This was posted on Indianz.com and bears repeating:
Medicine Wheel Teaching a hoax
Andrea Bear Nicholas
Chair in Native Studies
St. Thomas
University
Fredericton, NB, Canada
April 24, 2007
To
Mi'kmaq, Maliseet, and Passamaquoddy Peoples of the Maritimes:
It
has been repeatedly brought to my attention how completely our people have
been fooled into believing that the medicine wheel is somehow part of our
traditions, especially our spirituality. While I had long had concerns about
its origins, what woke me to the hoax was an event that occurred several years
ago at a national conference of Aboriginal women scholars. It occurred when I
raised the concern and prefaced my remarks with an apology to those whose
tradition it might have been. Immediately a chorus went up with virtually
everyone in the room saying loudly that it was not their tradition! And these
were Aboriginal women scholars from across Canada!
Subsequent to
that meeting, we in the Native Studies Program at St. Thomas University began
researching the history of the medicine wheel, and what we have found is
appalling!
Indeed, it was not even known by our people in the
Maritimes until the last couple of decades. It is not anywhere in the oral
traditions of Maliseet, Mi'kmaq or Passamaquoddy people collected as recently
as the 70s and 80s. So how in the world could it represent the knowledge of
our elders, if none of them ever heard of it until recently? The answer is
that it was a totally invented tradition that was foisted on our people only
as recently as the 1970s.
The following is an excerpt from a paper
I have written which is due to be published soon. It is titled "The Assault
on Aboriginal Oral Traditions: Past & Present." I include in this paper
an analysis of the assault on our languages, as the most important of our oral
traditions, specifically the fact that our languages have been deliberately
targeted for destruction, not only by residential schools, but also by public
schools and all schools taught only in a dominant language such as English.
The paper also deals with the fact that so many of the stories of our people
have been both distorted and often totally invented or fabricated by non-First
Nations people. It is in connection with the destruction of our languages
that I discuss the matter of invented traditions, especially the medicine
wheel, as follows.
[Begin quote] "It is into this void [where so
many people no longer speak their languages] that invented traditions have
come with a vengeance. One such "tradition", the medicine wheel, is of
particular concern for it is now widely promoted as the basis of Maliseet or
Mi'kmaq traditions. In fact, it was invented as recently as 1972.
(1) by a man representing himself as Cheyenne, but who was immediately
exposed as a fraud.
(2) The medicine wheel is not a Maliseet or
Mi'kmaq tradition, nor, it seems, was it a Cheyenne tradition. Within two
decades, however, it evolved into the form it is known today, thanks to the
embellishments of several others, including the discredited "plastic medicine
man" known as Sun Bear, who exploited the idea for their own personal gain.
(3) The irony is that this now very non-Native invention is seen as
the essence of Native traditions, not only by the dominant society but also by
First Nations people, even many who style themselves as "traditionalists", in
spite of the fact that the enormity of the fraud has been known at least since
1983.
(4) With the 1996 publication of a Native Studies textbook
that features the medicine wheel,
(5) the concept has been foisted
upon a whole generation of Maliseet and Mi'kmaq high school students who now
firmly believe that this invention is an old Mi'kmaq and Maliseet
tradition.
Furthermore, Native Studies teachers in New Brunswick
high schools are now provided with supplementary binders and curriculum
materials that are totally focused on the medicine wheel. That this
philosophy has effectively and almost totally displaced the oral traditions of
our people in schools, makes it impossible to conclude that it does not serve
the ends of the ongoing colonial assault on the traditions of our people.
That this headlong rush for an invented tradition has occurred without
critical attention to its origin as a hoax is a serious indictment of
academia, and particularly those institutions that have taken on the
responsibility of training First Nations teachers.
(6) The sad
irony is that anyone who now voices objections to the medicine wheel as
tradition is generally condemned for "messing" with tradition." [End of
quote]
I put these comments out knowing that they will stir up much
reaction and discussion, and that they will even be considered disrespectful,
to say the least! I just hope that the discussion it provokes is respectful.
As an indigenous academic my duty is to seek the truth, and to speak out
against untruth, particularly with regard to our history. In fact, I now
realize it would be disrespectful of me to hold my tongue on this matter any
longer, especially when I know that young people are being taught this hoax as
some sort of truth or legitimate tradition of our peoples, even in school.
I urge people to read the following footnotes to the excerpt quoted
above, and the sources they cite before weighing in on this matter.
Respectfully,
Andrea Bear Nicholas
(1) Storm, Hyemeyohst,
Seven Arrows, New York: Ballantine
Books, 1972.
(2) Kehoe, Alice B., "Primal Gaia: Primitivists and Plastic Medicine Men", in James
B. Clifton, ed., The Invented Indian: Cultural Fictions and Government
Policies, New Brunswick & London: Transaction Publishers, 1990, p.
200.
(3) Sun Bear and Wabun, The
Medicine Wheel, New Jersey: Prentice-Hill, 1980. Judy Bopp, The Sacred Tree, Lethbridge, Alberta: Four
Worlds Development Project, University of Lethbridge, 1988; and Lorler,
Marie-Lu, Shamanic Healing within the
Medicine Wheel, Albuquerque: Brotherhood of Life, 1989. For a critique
of this idea and other New Age phenomena Aldred, Lisa, 2000. "Plastic Shamans
and Astroturf Sun dances: New Age Commercialization of Native American
Spirituality" in The American Indian
Quarterly, vol. 24(3):329-352; and Jenkins, Philip, Dream Catchers: How Mainstream America Discovered
Native Spirituality. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.
(4) Parkhill, Thomas, Weaving Ourselves
into the Land: Charles Godfrey Leland, "Indians" and the Study of Native
American Religions, Albany: State University of New York., 1997. p.
141, citing Alice Kehoe, "Primal Gaia: Primitivists and Plastic Medicine Men",
p. 200-201, who in turn cites Castro, Michael, Interpreting the Indian,
Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1982, p. 155; and Bruchac,
Joseph, "Spinning the Medicine Wheel: The Bear Tribe in the Catskills", in
Akwesasne Notes, 1983, vol. 15(5):20-22.
(5) Leavitt, Robert,
Maliseet & Micmac: First Nations of the
Maritimes, Fredericton, NB: New Ireland Press, 1995. .
(6)
Dorson, Richard M., Folklore and Fakelore:
Essays toward a Discipline of Folk Studies, Cambridge & London,
Harvard University Press, 1976, p. 119.
Source: indianz.com
Edit: 22 May 2010
added image of 'Medicine Wheel'
Tags: aboriginal, bear tribe, canada, cheyenne, first nations, four, fraud, hoax, medicine, medicine man, medicine wheel, new age,
pan-indianism, quebec, shaman, sham, sun bear, symbol, tradition, traditional,
wabun, young, youth
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