Survival of the sacred
Controversy simmers over whether non-Indians can understand and respect native spirituality
By Kristen Moulton
The Salt Lake Tribune
http://www.sltrib.com/lifestyle/ci_3521903 When news spread that Arvol Looking Horse would be visiting Utah, many who practice American Indian spirituality were thrilled.
Some also felt a chill.
Looking Horse, after all, has come to represent the growing sentiment among many American Indians that non-Indians do not belong in the center of sacred ceremonial practice.
A Lakota spiritual leader, Looking Horse - with the support of dozens of Lakota, Dakota, Nakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho leaders - issued a proclamation in 2003 calling for an end to exploitation of ceremonies.
Non-Indians, he says, are welcome to join Indians in prayer and on the periphery, but they should not lead the most sacred ceremonies, such as the Sundance and Vision Quest.
Not only do Indians with little appreciation of tradition pervert and sell ceremonies and their tools, he argues, but also non-Indians dabble in something they do not fully understand.
Drawn by native spirituality's understanding of nature, plants and animals - and often packing their own New Age notions - scores of non-Indians have been attracted to native spirituality.
"A lot of people are doing things, and they've only got a shadow," says Lacee Harris, a social worker from Salt Lake City. Harris is a Northern Ute-Northern Paiute.
When Looking Horse was invited to Utah from South Dakota for various appearances along the Wasatch Front last week, audiences expected to hear him expound on the issue.
He didn't.
But that doesn't mean Looking Horse, averse to conflict, has backed away from his insistence that Indians reclaim their faith. Indeed, he believes the future of the human race hinges, in part, on the ceremonial practices.
"There is a lot about our [way of] life that is essential to the survival of the two-leggeds," he said in an interview.
Those who take part in ceremonies for their own gratification do not realize there are ramifications for others, he says.
"They begin a slow killing of the medicine," he says.
"They don't realize they destroy the creator by doing this," adds his wife, Paula Horne Mullen.
Time to 'pick up the pipe': Ogden resident Robin Naneix is one of those struggling to understand where that leaves her.