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To: MistyCA; AntiJen; Victoria Delsoul; SassyMom; bentfeather; GatorGirl; radu; souris; SpookBrat; ...
Ghost Dance Religion


By the late 1880s, many Indian tribes, desperate and facing a dire existence of poverty, hunger and disease, sought a means of salvation to revitalize their traditional culture. The evolution of a new religion, the Ghost Dance, was a reaction to the Indians being forced to submit to government authority and reservation life. In early 1889, a Paiute shaman, Wovoka, (son of the mystic, Tavibo, whose teachings influenced the new religion) had a vision during an eclipse of the sun in which he saw the second coming of Christ and received a warning about the evils of the white man.

Knowledge of the vision spread quickly through the Indian camps across the country. Word began to circulate among the people on the reservations that a great new Indian Messiah had come to liberate them, and investigative parties were sent out to discover the nature of these claims. On one of the excursions, it is said that the messiah appeared to an Arapaho hunting party, crowned with thorns. They believed him to be the incarnation of Jesus, returned to save the Indian nations from the scourge of white people. Delegations were sent to visit Wovoka in western Nevada and returned to their camps disciples, preaching a new religion that promised renewal and revitalization of the Indian nations. Among those who met with Wovoka, Good Thunder, Short Bull, and Kicking Bear became prominent leaders of the new religion which was called the Ghost Dance by white people because of its precepts of resurrection and reunion with the dead.


A Lakota Ghost Dancing shirt, believed to protect its wearer from bullets.


According to Wovoka, converts of the new religion were supposed to take part in the Ghost Dance to hasten the arrival of the new era as promised by the messiah. Although the Bureau of Indian Affairs banned the Ghost Dance (as they did all other Indians spiritual rituals), the Lakotas adopted it and began composing sacred songs of hope:

The whole world is coming,
A nation is coming, a nation is coming,
The eagle has brought the message to the tribe.
The Father says so, the Father says so.
Over the whole earth they are coming,
The buffalo are coming, the buffalo are coming,
The crow has brought the message to the tribe,
The Father says so, the Father says so.

The Ghost Dance religion promised an apocalypse in the coming years during which time the earth would be destroyed, only to be recreated with the Indians as the inheritors of the new earth. According to the prophecy, the recent times of suffering for Indians had been brought about by their sins, but now they had withstood enough under the whites. With the earth destroyed, white people would be obliterated, buried under the new soil of the spring that would cover the land and restore the prairie. The buffalo and antelope would return, and deceased ancestors would rise to once again roam the earth, now free of violence, starvation, and disease. The natural world would be restored, and the land once again would be free and open to the Indian peoples, without the borders and boundaries of the white man. The new doctrine taught that salvation would be achieved when the Indians purged themselves of the evil ways learned from the white man, especially the drinking of alcohol. Believers were encouraged to engage in frequent ceremonial cleansing, meditation, prayer, chanting, and most importantly, dancing the Ghost Dance. Hearing rumors of the prophecy and fearing that it was a portent of renewed violence, white homesteaders panicked and the government responded.



The government agent at Standing Rock, James McLaughlin, described the Ghost Dance as an "absurd craze" -- "demoralizing, indecent, disgusting." Reservation agents described the Indians as "wild and crazy," and believed that their actions warranted military protection for white settlers. But while one of the primary goals of the Bureau of Indian Affairs was to convert the Indians to Christianity, they did not recognize that the fundamental principles of the Ghost Dance were indeed Christian in nature and had the effect of converting many to a belief in the one Christian God. In addition, Wovoka preached that, to survive, the Indians needed to turn to farming and to send their children to school to be educated. Ironically, while these efforts would appear to coincide with the goals of the Bureau, the Ghost Dance was outlawed by the agency. The Bureau feared the swelling numbers of Ghost Dancers and believed that the ritual was a precursor to renewed Indian militancy and violent rebellion.
2 posted on 03/13/2003 5:25:43 AM PST by SAMWolf (The French are cordially invited to come to Wisconsin and smell our dairy air)
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To: All
Picture "Seeing with the Heart" by Fish Hawk

  
  AMERICAN HOLOCAUST      Dec.29  1890
  
  
 colder than winter are the hearts of men
 oh, my people, frozen to the bloody snow
 revenge of the 7th for Custer's pride
 Big Foot my chief, my women, my children
 laying in their frozen tears
 never again to laugh or to sing around fires
 the GHOST DANCE could not save you
 from the powers of the Hotchkiss nor
 the hatred of a vengeful foe
 for evermore we shall not forget the blood
 that ran in a lonely creek called
                          Wounded Knee.

--- Freeper Fish Hawk


3 posted on 03/13/2003 5:26:09 AM PST by SAMWolf (The French are cordially invited to come to Wisconsin and smell our dairy air)
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To: SAMWolf; AntiJen; MistyCA; souris; GatorGirl; SassyMom; All

After the death of Sitting Bull in 1890, a band of Sioux fled into the badlands of South Dakota where they were captured by the U.S. Cavalry near Wounded Knee. While the Sioux were being disarmed, a young warrior pulled a gun and shot an officer. The U.S. troops responded by opening fire and killing nearly 200 Sioux men, women, and children.

The so-called "Battle" at Wounded Knee marks the final, tragic chapter in the Indian Wars, which had reached their height between 1869 and 1878. During these years, the Army fought over 200 battles against Native American tribes, who sought to protect their homelands and buffalo hunting practices against incursions made by white settlers and the railroad.


72 posted on 03/13/2003 5:48:25 PM PST by Victoria Delsoul
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