Photos courtesy Jim Jandreau/Bear Butte Park Manager Bear Butte Mountain: A beautiful, sacred site in South Dakota
By
Vincent Schilling, Today correspondent
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“You cannot take away the spirituality of this mountain, which is its true draw. That is its true magnificence. For everybody that comes here, I believe it is different. No two people that come here have the same experience.”
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The story continues with the bear’s body disappearing, and in place of the bear was a hill in the shape of the bear’s sleeping body which continued to rumble and smolder.
To the native Lakota, Bear Butte has long been a place to hold council meetings and ceremonies such as vision quests and Sun dances. In the mid-1800s the father of Crazy Horse, a great holy man, climbed Bear Butte to seek spiritual guidance on a vision quest.
It has been said that Wakantanka appeared before the holy man in the form of a bear and gave him power to overcome obstacles and defeat his enemies. Crazy Horse’s father asked that the same gifts also be given to his son. After this bestowment, the mountain was known as Bear Butte or Mata Paha.
The history of Bear Butte is rich, as well as literal, artifacts dating back 10,000 years have been discovered near it. Tipi rings have been found along Bear Butte’s perimeter, as well as rocks the Sioux once placed along the mountain’s summit to establish claims to the land, to mark distance
or to offer prayers.
Many note a profound spiritual connection when visiting the site.
Jim Jandreau, who was born and raised on the Lower Brule Sioux in South Dakota is the first American Indian park manager at Bear Butte State park. Jandreau admits that although the sites of Bear Butte are majestic, the profound connection to spiritual matters are much more prevalent.
“You cannot take away the spirituality of this mountain, which is its true draw. That is its true magnificence. For everybody that comes here, I believe it is different. No two people that come here have the same experience.”
Jandreau said Bear Butte is open to anyone who wishes to visit.
“The medicine men that practice here and bring their people here to worship will all tell you that this mountain is not exclusive to only Indian people praying. Anybody who comes in the right mind and the right heart with prayer on their lips, with humbleness is welcome. When you go to that area with that humbleness then we are all truly equal.”
Bear Butte has long been the subject of preserving sacred sites by American Indian artists. Award-winning American Indian musician Michael Bucher, Cherokee, whose song off his “Seven” album entitled “Dirty Water” fights for the preservation of the site.
“I went to Bear Butte Mountain and climbed along the trails to look at the view and to feel the sanctity of the place. You can see buffalo at the base of Bear Butte and see prayer flags all over the trees. They are tobacco cloth offerings. Some of the multi-colored ribbons are old and faded and some of the flags are on trees that have been uprooted by the weather. It all adds to the holiness of the place that so many prayers for hundreds of years have been prayed there,”
Bucher said.
Both Bucher and Jandreau said that though visitors may go for the simple beauty of Bear Butte or to hike the trails that were once traversed by Indian people so many years ago, visitors leave with much more than they may have anticipated.
“Everyone that comes off this mountain, it doesn’t matter if they are Indian or non-Indian or what tribe they are from, when they come away from this mountain, and go to see that medicine man interpreter about their vision, none of them will ever be the same,” Jandreau said. “People who come here are changed spiritually and morally. They may not know it when they drive out of the gate, but that stays with them.”
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Sunday, May 10 at 2:43 AM Native NDN wrote ...
There are many significant religious sites located in the West, most notable in sparse population areas. Today, tribes maintain ties to the value of these locations, but have learned not to publicly acknowledge or commercialize most, in order to preserve their desecration by public curiosity. Only during total destruction from proposed mining, commercial development, etc., these sites become known; but is normally viewed as primitive and undocumented defense by the aggressor and courts.
21211224Thursday, Apr 9 at 10:23 AM White-Bear wrote ...
May you walk in beauty White-Bear Apache Elder
19337327Thursday, Apr 9 at 9:03 AM Matthew king wrote ...
Hau Jim Jandreau, it's waste aloh that this wakan site remains so, and that there are Native park wardens like yourself there to work in them, can we use this article in our news letters in the UK ? reply to wind.runner@live .co.uk, pilamaye, toksa ehakela kola
19332672Tuesday, Apr 7 at 12:20 PM Dick Brown, Development Director, SD Parks and Wildlife Foundation wrote ...
Congratulations on this excellent article about Bear Butte Mountain, Jim Jandreau, Bear Butte State Park manager and Michael Bucher. The South Dakota Parks and Wildlife Foundation's highest priority project in 2009 is to secure matching funds that will purchase conservation scenic easements to protect Bear Butte, a national, historic landmark and Native American sacred site. We seek the thoughtful support of all who will help protect and preserve this sacred site. Dick Brown
19229736Tuesday, Apr 7 at 10:31 AM Protect Bear Butte! wrote ...
For more information about the ONGOING EFFORTS to Protect Bear Butte, please visit our website at www.protectbearbutte.com We need everyone's efforts to help protect Bear Butte from the continual desacration that is occuring and only getting worse each year.
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