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The Omaha Tribal Powwow


Article # : 17220 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 2 / 1990  4,412 Words
Author : Roger L. Welsch
Plains folklorist Roger L. Welsch is professor of English and anthropology at the University of Nebraska.

       America's festival celebrations usually represent a long historical tradition, often rooted in premigration cultures. The very name Easter (from the fertility goddess Ishtar) and its attendant symbols (eggs and rabbits) leave little doubt about the origins of that now-Christian holiday.
       
        We think of Thanksgiving as a distinctly American celebration, but the Pilgrims were only continuing a tradition they had long known in England - Harvest Home.
       
        The Fourth of July? It is a date with potent historical significance, of course, but peoples all over the world celebrate with fireworks, food, and picnicking at roughly the same time. Not because of America's patriotic observation but because it is the approximate time of St. John's Day, the summer solstice. No matter how insistent we are that this is an American holiday, we must recognize that we are behaving within a much larger human framework.
       
        There is one distinct, unique, perhaps unlikely American festival, however - the tribal powwow. Most American Indian groups that have managed to maintain cultural vitality gather once a year to recharge their cultural batteries, to sing and dance, to eat and laugh, to celebrate family and community, to remember and renew. Tribes that have fragmented and weakened sometime join with other tribes to ensure that they will continue to play a role in the annual celebrations, whether or not they are specific to their own origins.
       
        On the Plains, powwows (and similar celebrations under other labels) usually occur from mid-summer to mid-fall and therefore are probably recognitions of the autumnal equinox, a worldwide phenomenon. In the Southwest it may be the Corn Dance, a midwinter ritual, that serves as an annual gathering time and thereby serves as an observation of he winter solstice, but the particulars of such events, whatever solar events they may celebrate, are distinctly American.
       
        Powwows are generally ignored by academic anthropologists and historians, and that's not surprising. Last August I spent several days at the Omaha Indian Powwow, and as I looked around me I tried to imagine what conventional students of culture would see and think.
       
        Cultural decay or dynamic change?
       
        Omaha Indians who work each day as hard-hatted laborers, bureaucrats in
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