Chapter One
INDIAN MEDICINE
Wisdom begins in wonder.
-Socrates
May is a delightful time to visit the Wichita Mountains in southwestern
Oklahoma. The little bluestem, the big bluestem, switch, Indian, and grama
grasses are green after their winter sleep, and the wildflowers display a
variety of colors. Groves of post oak, blackjack, and eastern red cedar dot the
landscape. Countless birds, including rare black-capped vireos, search for
nourishment. Everywhere there is a promise of nurture and it warms the soul, as
do the warm and gentle breezes from the south. The Wichita Mountains are about
300 million years old, and among the oldest mountain ranges on earth. They
consist of two rugged ranges of red granite reaching nearly 2,500 feet at the
highest point. They run several miles east and west and enclose a natural
prairie where buffalo, elk, prairie dogs, and other wildlife still roam in what
is today the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge administered by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. While the Wichitas may lack the majesty of the Rocky
Mountains, they are impressive islands projecting upward from a sea of rolling
prairie.
The Wichitas are rich in lore which includes legends of Indian battles and
Spanish treasure. The Spanish penetrated the area in the 1600s, and French
traders first traversed the region during the 1770s. Long before the first
Europeans arrived, Indians found protection from their enemies in the Wichitas.
They also found solace at what is called Medicine Bluff, located near the
eastern edge of the mountains. The bluff rises three hundred feet above a creek
whose waters were thought by Indians to have special qualities.
Indians-Wichitas, Comanches, and Kiowas-most likely named the bluff in their
native languages, designing it as a place of mystery with great spiritual
powers. The first white men in the area named it Medicine Bluff after learning
of this Indian belief. The word medicine probably derived from é, the
French word for physician, which early French fur traders would have introduced
into North America. The term was widely applied by whites. In time, Indians used
the word to identify their own healing methods and spiritual mysteries.
Medicine Bluff is just one of countless natural places with distinctive features
that Indians believed had special spiritual power because they could not
rationally explain why they existed. Such natural places conveyed to them the
essence of a religious experience but were not actually worshipped. Not all
things with spiritual power, to be sure, were natural. Indians created smoking
pipes, bundles, and other objects that became sacred and powerful once the
makers performed special rituals to imbue them with qualities of sacredness or
good medicine. For the American Indian, almost anything could attain such a
therapeutic or mystical quality, emphasizing how great a role spiritual power
plays in Indian medicine.
In “Letter Six” of his Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Conditions
of North American Indians (1844), the artist George Catlin noted that “Indian
country is full of doctors, and as they are all magicians, and skilled, or
profess to be skilled in many mysteries, the word ‘medicine’ has become
habitually applied to every thing mysterious or unaccountable and the English
and Americans … have easily and familiarly adopted the same word, with a slight
alteration, conveying the same meaning; and to be a little more explicit, they
have denominated these personages ‘medicine-men,’ which means something more
than merely a doctor or physician.”
Catlin related that every Plains Indian male has a medicine bag. When a boy is
fourteen or fifteen, he leaves his father’s lodge, locates a secluded spot,
cries out to the Great Spirit, and fasts. At night, he sleeps on the ground. He
may stay there from two to five days, or until he dreams of an animal, bird, or
reptile in his sleep. He believes the first such creature to appear to him in a
dream is his protector for life, so designated by the Great Spirit. The young
Indian then returns to the lodge of his father, tells of his dream, breaks his
fast, and leaves again to find and kill the animal, bird, or reptile in
question. After killing it, he skins it and uses the full skin to fashion his
medicine bag, which he stuffs with grass, or moss, or something of the kind. He
then closes it and will rarely open it again. He will carry the bag throughout
his life, frequently paying homage to it and looking to it for safety and
protection. Catlin saw medicine bags made from a variety of creatures, including
otter, beaver, muskrat, weasel, raccoon, skunk, frog, toad, bat, mouse, mole,
hawk, eagle, magpie, sparrow, and even a wolf. The size of the skin determines
the size of the bag. When its owner dies, the medicine bag is placed with his
remains.
Indians practiced their medicine long before Christopher Columbus arrived in
1492. Believing he had reached the Indies, Columbus called the natives Indians,
a name that stuck. Since most native cultures in North America were exclusively
oral, the recorded history of Indian medicine begins with the arrival of the
Europeans and their written observations. One exception was the Aztecs in what
is now Mexico, who did have written records. After the Spanish arrived in 1519,
however, most of these records were destroyed with great zeal. The Spanish did
express their amazement at the Aztecs’ vast knowledge of medicinal plants, and
noted that their practice of medicine was an intrinsic part of their spiritual
life.
At the time, Europeans used the word medicine to describe any substance,
regimen, or physical procedure that had a beneficial effect on the human body
and restored health, and they viewed medicine as separate from religion. Among
Indians, however, their medicine encompassed much more. “While they used herbal
remedies to treat simple physical conditions such as burns, broken bones, sore
eyes, and dislocations, the majority of Indian medicine was used to cure
conditions which had no obvious physical cause,” writes one authority, Clara Sue
Kidwell. “Symptoms included not only overt aches and pains, but could include
what modern medicine might term neuroses, any behavior that was excessive or out
of the ordinary…. Illness is a matter of balance and harmony with one’s
physical surroundings, spiritual environment, and social group. Thus, it goes
far beyond mere physical symptoms. If one’s balance is disturbed (witchcraft is
a good example of how fear of an individual as a witch can have a disruptive
effect in a group of people), illness results.”
Eric Stone, a Rhode Island physician, wrote in 1932 that Indian “mythology and
theology are peculiarly rich and endowed with an unexpected symbolism and
beauty, bespeaking an unusual ability to express their emotional and esthetic
appreciation of their all-important physical environment. Their métier was not
pictorial, but lay, on the one hand, in decorative design and, on the other, in
a wealth of folklore and poetry.”
Anthropologists, ethnologists, and historians tell us that early Indian medicine
was closely tied to their reverence for nature and its supernatural powers.
Indians lived most of their lives out of doors, and nature charmed them, but, as
Clara Sue Kidwell points out, “Nature is threatening as often as it is
benevolent. Ceremonies were held to restore balance that had been disrupted, or
to assure that balance continued and nature produced the results that the people
desired. The natural environment of the Great Plains was a source of spiritual
power for individuals through vision quests, but vision questing required the
endurance of pain and physical deprivation-sleep, food, water. Going alone into
special places where spirits were thought to make their presence known was a way
of acquiring access to that power. Going alone into the environment could also
be a source of illness if one encountered a spiritual being without proper
preparation.”
In most tribes, the principal person overseeing such matters was a medicine man
or sometimes a medicine woman. After the arrival of the Spanish in the
Southwest, this person was often called a curandero (or curandera), but
ethnologists have sometimes used the Asian term shaman, defined by
Merriam-Webster as a priest or priestess who uses magic for curing the sick.
Kidwell, however, points out that a shaman or medicine man’s role is not just in
healing, nor is it necessarily one of high prestige. The shaman or medicine
man/woman supposedly had learned to control and use the spiritual power of
nature. At the same time it followed for the people who believed in his or her
powers that those powers might be used to do harm as well as to help. Moreover,
Kidwell added that “being a shaman is also a dangerous position for the
individual who must confront the power that is causing the illness and uses his
or her power to exorcise it or bring it under control. If the curer’s power
weakens, the illness may affect him or her.”
Whatever their title, such individuals received what others believed was a
vision or a deep spiritual insight into their patients. They never lost sight of
the spiritual side of health and disease, realizing the power of the mind. Most
were viewed as wise, as knowing the secrets of healing, and as visionaries who
mastered death. They were thought to be able to go into a trance, leave their
bodies, and visit unearthly kingdoms. Some were also poets and singers who
danced and created works of art. Their medicine simply denoted a spiritual power
used for many purposes including healing with natural herbs and plants.
The role of the shaman varied from tribe to tribe. The Harvard anthropologist
Roland B. Dixon wrote in 1908 that in numerous instances the position of shaman
descended by inheritance in either the male or the female line, depending upon
the prevailing tribal system of descent. In most cases, it was mandatory that
the person in line for the position accept it and the duties and
responsibilities that went with it. If the person refused to do so, Dixon said,
tradition had it that spirits would punish him or her in the form of sickness or
death.
In some tribes, young Indians wishing to possess medicine were severely tested.
In 1858, Thomas Kennard described such a test as carried out among various
tribes:
At a certain period of each year, all young braves, who are ambitious to become
great or medicine men, assemble and go through the horrible ordeal which is to
render them immortal…. After three or four days of fasting, praying and
privation, and after having witnessed all the mysterious movements of those
advanced in the science, the ambitious young men present themselves for the last
and most trying test of greatness. They enter the great medicine lodge, where
the ceremonies have been celebrated for four days, and place themselves in a
reclining position, when immediately the executioners commence their work, by
pinching up an inch or two of the integument and pectoralis major muscle on each
side, and thrusting a ragged knife through the flesh beneath the fingers; after
which skewers are passed through the wounds thus made. A similar operation is
performed in several places over the trapezius muscle, and often on the front
part of the thigh, the leg or the forearm. To these skewers or sticks, passed
beneath the integument and through the muscles, cords are attached, by means of
which the candidates are raised clear of the ground, and left dangling until
apparently dead, having fainted repeatedly. They are then lowered down and left
without the slightest aid or comfort until reaction takes place, when heavy
weights, such as buffalo heads, are attached to the skewers and kept dragging on
the ground or suspended in the air as the poor sufferers are hurried from place
to place, until they are torn loose by their own weight, or by being caught in
some way as they madly rush over the plains around the encampment. The Sioux
have even a more refined process of testing or torturing the ambitious than that
just described as common to most North American Indians. They pass skewers
through the pectoral muscles as above mentioned, and then fasten their victims
to a strong sapling just stiff enough to raise them on tiptoe, in which
position, with the head thrown back, they are compelled to gaze at the shining
sun from its rising to its setting; and if one faints or falls whilst undergoing
the trial before the sun has disappeared, he is forever disgraced as a man
without medicine.
Among the Apaches, the shamans or medicine men usually acted as individuals, but
among the Pawnees, Zuñis, and a few other tribes, they were organized in one or
more societies and kept their secrets concealed from people at large. An
herbalist was consulted for less serious health problems. If the herbalist
failed to relieve symptoms, a “hand trembler,” or diviner, was called in. If the
patient still did not show signs of improvement, a medicine man would finally be
summoned. Healers in all tribes, however, did have one thing in common: they had
complete and sincere faith in their practice and took great pride in their work
as healers.
Unlike native peoples elsewhere in the world, most early American Indians did
not stress ancestor worship; but many Indian peoples believed that if the dead
were not properly buried, their spirits would haunt those responsible and bring
illness and other misfortunes upon the living. Some believed that if a person
entered an area haunted by such spirits, he would soon die, and if a dead
relative called to you in a dream, you would soon die. In some tribes, it was
the custom to wear small medicine bags of herbs and roots next to the body to
ward off bad spirits-which might take the form of owls or wolves-and the
illnesses they could cause.
Many Indians saw enemies or bad spirits as the cause of illness, but the healing
methods used by medicine men varied from tribe to tribe. The medicine man would
usually conduct a ceremony that supposedly created magical power to effect a
cure, or that called upon spirits to aid a sufferer. From his medicine bundle,
usually made of animal skin, he might produce a charm or fetish such as a deer
tail, bird feather, or bone, and sometimes the stomach of a buffalo or other
animal. He might use a medicine stick to serve as an offering, a warning, or an
invitation.
Nearly all Indians subscribed to a particular notion of how human or spirit
enemies did their work, specifically, that “disease was due to the presence in
the body of some tangible, albeit mysterious, object placed there magically by a
sorcerer or inimical spirit.”
It was then the medicine man’s responsibility to extract this harmful object
from the body of the patient, and this was usually accomplished by sleight of
hand. The object might be a bone fragment, stone, thorn, hair, or even a tiny
worm or small animal. Before removing it, the medicine man might blow on the
person’s body, make a small incision, or use a feather, the tip of which was
placed on the body while holding the other end in his mouth. Once removed, the
object might be shown to the patient and others as proof the medicine had
worked. The medicine man would then destroy the object by burning it, swallowing
it, tossing it into running water, or burying it in the ground.
(Continues…)
Excerpted from Frontier Medicine
by David Dary
Copyright © 2008 by David Dary.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Knopf
Copyright © 2008
David Dary
All right reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-307-26345-2



