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Since the 1970s the book ''[[Black Elk Speaks]]'' has become an important source for studying Native spirituality, sparking a renewal of interest in Native religions. Black Elk worked with [[John Neihardt]] to give a first-hand account of his experiences and that of the Lakota people. His son Ben would translate Black Elk's stories, which were then recorded by Neihardt's daughter Emid, who would then put them in chronological order for Neihardt's use.<ref name="Holler2000">{{cite book|author=Clyde Holler|title=The Black Elk Reader|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NUwUv67oRQcC&pg=PA40|accessdate=24 February 2013|year=2000|publisher=Syracuse University Press|isbn=978-0-8156-2836-1|pages=40–}}</ref> Within the [[American Indian Movement]] ''Black Elk Speaks'' became an important source for those seeking religious and spiritual inspiration. They also sought Black Elk nephew and medicine man, [[Frank Fools Crow]] for information on Native traditions.<ref name="Holler2000">{{cite book|author=Clyde Holler|title=The Black Elk Reader|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=h7_j70PWw04C&pg=PA43|accessdate=24 February 2013|year=2000|publisher=Syracuse University Press|isbn=978-0-8156-2835-4|page=43}}</ref>
Since the 1970s the book ''[[Black Elk Speaks]]'' has become an important source for studying Native spirituality, sparking a renewal of interest in Native religions. Black Elk worked with [[John Neihardt]] to give a first-hand account of his experiences and that of the Lakota people. His son Ben would translate Black Elk's stories, which were then recorded by Neihardt's daughter Emid, who would then put them in chronological order for Neihardt's use.<ref name="Holler2000">{{cite book|author=Clyde Holler|title=The Black Elk Reader|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NUwUv67oRQcC&pg=PA40|accessdate=24 February 2013|year=2000|publisher=Syracuse University Press|isbn=978-0-8156-2836-1|pages=40–}}</ref> Within the [[American Indian Movement]] ''Black Elk Speaks'' became an important source for those seeking religious and spiritual inspiration. They also sought Black Elk nephew and medicine man, [[Frank Fools Crow]] for information on Native traditions.<ref name="Holler2000">{{cite book|author=Clyde Holler|title=The Black Elk Reader|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=h7_j70PWw04C&pg=PA43|accessdate=24 February 2013|year=2000|publisher=Syracuse University Press|isbn=978-0-8156-2835-4|page=43}}</ref>


Attempt to get thru to Wikipedia- Anyone with Computer Savvy try and get this message to them. I could not do it.
Black Elk Speaks. John Neihardt- University Nebraska Press. 1932.
Serious error regarding Black Elk of the famous book, Black Elk Speaks, Univ. Nebraska Press, Author John Neihardt.
Wikipedia repeatedly holds that Black Elk was and remained a Catholic and combined the two religions. (Which is impossible as one is Man-based; the other Nature based.
The book, Black Elk Flaming Rainbow, by Hilda Neihardt, Univ. Nebraska Press, reveals contrary wise. Hilda is the daughter of John Neihardt. She interviewed Lucy Looks Twice (Daughter of Nicholas Black Elk.) pg. 119, states that just prior to Black Elk death, he called for his peace pipe which symbolized the Lakota Sioux Spirituality/Religion and stated, "This was my way all along."
This declaration clearly refutes the constant attempt of Christian missionaries, notably the reservation established Jesuits, to use force and subterfuge to claim Black Elk as a Catholic adherent, especially neglecting his acts and attitude after becoming released from his captivity. Ben Black Elk, son of Nicholas and interpreter between Neihardt and B.E. stated to my mother and I the same declaration as Lucey regarding their father's declaration. The telling of the Vision states in itself that Black Elk was no longer a Catholic in that he and his verifiers never notified the controlling Jesuits the entire winter preceding Neihardt's planned visit to interview. Autumn, Neihardt came to the reservation and plans were made for his return the forthcoming summer. The following revisions of Black Elk Speaks after Neihardt's death are in error regarding the omission of Hilda's information. She also made her interview known to me and her son at her residence in Bancroft. Nebraska and was quite adamant about the omission of such along with other information taken by Raymond DeMallie, author of Sixth Grandfather. The revisions and DeMallies works avoids the Auschwitz, Buchenwald conditions backed up by U. S. Cavalry; Black Elk and the Sioux people faced under the controlling missionaries. Passes and badges were required to visit relatives within the large reservation. Food was scarce. Black Elk's fate would have doomed him to Canton as he was a well-known successful Spiritual Healer. The Jesuits attacked and broke down two of his healing ceremonies. The last one he was physically thrown into a wagon in the black of night by Fr, J. Ledebner, SJ, to be exorcised by one Fr. Joseph Zimmerman,SJ,. He no doubt received the word that he was bound for Canton had he resisted. More than one WWII Jewish person 'converted' under these conditions albeit temporary if they survived WW II incarceration.

A Federal, All Indian Insane Asylum (Canton)was successfully lobbied for by Christian missionaries and which native religious leaders (Holy Men) were incarcerated for life, 121 graves, now at Canton, SD golf course are proof. Missionaries went on to have all Indian Spirituality and ceremony Banned on Sioux reservations such was their allowed control. This unconstitutional, illegal Ban was finally removed by Congress due to Martin Luther King's Civil Rights Movement. A.I. M. as well. My forthcoming Book, Black Elk Speaks IV will elaborate. Publishers, University Presses are too cowardly to print my book which also warns of Climate Change which is omitted by the Revisions of BES. The original of BES clearly points out the forthcoming danger that is happening now. The Blue Man of Corruption. Planetary disaster and greed.

Note: Wikipedia is meant (hopefully) to be Truthful and Preserving Truth. I hope you take your work seriously and get free from the past advocacy wherein Christian White People have to have their history in accordance with how they want it; in particular zero Introspection regarding their proselytizing religion regardless of what damage it has done to the American Indian.
;Books of Black Elk's accounts
;Books of Black Elk's accounts
* ''[[Black Elk Speaks]]: being the life story of a holy man of the Oglala Sioux'' (as told to [[John Neihardt|John G. Neihardt]]), [[Bison Books]], 2004 (originally published in 1932) : [http://www.firstpeople.us/articles/Black-Elk-Speaks/Black-Elk-Speaks-Index.html ''Black Elk Speaks'']
* ''[[Black Elk Speaks]]: being the life story of a holy man of the Oglala Sioux'' (as told to [[John Neihardt|John G. Neihardt]]), [[Bison Books]], 2004 (originally published in 1932) : [http://www.firstpeople.us/articles/Black-Elk-Speaks/Black-Elk-Speaks-Index.html ''Black Elk Speaks'']

Revision as of 07:14, 25 February 2015

Black Elk
Black Elk (L) and Elk of the Oglala Lakota photographed in London, England in their grass dance regalia while touring with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, 1887
Black Elk (L) and Elk of the Oglala Lakota photographed in London, England in their grass dance regalia while touring with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, 1887
BornDecember 1, 1863 (1863-12)
Little Powder River, Wyoming
DiedAugust 19, 1950 (1950-08-20) (age 87)
Pine Ridge, South Dakota
Resting placeSaint Agnes Catholic Cemetery, Manderson, South Dakota
SpouseKatie War Bonnet (1892–1903)
Anna Brings White (1905–1941)
Ellen (?–1950)
ChildrenBenjamin (?–1973)
John
Lucy Looks Twice (?–1978)

Heȟáka Sápa (Black Elk) (December 1863 – August 19, 1950)[1] was a famous wičháša wakȟáŋ (medicine man and holy man) of the Oglala Lakota (Sioux). He was Heyoka and a second cousin of Crazy Horse.

Childhood

Black Elk was born in December 1863 along the Little Powder River (thought to be in the present-day state of Wyoming).[2]: 3  According to the Lakota way of measuring time, (referred to as Winter counts) Black Elk was born "the Winter When the Four Crows Were Killed on Tongue River".[2]: 101  In his early 40s in 1904, Black Elk was christened with the first name of Nicholas after becoming Catholic. When other medicine men would speak of him, such as his nephew Fools Crow, they would refer to him both as Black Elk and Nicholas Black Elk.[3]: 44 

Vision

When Black Elk was nine years old, he was suddenly taken ill and left prone and unresponsive for several days. During this time he had a great vision in which he was visited by the Thunder Beings (Wakinyan), and taken to the Grandfathers — spiritual representatives of the six sacred directions: west, east, north, south, above, and below. These "...spirits were represented as kind and loving, full of years and wisdom, like revered human grandfathers."[2]: preface  When he was seventeen, Black Elk told a medicine man, Black Road, about the vision in detail. Black Road and the other medicine men of the village were "astonished by the greatness of the vision."[2]: 6–7 

He had learned many things in his vision to help heal his people. He had come from a long line of medicine men and healers in his family; his father was a medicine man as were his paternal uncles. Late in his life as an elder, he related to John G. Neihardt the vision that occurred to him in which among other things he saw a great tree that symbolized the life of the earth and all people.[4] Neihardt recorded all of it in minute detail, and consequently it is preserved in various books today.

In his vision, Black Elk is taken to the center of the earth, and to the central mountain of the world. What mythologist Joseph Campbell explained as "the axis mundi, the central point, the pole around which all revolves...the point where stillness and movement are together..." Black Elk was residing at the axis of the six sacred directions. Campbell viewed Black Elk's statement as key to understanding myth and symbols.[5]

As Black Elk related:

And while I stood there I saw more than I can tell and understood more than I saw; for I was seeing in a sacred manner the shapes of all things in the spirit, and the shape of all shapes as they must live together like one being. And I saw that the sacred hoop of my people was one of many hoops that made one circle, wide as daylight and as starlight, and in the center grew one mighty flowering tree to shelter all the children of one mother and one father. And I saw that it was holy.[2]: intro., 97 

Black Elk had many visions throughout his life which reinforced what he had experienced as a boy, and he worked among his people as a healer and medicine man.

Wild West Show

In 1887, he traveled to England with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show,[6] an experience he described in chapter twenty of Black Elk Speaks .[7] On May 11, 1887, the troop put on a command performance for Queen Victoria, whom they called "Grandmother England." He also described being in the crowd at her Golden Jubilee.[8]

In spring 1888, the Wild West Show set sail for the United States. Black Elk became separated from the group and the ship left without him, stranding him with three other Lakota. They subsequently joined another wild west show and he spent the next year in Germany, France, and Italy. When Buffalo Bill arrived in Paris in May 1889, Black Elk obtained a ticket to return home to Pine Ridge, arriving in autumn of 1889. During his sojourn in Europe, Black Elk was given an "abundant opportunity to study the white man's way of life," and he learned to speak rudimentary English.[2]: 9 

For at least a decade, beginning in 1934, Black Elk returned to the work that he had done earlier in life with Buffalo Bill - organizing an Indian show in the Black Hills. Unlike the Wild West shows which were used to glorify Indian warfare, Black Elk's show was used primarily to teach tourists about Lakota culture and traditional sacred rituals - including the Sun Dance.[9]

Black Elk, daughter Lucy Black Elk and wife Anna Brings White photographed in their home in Manderson, South Dakota, about 1910

Wounded Knee

At Wounded Knee in 1890, while on horseback Black Elk charged soldiers and helped to rescue some of the wounded. He arrived after Spotted Elk's (Big Foot's) band of people had been shot and he was grazed by a bullet to his hip.[10]

Family

Black Elk married his first wife, Katie War Bonnet, in 1892. She became a Catholic, and all three of their children were baptized as Catholic. After her death in 1903, he became a Catholic in 1904, when he was christened with the name of Nicholas and later served as a catechist.[3]: 44  [2]: 14  Black Elk saw similarities between Christianity and the Lakota religion which allowed him to practice as a medicine man while also being Catholic. He was a leader in the revival of the Sun Dance (an important religious ceremony among several tribes) and its reinstatement in Lakota life. Lakota traditionalists now follow his version of the dance.[11] He continued to serve as a spiritual leader among his people, seeing no contradiction in embracing what he found valid in both his tribal traditions concerning Wakan Tanka and those of Christianity. He remarried in 1905 to Anna Brings White, a widow with two daughters. Together they had three more children and remained together until her death in 1941.

Toward the end of his life, Black Elk revealed the story of his life, and a number of sacred Sioux rituals to John G. Neihardt and Joseph Epes Brown for publication, and his accounts have won wide interest and acclaim.

Record

Since the 1970s the book Black Elk Speaks has become an important source for studying Native spirituality, sparking a renewal of interest in Native religions. Black Elk worked with John Neihardt to give a first-hand account of his experiences and that of the Lakota people. His son Ben would translate Black Elk's stories, which were then recorded by Neihardt's daughter Emid, who would then put them in chronological order for Neihardt's use.[11] Within the American Indian Movement Black Elk Speaks became an important source for those seeking religious and spiritual inspiration. They also sought Black Elk nephew and medicine man, Frank Fools Crow for information on Native traditions.[11]

Attempt to get thru to Wikipedia- Anyone with Computer Savvy try and get this message to them. I could not do it. Black Elk Speaks. John Neihardt- University Nebraska Press. 1932. Serious error regarding Black Elk of the famous book, Black Elk Speaks, Univ. Nebraska Press, Author John Neihardt. Wikipedia repeatedly holds that Black Elk was and remained a Catholic and combined the two religions. (Which is impossible as one is Man-based; the other Nature based. The book, Black Elk Flaming Rainbow, by Hilda Neihardt, Univ. Nebraska Press, reveals contrary wise. Hilda is the daughter of John Neihardt. She interviewed Lucy Looks Twice (Daughter of Nicholas Black Elk.) pg. 119, states that just prior to Black Elk death, he called for his peace pipe which symbolized the Lakota Sioux Spirituality/Religion and stated, "This was my way all along." This declaration clearly refutes the constant attempt of Christian missionaries, notably the reservation established Jesuits, to use force and subterfuge to claim Black Elk as a Catholic adherent, especially neglecting his acts and attitude after becoming released from his captivity. Ben Black Elk, son of Nicholas and interpreter between Neihardt and B.E. stated to my mother and I the same declaration as Lucey regarding their father's declaration. The telling of the Vision states in itself that Black Elk was no longer a Catholic in that he and his verifiers never notified the controlling Jesuits the entire winter preceding Neihardt's planned visit to interview. Autumn, Neihardt came to the reservation and plans were made for his return the forthcoming summer. The following revisions of Black Elk Speaks after Neihardt's death are in error regarding the omission of Hilda's information. She also made her interview known to me and her son at her residence in Bancroft. Nebraska and was quite adamant about the omission of such along with other information taken by Raymond DeMallie, author of Sixth Grandfather. The revisions and DeMallies works avoids the Auschwitz, Buchenwald conditions backed up by U. S. Cavalry; Black Elk and the Sioux people faced under the controlling missionaries. Passes and badges were required to visit relatives within the large reservation. Food was scarce. Black Elk's fate would have doomed him to Canton as he was a well-known successful Spiritual Healer. The Jesuits attacked and broke down two of his healing ceremonies. The last one he was physically thrown into a wagon in the black of night by Fr, J. Ledebner, SJ, to be exorcised by one Fr. Joseph Zimmerman,SJ,. He no doubt received the word that he was bound for Canton had he resisted. More than one WWII Jewish person 'converted' under these conditions albeit temporary if they survived WW II incarceration.

A Federal, All Indian Insane Asylum (Canton)was successfully lobbied for by Christian missionaries and which native religious leaders (Holy Men) were incarcerated for life, 121 graves, now at Canton, SD golf course are proof. Missionaries went on to have all Indian Spirituality and ceremony Banned on Sioux reservations such was their allowed control. This unconstitutional, illegal Ban was finally removed by Congress due to Martin Luther King's Civil Rights Movement. A.I. M. as well. My forthcoming Book, Black Elk Speaks IV will elaborate. Publishers, University Presses are too cowardly to print my book which also warns of Climate Change which is omitted by the Revisions of BES. The original of BES clearly points out the forthcoming danger that is happening now. The Blue Man of Corruption. Planetary disaster and greed.

Note: Wikipedia is meant (hopefully) to be Truthful and Preserving Truth. I hope you take your work seriously and get free from the past advocacy wherein Christian White People have to have their history in accordance with how they want it; in particular zero Introspection regarding their proselytizing religion regardless of what damage it has done to the American Indian.

Books of Black Elk's accounts
Books about Black Elk
  • Black Elk: Holy Man of the Oglala, by Michael F. Steltenkamp, University of Oklahoma Press; 1993. ISBN 0-8061-2541-1
  • Nicholas Black Elk: Medicine Man, Missionary, Mystic, by Michael F. Steltenkamp, University of Oklahoma Press; 2009. ISBN 0-8061-4063-1
  • The Sixth Grandfather: Black Elk's Teachings Given to John G. Neihardt, edited by Raymond J. DeMallie; 1985
  • Black Elk and Flaming Rainbow: Personal Memories of the Lakota Holy Man, by Hilda Neihardt, University of Nebraska Press, 2006. ISBN 0-8032-8376-8
  • Black Elk’s Religion: The Sun Dance and Lakota Catholicism, by Clyde Holler, Syracuse University Press; 1995
  • Black Elk: Colonialism and Lakota Catholicism, by Damian Costello
  • Black Elk Reader, edited by Clyde Holler, Syracuse University Press; 2000

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Sources differ
  2. ^ a b c d e f g DeMallie, Raymond J (1984). The Sixth Grandfather: Black Elk's teachings given to John G. Neihardt. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-1664-5.
  3. ^ a b Mails, Thomas E. (1979). Fools Crow. Garden City, NJ: Doubleday. ISBN 0385113323.
  4. ^ Neihardt, John, ed., Black Elk Speaks, annotated edition, published by SUNY, 2008, p. 33.
  5. ^ Campbell, Joseph (1991). The Power of Myth (with Bill Moyers). Anchor Books edition (non-illustrated smaller-format edition). p. 111. ISBN 0 385 41886 8.
  6. ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/manchester/content/articles/2005/07/28/buffalo_bill_salford_280705_feature.shtml "Tracking the Salford Sioux"]
  7. ^ Black Elk Speaks
  8. ^ "When she came to where we were, her wagon stopped and she stood up. Then all those people stood up and roared and bowed to her: but she bowed to us." Neihardt, John, ed., Black Elk Speaks, annotated edition, published by SUNY, 2008, pp. 176-177.
  9. ^ John G. Neihardt (1 August 2008). Black Elk Speaks: Being the Life Story of a Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux. SUNY Press. p. 313. ISBN 978-1-4384-2538-2. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  10. ^ John Gneisenau Neihardt (1985). The Sixth Grandfather: Black Elk's Teachings Given to John G. Neihardt. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 274–. ISBN 0-8032-6564-6.
  11. ^ a b c Clyde Holler (2000). The Black Elk Reader. Syracuse University Press. pp. 39–. ISBN 978-0-8156-2836-1. Retrieved 24 February 2013. Cite error: The named reference "Holler2000" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).

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