I don't suppose anyone here would like this guy much, huh?
Man seeks bond to Native American culture
Adams businessman says it’s about heart, not blood
By ERIN JAMES
For the Daily Record/Sunday News
Sunday, July 24, 2005
http://ydr.com/story/local/78542/Harry Fleming of Biglerville poses with an assortment of Native American
items, including a medicine wheel, headband and shirt he handcrafted.
Fleming will be traveling to the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota
in two weeks to attend a Sundance Ceremony in which he will ask to be
adopted as a member of the Lakota tribe.
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As far as he knows, not a single drop of Indian blood flows through Harry
Fleming’s veins.
But he’ll tell you his blood doesn’t matter.
“My heart’s 200 percent Native American,??? Fleming said. “That’s the way I
feel. That’s the way I live.
And that’s why the Biglerville construction businessman is leaving in two
weeks to visit the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota and attend a
Sundance Ceremony.
He also has a request to be adopted as a member of the Lakota tribe and be
given an Indian name.
Tribe leaders don’t have to oblige, and Fleming said he’s not sure what to
expect if he is adopted.
Nor does he care.
“I just want to feel connected,??? Fleming said.
Fleming, 54, said his fascination with Indian life began a decade ago when
he opened his doors to a homeless woman, who in turn introduced him to
Native American spirituality.
Since then, Fleming can’t get enough of the culture.
Today, his secluded home in the northwest corner of Adams County is filled
with Native American clothing, jewelry and decorations.
An authentic Native American leather wedding dress from the early 1800s
hangs in one closet. A medicine wheel and dream catchers decorate his office
A buffalo skull sits on a shelf.
Though he is a craftsman and a collector of Native American objects, it is
the culture’s spirituality that really drives Fleming’s fascination.
“It’s a feeling, it’s a way of being. It’s a way of thinking,??? he said.
“It’s hard to explain.
If accepted as a Lakota member, Fleming said he will also join another
exclusive group: those who have been adopted into tribes.
Although he has heard of others, Fleming said he does not personally know
anyone else who has gone through the formality.
Fleming said his “enlightened??? beliefs have affected how he lives his life,
from the way he hunts deer to the way he runs his log cabin and excavating
business.
For example, now Fleming holds a ceremony to give thanks after a successful
hunt. He teaches respect of all living things to his education classes for
young hunters.
And he practices the Native American healing method called channeling, which
Fleming said can cure ailments like headaches and back pain with energy.
“I consider myself as channeling God’s love and light his energy,??? he said.
Fleming’s 22-hour trip to South Dakota, which he will make with a friend,
begins Aug. 6. He will take only basic necessities and his peace pipe, a
tobacco-smoking instrument he wants to have blessed.
It is his first trip to any Indian reservation, but Fleming said he has no
worries.
“When you’re connected to the Great Spirit, things happen,??? he said.