Spiritual Forums

Home


Donate!


Articles


CHAT!


Shop


 
Welcome to Spiritual Forums!.

We created this community for people from all backgrounds to discuss Spiritual, Paranormal, Metaphysical, Philosophical, Supernatural, and Esoteric subjects. From Astral Projection to Zen, all topics are welcome. We hope you enjoy your visits.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest, which gives you limited access to most discussions and articles. By joining our free community you will be able to post messages, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos, and gain access to our Chat Rooms, Registration is fast, simple, and free, so please, join our community today! !

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, check our FAQs before contacting support. Please read our forum rules, since they are enforced by our volunteer staff. This will help you avoid any infractions and issues.

Go Back   Spiritual Forums > Religions & Faiths > North American Indigenous Spirituality

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 30-03-2012, 11:30 PM
Wisa'ka
Posts: n/a
 
Okipa

Unlike their Siouan speaking kin and often enemies, the Lakota, the Mandan were sedentary, dwelling in large villages of roomy earth lodges surrounded by palisades. Said to have once lived in Ohio, Indiana and Wisconsin, like other Siouan tribes, they were pushed across the Mississippi by Algonquian and long range marauding Iroquoian warriors. Warring with other tribes across the Mississippi River, the Mandan slowly migrated up the Missouri River into what is now North Dakota. While many of these sedentary former woodland Indians such as the Absaroka, Cheyenne and Lakota ‘forgot the corn’ and took to full time Buffalo hunting, even more so after the re-introduction of the horse to the Great Plains, the Mandan along with the Arikara, Hidatsa and Pawnee remained village dwelling farmers and part time hunters.

When early 18th century French traders encountered the Mandan, the tribe, it was said to had numbered several thousand living in villages along the upper Missouri River. The French also reported these Mandan already owned horses. In 1804, Mandan hospitality, sheltered and fed the Lewis and Clark expedition. Almost 30 years later the Mandan were visited by early American artist George Catlin.

From that first French encounter to 1837, The Mandan were greatly reduced by several smallpox epidemics, the last one almost over night leaving only 130 people alive out of around 2000.

Out of all the explorers and traders, George Catlin described these Mandan and their culture through his journal and paintings. In recording this culture, Catlin also went into some detail concerning the Mandan’s most important ceremony - Okipa or Okeepa.

The four day Okipa ceremony opened by a spiritual leader acting as the ’Lone Man’, recited Mandan history and legend before a long dance by the Buffalo Society.

Inside the large Okipa lodge there were young men who had been fasting and readying themselves for ritual torture overseen by a medicine man known as Speckled Eagle and his assistants. Skewered through the chest, back, sometimes arms and thighs, they were suspended from roof beams and weighed down by buffalo skulls suspended from them, They hung until loosing consciousness or having the skewers tear free. Upon the floor they would have visions and often had Speckled Eagle chop off one or more of their fingers as an offering to the spirits. Returning to consciousness, the young men were dragged out of the Okipa lodge and raced around the Buffalo Dancers.

The Okipa ceremony not only introduced boys into manhood, it also called in the buffalo and insured a good harvest along with overall prosperity.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 01-04-2012, 02:13 PM
RiversLady
Posts: n/a
 
I always wondered who invented this ceremony. What a way to have a vision quest!
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 01-04-2012, 02:51 PM
Wisa'ka
Posts: n/a
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by RiversLady
I always wondered who invented this ceremony. What a way to have a vision quest!

This ceremony had probably been with them since they lived east of the Mississippi River, but was somewhat modified to befit their life out on the plains. Historians and anthropologists put them with either the H0-Chunk (Winnebago) or Oneota culture formerly of the Osage, Ioway and other Siouan people who were once the part of the Mississippian mound building culture. Some tribes use to call them the Sioux who live underground refering to their earth lodge dwellings.

Some say they have the blood of legendary Prince Madoc and his Welsh colony as early explorers noted that a few of these Mandan had light hair and eyes.

Many tribal vision quests involved such hardship and pain involving long periods of preperation.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 05:41 AM.


Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
(c) Spiritual Forums