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J.C.
Allen-Tackett dances at the UW Winter Pow Wow. All photos
by Karen Orders. |
The drum beat is strong
and steady. Dancers in colorful regalia move slowly across the dance
floor. Women grasp the edges of their shawls, spreading them wide
to display stunning designs. Men adorned with eagle feathers step
in rhythm, their feathers swaying with each movement. The smell
of fried bread fills the air.
At a pow wow, the senses
are always engaged.
Each year the UW holds
two pow wows celebrating Native American cultures. The more informal
event is in January; the larger Spring Pow Wow in April is a huge
affair, attracting thousands to Hec Edmundson Pavilion. The events
are hosted by First
Nations@UW, a student group.
There’s also a
course about pow wow, offered by American
Indian Studies in conjunction with First Nations@UW. The course
covers the history and significance of pow wow and serves as an
internship for students organizing the annual events.
“It was important
for the class to be tied directly to implementation of pow wow,”
says Tom Colonnese, professor of American Indian studies, who teaches
the course. “You can learn about pow wow from class and movies,
but like most things, you don’t really get it without being
there yourself. It’s a visceral experience. You feel the drums
as well as hear the drums. You need to experience pow wow to really
learn about it.”
Colonnese explains that
the term “pow wow” is believed to come from the Algonquian
word ‘pauau,’ or gathering. The English who witnessed
‘pauau’ heard it as ‘pow wow’ and the term
stuck. But this historical note, like most aspects of pow wow, is
subject to debate.
“Many elements
of the history of pow wow—where things come from, what they
mean—are controversial,” says Colonnese. “If you
ask different dancers about a dance, you’re likely to get
a different answer from each person. That’s because there
is no such thing as ‘Indian.’ It’s a European
construction. It’s an attempt to put one name over 500 different
cultures. And each one has different beliefs about the dances.”
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At
the Winter Pow Wow, Stacey Goodbuffalo danced in a colorful
shawl of butterflies. |
Most agree, however,
that the earliest dances celebrated two things: the natural world
and successful hunts. They were usually danced in the spring, when
large groups reunited after separating into smaller hunting bands
for the winter. Dances celebrating success in warfare were introduced
later, in the 1600s. “One of the earliest of these was the
‘grass dance,’” says Colonnese. “These dances
were done on prairies with tall grass that they had to beat down
to create a dance floor.”
Pow wow has continued
to evolve, with ‘fancy dancing’—the fastest and
most colorful style of dance—joining the repertoire in the
1800s. “Some say that ‘fancy dancing’ grew out
of Indian dancing in Wild West shows, where the Indians were asked
to make the dances and outfits fancier,” says Colonnese. “Others
argue that it was the Indian dancers themselves who wanted to change.
I suspect it was a bit of both. We continue to see change.”
Although pow wows now
attract huge audiences, there was a time when the celebrations were
outlawed by the U.S. government as part of a larger movement to
assimilate Native Americans. Pow wows returned after World War I
(or World War II, depending on whom you ask), became more popular
in the 1960s as Americans embraced ethnic identity, and continue
to grow in popularity. Last year, the UW’s three-day Spring
Pow Wow attracted
4,000 visitors.
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Detail of a traditional bustle of eagle feathers, worn by
a male dancer. |
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“A lot of Indian
students, if you ask them about the first time they were on the
UW campus, will say it was at a pow wow,” says Colonnese.
“And a lot of their parents consider it important that the
UW has this respect for Indian culture. The pow wow is, among other
things, a way for us to recruit Native students.”
Mona Daniels, a social
work major, grew up going to pow wows. “My father brought
me and my siblings to pow wows every summer in Idaho, Washington,
and Montana,” she recalls. “I started dancing when I
was five years old. One of my older sisters was a fancy dancer,
and that was the kind of dance that I wanted to do. I got my Indian
name, Lil’ Yellow Bird, from a pow wow. I had a little yellow
shawl and people said when I danced I looked like a little yellow
bird jumping around the dance floor.”
Daniels and Jim La Roche,
an anthropology major, are serving as teaching assistants for the
pow wow class, which both have taken. They also hold leadership
roles with First Nations@UW.
La Roche attended pow
wows as a child but had no idea what went into planning one. Organizing
a pow wow, he says, has been a revelation. “When you’re
working it, you realize what a huge effort it is,” he says.
“The Spring Pow Wow is a year-long effort, starting with overall
planning and then getting into details. There is a cultural side
but also a business side to the event, and I’ve enjoyed that.”
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Tom
Colonnese (left) and Mona Daniels share a moment with Winter
Pow Wow emcee Dave Browneagle in the UW's HUB Ballroom. |
When Daniels and La Roche
took the pow wow course, it was a small class mostly attended by
Native American students. It now attracts 150 students—with
more on the waiting list—from diverse backgrounds. “This
may be the only chance for some of these students to interact with
Native peoples,” says La Roche. “We hope they will understand
us a little more as a result. We’re one of the smallest populations
on campus, but we’re very visible. We’re not going to
be forgotten.” Adds Colonnese, “I suspect that the students
learn more from their Indian classmates than from all my lectures
and course materials.”
Just as the class is
open to all students, the pow wow welcomes the whole community.
Daniels and La Roche want people to know that it is not a Native-only
event. “Come, buy a piece of fried bread, and stay a few hours,”
says La Roche. “It’s a great celebration.”
For those who need more
convincing, consider Daniels’ touching description of what
pow wow means to her: “Pow
wows are time for me to heal myself. When I hear the drums and watch
the dancers, I automatically feel happier. They are a time for me
to reunite with old friends and family and make new friends. I was
always told that when I dance, I am not only dancing for myself;
I am dancing for my elders and those who can no longer dance, for
loved ones who have passed away into the other world, and for my
family. Pow wow is a part of my heart’s joy.”
The UW
Spring Pow Wow will be held April 14-16, 2006 in Hec Edmundson Pavilion.
For details, visit students.washington.edu/fnuw
or send email to fnuw@u.washington.edu.
[Winter-Spring 2006 - Table of Contents]
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