“My soul thirsts for God, for the living God.
When can I go and meet with God?”
The Ghost Dance, one of the saddest religions of all time,
was a frenetic hobgoblin of Christianity, mysticism, Native ritual, and sheer
desperation that swept Native life throughout the American west in the final
years of the 19th century.
Wovoka, a Piute holy man, saw the original vision, then
designed the ritual from his own revelation. Erect a sapling in an open area, a familiar symbol from rituals like the
Sun Dance, which was, back then, outlawed by reservation agents. Purge yourselves—enter sweat lodges,
prostrate yourself before Wakan Tanka, the Great Mysterious, to witness
to your humility. Often warriors would cut out pieces of their own flesh and
lay them at the base of that sapling to bear witness to their
selflessness.
Then dance—women and men together—dance around that sapling,
dance and dance and dance and don’t stop until you fall from physical
exhaustion and spiritual plenitude.
Dance until the mind numbs and the spirit emerges. Dance into frenzy. Dance into religious ecstasy.
If they would dance, Wovoka claimed Christ would return
because he’d heard their prayers and felt their suffering. When he’d come, he’d bring the old ones with
him, hence, “the Ghost Dance.” The
buffalo would return, and once again the people could take up their beloved way
of life. If they would dance, the dust
from the new heaven and the new earth would swallow the wasicu, the
white people. If they would dance, their
hunger would be satiated, their thirst assuaged, their sadness comforted.
“The great underlying principle of the Ghost dance
doctrine,” says James Mooney, “is that the whole Indian race, living and dead,
will be reunited upon a regenerated earth, to live a life of aboriginal
happiness, forever free from death, disease, and misery.”
It was that simple and that compelling a
vision.
As a white Christian, I am ashamed to admit that in the
summer of 1890, the desperation of Native people, fueled by poverty,
malnutrition, and the near death of a culture, created a religion that played a
disturbing role in the massacre at Wounded Knee.
It’s not hard to read the opening two verses of
Psalm 42 if we’ve never felt the thirst David is talking about. But it’s helpful for me, a white Christian,
to know the story of the Ghost Dance, to understand how thirstily Native people
looked to a God who had seemingly left them behind. They were dying,
spiritually and physically.
That’s why the thirsty four-leggeds here would make sense to
Native people—why, back then, they would have understood the opening bars of
David’s song.
What’s at the bottom of this lament is nothing less than
God’s apparent absence.
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