Title: Native American Religions
1Native American Religions
2QUESTIONS
- What relevance does Native American religion have
for today? - What are some elements of Native American
religion would interest New Age religion and
spiritual people? - What are some common parts of Native American
religion?
3Native American religion
- Difficult to define because they are so diverse
(hunting-gathering societies to agricultural
societies, small nomadic bands to towns, cities,
and empires, in every section of America) - Estimated that there may have been as many as
2,000 different Native American cultures in North
America - Must make generalizations based on certain shared
religious characteristics seen across Native
American tribes
4Limitations on sources
- First people came to Americas 15,000 to 20,000
years ago (some Natives believe their ancestors
were created in Americas) - 20,000 years of Native Americans in Americas
- Information only available from last 400 years
- Most sources were from Christian missionaries and
explorers - Difficult to understand how much Native American
religion has been influenced by contact with
Europeans
5polytheistic
- All nature is alive with spirits
- Spirits take the forms of animals, plants, and
appear in visions - Guardian spirits
- Spirits of the dead who live in the Land of the
Dead - Mother Earth she provides the bounty of the
Earth - Lightening and thunder individual deities
6Monotheistic
- The Supreme Being or High God
- Separate from the concerns of Earth
- People pray to the nature spirits or ancestors
for matters of daily life - The High God is appealed to only rarely and is
seldom mentioned in religious conversation
7monistic
- Some Native Americans believe the High God is a
divine or sacred power similar to the Tao. - Dakota Sioux believe in Wakan Tanka or The Great
Mysterious - Creative force found in all beings and spirits
- Any object or being that has influence over the
course of life is seen as a manifestation of this
divine power
8So, is native American religion polytheistic,
monotheistic, or monistic (henotheistic)?
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10animism
- An animist is someone who believes that the
trees, rocks, rivers, plants, and animals are
spiritually alive. - Spirits in nature have the ability to help or
harm. - Animists offer some form of worship to these
spirits. - Native Americans are thus animists in a sense.
11Animism continued
- If the Supreme Being lives and manifests itself
in all creation, nature should be respected and
cared for. - In general, a different view than white European
settlers, who viewed nature as something to be
exploited. - White Europeans were willing to sacrifice the
beauty and life of the land to build a technology
that would make life more comfortable and
pleasant. - Native Americans had a reverent attitude toward
nature and sought to live in harmony with it.
12hunting
- Important to Native Americans both a practical
and religious experience - Native American hunters often prayed to the
spirit of the animal before the hunt. - Only those animals absolutely needed were killed
- Hunters asked for forgiveness from the animal
- Every part of the animal was used
- Euro-American hunters slaughtered herds, took
hides and tongues leaving the bulk of the animal
to rot.
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14agriculture
- Native Americans revere the soil, plants, and
trees - The soil is personified as Mother Earth. Plants
are thought to have spirits. - For many Native American people, farming is a
religious activity. - Hopi of the Southwest continue to farm for corn,
even when the bulk of their food comes from
modern sources
15Agriculture continued
- Even gathering clay to make pottery is done with
an understanding of the life in the soil. - The Papago women of southern Arizona speak of the
clay they dig for pots I take only what I need.
It is to cook for my children. - Cutting down a tree is not done without making an
offering to the tree first - Trees are sacred and have feelings that must be
respected
16Contacts with the spirit world
- Native American people tend not to see the
universe as being under the control of an all
powerful God - Interested in day-to-day life among multiple
spirits - Native Americans seek to maintain good
relationships with spiritual beings (forests,
streams, and animals, among others) that share
the world with humans.
17Sacrifice
- Most world religions practice some form of
sacrifice to please deities - Animals, grain, wine, beer, and human blood
sacrifice have been offered by different
religions - Such sacrifices were rare among the native
peoples of the United States and Canada - Human sacrifice was used by natives of Central
and South America (Maya of Guatemala, Aztecs of
Central Mexico, Inca of Peru, and communities of
American Southwest).
18sacrifice
- Sacrifice is used to help human obtain assistance
from spiritual beings - Some rituals such as the Sun Dance of the Great
Plains Native Americans involve self-torment or
sacrifice - This is seen as a way of obtaining the spiritual
power necessary for human survival - Medicinal bundles made from animal hides, bones,
plants, and minerals are other sources of
spiritual power. - Medicinal bundles are greatly valued by Native
Americans.
19Why do you think that the great blood sacrifices
of other world religions was/is uncommon in
native American religion?
20taboos
- One way that Native Americans protect themselves
from possible danger from the spirit world is
through taboos. - Taboos are actions, circumstances, persons,
objects, etc., which owing to their dangerousness
fall outside the normal everyday categories of
existence. - Taboo is a kind of religious action that enables
people to avoid doing things that would offend
the spirits of nature and the ancestors.
21TABOO INTERACTING WITH MENSTRUATING WOMEN
- Women participate in child production and thus
have special powers - Menstruating women are seen as especially
powerful - Interacting with or even being looked at by a
menstruating women could ruin a hunters
abilities for life even weapons could be
rendered useless wild game could be driven away - Menstruating women were often kept separate
22TABOO AVOIDANCE OF THE DEAD
- Native Americans feared that the spirit of the
dead would remain for a time and attempt to take
family and friends with it. - Native Americans avoid the dead except in cases
of extreme emergency. - Among the Navaho and other tribes of Arizona and
New Mexico, dead bodies, their clothing and
belongings are greatly feared. They are reluctant
to touch the bodies of victims of automobile and
other accidents. - Care of the dead is often left to non-native
people
23CONCERN ABOUT FINAL RESTING PLACE
- Steps taken to keep bodies away from contact with
the human world - Sometimes, names of dead are not spoken for many
years after their deaths - Dead buried by special members of tribe not
immediate family - These people were ritually unclean for a time and
unable to partake of tribal meals
24CONTROVERSY NATIVE AMERICANS AND THE SCIENTIFIC
COMMUNITY REGARDING THE DEAD
- Archaeologists and scientists often study human
remains to learn about the diets and health of
prehistoric people - Native Americans are troubled by what they see as
a disrespect for the dead - They have fought for the return and reburial of
the remains discovered by archaeologists
25CEREMONIES AND RITUALS
- Native Americans sought to control the forces of
the spiritual world with ceremonies - The purpose of ceremonies, rituals, songs, and
dances is not necessarily to worship - They are a means of renewing the partnership
between humans and the spirit world - Ceremonies and rituals include dancing, singing,
fasting, ordeals, bathing, and observing taboos.
26DANCE A POPULAR RITUAL
- The entire community participates
- Used to prepare for a hunt, agricultural season,
or for celebration they were also used in the
preparation for war - Used as a rite of passage
- Dance is accompanied by the beating of drums,
singing of songs, shaking of rattles, and playing
of flutes
27DANCE CONTACT WITH THE SPIRIT WORLD
- Rhythms can be simple or complex
- Several people banging on a log to complex
rhythms played on animal skin drums - Verses could be simple and repetitive or tell
detailed stories of creation or heroes of the
past - Hours of song and steady rhythm are hypnotic
- Long hours of dancing in this atmosphere prepares
the participants to interact with the spirits
28RITUALS FOR HUNTING
- Animals were important to Native Americans for
food and raw materials (hides for warmth, bones
for tools and weapons) - Rituals prepared hunters for their work
- Hunting could be unpredictable one season their
would be an abundance of game and the weapons
could be very accurate another season game could
be scarce and weapons ineffective - Spirits of animals and the hunters and weapons
themselves had to be properly prepared
29PUEBLO HUNTING RITUAL
- Pueblo ritual of the southwest
- Men dressed as deer and crawled around to the
beat of a drum and the singing of songs - Hunters acted as if they were killing them and
the animal actors as if they were dying - Sympathetic or imitative magic persons
imitating the game animals in the ceremony were
symbolically called forth and killed in the
belief that this would occur during the real hunt
30THE VISION QUEST
- To gain special power in life, Native Americans
often seek visions that put them in contact with
the spirit world - Visions sought by young people at the time of
puberty - One day they go alone into the wilderness to live
alone until a vision is received - The young person lives without food, limited
water, and with hardly any possessions - Done to appear poor and humble before the spirits
31VISION QUEST CONTINUED
- Sometimes, the young person is painted to
resemble a famous person from the tribe - When the vision comes, the spirits often appear
in the guise of animals in a dreamlike or
trancelike state - The animal may become the persons special
guardian the person may change his/her name to
include the animals name - A bond is formed with that animal that lasts for
life
32VISION QUEST CONTINUED
- Spirits may appear as a man or a woman
- If no vision occurs after a few days, then the
young person may cut his/her flesh or even cut
off a finger as a sign of sincerity. - When the vision comes, the young person returns
to the community as a full member of the group,
having moved through this rite of passage.
33VISIONS THEN AND NOW
- Visions are sought by Native Americans at other
times in life ex. On the eve of a major battle - Visions sought in connection with hunting such as
the great buffalo hunts in the 19th century - Today, they are sought before making major life
decisions such as marriage, running for political
office, or moving from the reservation for
employment or education
34SUN DANCE
- Practiced Native Americans of the Great Plains
- Dance takes place during the summer, on the
solstice when the sun is near its peak lasts
usually three days and nights. - Dancers seek a vision
- Gather in a lodge especially built for the
purpose - Sacred pole in the center of the lodge cut from a
tree chosen for this sacred purpose - People may be hung from the pole by hooks through
pectoral muscles in order to contact the spirits - Contact with the spirit world for too long can be
dangerous, so they fight to free themselves from
the hooks quickly.
35SMOKING
- Natives smoked strong tobacco (Nicotina rustica
plant) from long, decorative pipes (works of art,
valued possessions that could be traded) - Most people cannot take more than six puffs from
the pipe without feeling almost intoxicated - (not like mass-produced tobacco grown today)
- Native Americans (men mostly) did it occasionally
to enhance bonding between tribal leaders,
agreements among tribal members - Not smoked as a habit
36PEYOTE
- Spineless cactus that grows in American Southwest
and Mexico - Natives of Central America and Southwest ate it
to have visions - Peyote has 9 narcotic alkaloids including
mescaline (which is used to make acid) - Most states have drug regulations banning
mescaline - Federal courts have upheld the state laws
- Native Americans continue to appeal to federal
courts including the Supreme Court as they feel
that their religious freedoms under the Bill of
Rights are being abridged. - Why is this a significant issue?