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Date: Thu, 23 Sep 2004 17:33:20 -0000
Subject: [newagefraudsplastichshamans] German Hobbyists and Nuagers
Some passages that really struck me reading the link given by Barnaby.
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Germany's Weekend Warriors By JAMES HAGENGRUBEROf The Gazette Staff
BERRIFFINGEN, Germany - Alex Biber's day job is designing semiconductor technology. Away from work, he becomes "Beaver," a Cheyenne warrior.
Biber the engineer drives on the autobahn and wears blue jeans. Beaver the brave wears hand-tanned buckskin and rides a horse. He
commands the steed in an ancient language once used by Plains Indians half-a-world away.
Biber, his wife and two daughters live in a 91-year-old farmhouse, but the family vacations in tepee villages in humid Central European forests....
The soft-spoken, blue-eyed man is one of Germany's weekend warriors, a tribe that numbers about 40,000 strong....
What he didn't say is that hobbyists are increasingly reluctant to draw attention to themselves. Although some American Indians are
flattered by Germany's fascination with their culture, some think the Germans' passion goes too far.
Hobbyist and New Age groups have ventured beyond the beadwork and feathers and are copying sacred religious ceremonies, upsetting some Native Americans. Hobbyists, in turn, sometimes criticize Indians for not living up to their image in the Aryan brain.
During a recent powwow in Germany, some make-believe Indians were angry with the visiting American Indian dancers for using microphones and wearing brightly colored feathers. The hobbyists also were annoyed that the dancers wore underwear beneath breech cloths.
The guest dancers were dumbfounded and protested the protests. The hobbyists lost the battle. They were kicked out and told not to
return without open minds and underwear, said Carmen Kwasny, a full-blooded German and press secretary for the Native American Association of Germany, which hosts dance gatherings near a large U.S. military base in Kaiserslautern.
"As long as (the hobbyists) stay in their little camps, we don't worry about them. But the problem is they go into schools and get
interviewed on television, and they show up at our powwows and create trouble," said Kwasny, who is fascinated by Indians, but doesn't try to imitate them.
The Native American Association's Web site (
www.naaog.de) now includes a list of powwow protocols.
"Native Americans do not appreciate you or your children showing up in fake Indian outfits," the guidelines state. "Toy guns, plastic spears, and tomahawks should also be left at home.
"During a powwow, you will have opportunities to participate in the dancing. Please watch out for the other dancers. Do not touch their regalia."
If hobbyists insist on appearing in breech cloths, they are asked to wear shorts or cycling pants underneath.