, especially with the severe housing shortage on the reservation. In 2008, when this photograph was made, 22 people lived in the three-bedroom house. "These houses aren't who we are," says Oglala activist Alex White Plume.

Page 5: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

Bareback riders Carey Rouillard (left) and Travis New Holy stop for a neighborly chat in Evergreen, S.D. Oglala have a traditional reverence for the horse, which they call sunka wakan, or sacred dog.

Page 6: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

After intense communication with the spirits, participants emerge from a steaming inipi, or purification (sweat) lodge. This ceremony was held by Rick Two Dogs, a medicine man descended from American Horse.

Page 7: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

Horse races and traditional Native American games held near Manderson, S.D., to commemorate the anniversary of Little Bighorn and the defeat of Gen. George Custer.

Page 8: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

A passenger barely has room for the journey home in a car loaded with used clothing donated by a Colorado-based Native American charity.

Page 9: With the reverence afforded a sacred being, Oglala men fell a specially chosen cottonwood tree and carry it to the center of a sun dance circle. Erected.

In a basement in Manderson, S.D