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NATIVE AMERICAN MYSTICISM

Posted by anthonynorth on November 7, 2007

native-american-mystic.jpg One area of spirituality often ignored by the wider world is the Native American. The Native American mystic is often known as the Medicine Man, principally because of his power to heal, but also to communicate with the supernatural.
A continuation of the early shaman, endemic to most tribal societies, he also bears many similarities to the guru. The ‘Medicine Man’ most likely survived from before the migrations across the Bering Strait over twenty thousand years ago.

MYSTICAL APPRENTICESHIP

Such a mystic is thought to be chosen by the spirits, indications of an ability to communicate with them beginning in childhood.
Continuing visions and omens will lead to the child being taught by an existing mystic.
A right of passage for the growing mystic will be his first vision quest, of which he will have many in his life.
Such quests happen after a period of asceticism, such as going to a remote place to meditate. Another method is the sweat lodge in which saplings are covered with blankets and hot stones placed within. The mystic will go inside and pour water on the stones, his sweat causing purification.

THE VISION QUEST

During his visions he will meet his guardian spirit. Granted a dream or vision of this spirit, it will usually be in an animal form and will grant the mystic special powers.
He will be taught a spirit song and given a number of talismen – eagle feathers, shells, animal parts.
These bestow the mystic’s new powers and represent omens. They will be kept in a sacred bag known as his medicine bundle.
The mystic will, of course, become much more than a relationship between himself and the supernatural. In classic tribal style, he will also be the bridgehead between his tribe and the guardian spirit.

RITUAL LIFE

In this sense, he is responsible for the tribe’s culture and well being. He will be the storyteller who tells of the tribe’s origins as told by the guardian spirit, and he will be the symbol of totemism, giving the tribe identity and a moral code through animal or plant representations of natural phenomena and events.
Such factors give sociology to the role of the mystic. In diplomacy and other gatherings, the sacred pipe would be part of spiritual purification, allowing the participants to speak wisely. And other group ceremonies led by the mystic would be energetic indeed.

ECSTATIC CEREMONY

One of the most famous ceremonies is the Sun Dance. Especially popular among the Plains Indians, it was practiced annually to cause cosmic regeneration and tribal wellbeing.
The mystic and others would dance for up to five days whilst gazing at the sun. Some would attach themselves to totem poles by thongs and skewers through chest muscles.
Self-mutilation would occur. The end result would be absolute exhaustion leading to trance.
The dance was often performed privately when a particular mystic or chief faced a momentous decision. Prior to the Battle of the Little Bighorn, Sitting Bull went into the wilderness to perform the dance.
He first cut fifty notches in his chest as sacrifice and danced for 24 hours. Exhausted, he went into a trance and saw white soldiers falling from the sky.

NEW INFLUENCES

Around this time, the whole nature of the religion turned from a sense of oneness with the world to something approaching the Apocalyptic. This new phase was a direct result of the threat the white man posed to their society.
Suddenly, politics and fear were of importance. In 1680 a Pueblo named Pope used his mysticism to lead a revolt against the Spaniards after missionaries had threatened their beliefs.
Many such mystics arose, including Tenskwatawa of the Shawnee. For many years he lived in his brother’s shadow and drank too much. Then in 1805 he had a dream where he took the road taken by souls upon death. He became charismatic, in classic cult guru style, and preached a moral code to reclaim the lost ways.

APOCALYPTIC URGES

Tenskwatawa, being apocalyptic, told of the Great Spirit sweeping across the land, releasing the lost game, and after, the white man would be gone. Gaining thousands of followers, he led them to a disastrous battle in 1811, after which his reputation had gone.
Such frustrations at the loss of their way of life became a predominant theme, harking back to the times before the white man. And in 1869, the frustrations birthed the Ghost Dance when a Paiute called Wodziwob had a vision of a train filled with dead tribesmen.
He urged people to resurrect an ancient dance similar to the Sun Dance, where practitioners danced in a circle, the aim being to bring back those dead tribesmen to remove the white man.
Wodziwob’s son, Wowoka, popularised the Ghost Dance, composing songs and preaching non-violence and a way to return to the old values, not letting the white man win.

BLACK ELK

We know a great deal of this period, and Native American mysticism in general, because of the research of American writer John Neihardt in 1930. He studied and spoke to one of the last great mystics, Nicholas Black Elk.
Born in 1863 into the Sioux, Black Elk had his first vision at five. Four years later his great visions occurred after an illness. The Grandfathers of the World came down from the clouds and took him away with them to the centre of the universe and showed him the sacred hoop that represented the collective soul of his people.
The Grandfathers told him, however, that there were troubled times ahead, as the hoop was broken. Becoming a healer, he could also understand animals, and he had a vision of the Little Bighorn before the battle.
Trying to show the white men that his ways were not bad, he joined Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show, even performing in front of Queen Victoria. But by 1889 he was disillusioned.

WOUNDED KNEE

Embracing the Ghost Dance, the movement surged in popularity, causing the white man to fear an upsurge in Native American nationalism. The following year, it all came to an end in the infamous massacre at Wounded Knee.
Black Elk was sent to a reservation in South Dakota. Many years later, Neihardt was one of the witnesses to Black Elk’s last spiritual vigil where he had met the Grandfathers. He apologised to them for failing to mend the sacred hoop. He knew, like the rest of his people, that their way of life was over.

© Anthony North, November 2007

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15 Responses to “NATIVE AMERICAN MYSTICISM”

  1. Michele Abercrombie said

    So, so sad…the worst kind of loss…

    I live in the White Rock area of Dallas, Texas. Just under two hundred years ago the large creek that runs through it was a known path for local tribes. One hundred years ago the city officials completed a man-made lake project, aptly named White Rock Lake, by using swamp-like areas fed by this large creek. The lake was finally completed by an unusual amount of rainfall, ahead of schedule…but I digress.
    The lake and surrounding woods, creek, trails, and parks….and all wild life that comes with them, make for a jewel in the middle of a major city. My husband and I often traverse the lesser known areas as a sort of communion. The magic there is definately palpable. As I’ve watched the crane’s majestic flight through my favorite area of the creek while perched atop a large fallen oak, I’ve wondered…has some young indian lad or lass come here to contemplate their lives just as I?
    They must have as their spirits are thriving here. Even those not spiritually sensitive can feel that this place has a real magic and beautiful feel to it. I wish it was possible to share it with everyone!!

    Thank you for the article sir. You’ll never shake me as a fan. 🙂

    Take care,
    Michele

  2. anthonynorth said

    Hi Michele,
    Thank you for those kind words at the end.
    It is, indeed, a loss. As for the feeling in such places, I’ve felt it myself. A different culture, admittedly, but I think the spiritual residue of such sites is universal. I write about it here:

    FINDING PEACE

  3. Anik said

    I wish our ancestors could have accepted that Natives had much to teach the white man. But as usual, war was the only way we knew. Today, as the land chokes from our pollution and money-making activities, we realize that now it is too late, but 200 years ago, it might have been possible to take a different path. If widom was more important to us than money, we wouldn’t be facing the end of the world in a few decades, our bodies wouldn’t be full of pollutants and perhaps we could actually think straight. But money blinds us to this day and it has become a cancer to people all over the world. White people forced the world to value money over life and God. Well, we should have put our egos aside and we should have asked for help. Now, we are all lost and the world is dying. We are assholes, the lot of us.

  4. sherman lafollette said

    have you ever read the crzy_hrse blog? much of the same sentiment is given poetic expression there.

  5. anthonynorth said

    Hi Anik,
    I feel for your sentiments, but we are not fools. When disaster is about to hit us in the face, we will change. And do you know what? Part of that change is already happening. People are quietly changing from materialism towards a new spirituality.
    True, it may only be an ‘assistance’ to cope with the pressures of modern life at the moment, but it will grow. And a big part of that spirituality is a realisation of the correctness of those old nature-based religions.
    Black Elk was perhaps premature with his pessimism, and those ideas may out in the end. And then the Grandfathers will be laughing.

    Hi Sherman,
    I haven’t seen that site. Have you a url?

  6. STEVEN VOLPE said

    I wonder at the indian code of justice and if the medicine-man had any say in situations like murder. It would be interesting to know how Indians delt with crime before the white man showed up.

  7. anthonynorth said

    Hi Steven,
    A very good question. A quick search got me nothing of interest. Anyone out there with some answers?

  8. JamesG said

    hi. im a member of the big pine paiute tribe in california. good article but it was Wavoka. not wawoka 😛 and Wodziwob didnt create the dance. wavoka created it when the reservation system came into play. and as to the question on the punishment of murder. you were exiled from the tribe(ultimate dishonor) or you were killed depending on which tribe.

  9. anthonynorth said

    Hi JamesG,
    Thank you for your corrections. It is often difficult to get things absolutely right with the amount of literature available. Despite this, I hope I have done the subject justice.

  10. Hi everyone.I’m in the process of writing a fiction novel.I’m Native American.I’m a Chippewa and a member of Sault Ste Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians. My tribe is located all through out the UP of Michigan. I would like to thank those who shared the knowledge of Native Mystics , and culture.
    While I was doing some research on the internet,I came upon this site. This is a really nice site.I will be visiting it more often now, and will tell my friends about it.Iam also called ‘Spirit Bear’.I think I am a mystic.I’ve had visions also . One in 1978 , regarding the events that would later take place in Russia formely known as the Soviet Union.
    It is dificult disclosing the idea that I may be somewhat of a msystic.I’m still following this path and have much to learn.So thankyou again for all of your spirits and your thoughts and knowlege.May the Creator give you all the enlightenment you can handle.

  11. Hi Gary,
    Thanks for that. And welome.

  12. Werr Taich said

    Does anyone know the meaning of seperate sightings of a black dog ghost in your home ?

  13. jay said

    Sometimes enlightenment is painful.

  14. Lessie said

    Looking for the sweat lodge where we tie tobacco packets before we enter the lodge and after we have a vegetarian meal. Is this that lodge? I attended before can’t remember the name. Please let me know. We sing Earth Mother

    namaaste

    Lessie

  15. Hi Lessie,
    As far as I’m aware the lodge could vary among tribes, so there isn’t an absolute standard.

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