Historical dictionary of shamanism

MEDICINE WHEEL

Medicine Wheel: translation

The term was first applied to the Big Horn Medicine Wheel monument andsacred siteon Medicine Mountain, part of northern Wyoming’s Big Horn Range. The wheel consists of an 80-foot-diameter circular arrangement of stones, with 28 rows of stones radiating from the center to form spokes that meet an encircling stone rim. There are five smaller stone circles around the wheel’s periphery. It is thought to have been built around 200 years ago byNative Americans, with the 28 spokes symbolizing the days of a lunar month. As a more general concept, the medicine wheel has come to refer to a set of Native American teachings based around the construction of a hoop with four quarters and/or six cardinal directions representing creation and (human andother-than-human) people’s relation to it.The precise correspondences vary from tribe to tribe and the medicine wheel has become an important symbol of pan-Indian identity.
Sun Bear(Vincent LaDuke), allegedly ofOjibweand EuroAmerican descent, who founded the Bear Tribe Medicine Society, hadvisionsdirecting him to share the teachings of the medicine wheel with Natives and, controversially, non-Natives. At medicine wheel gatherings, participants can undertakesweat lodges, pipe rituals, and crystalhealingceremonies, all themes from Plains Indian and Ojibwe traditions adapted by Sun Bear and fused withenvironmentalismandNew Ageself-help andtherapeuticthemes to form the “medicine wheel teachings.” Sun Bear’s teachings have inspired countless people and provided them with empowering methods for living their lives in a “sacred manner,” but Métis teachers like Sun Bear have been ostracized and criticized by Native American activists (especially among theAmerican Indian Movement) who question his ancestry and the authenticity of his teachings and have physically disrupted his workshops. Alice Kehoe traces the idea of the medicine wheel to what was originally “a minor item in Cheyenne life, little wooden hoops used primarily in a game of skill” (1990, 200).Vine Deloria Jr. identifies Kehoe and other contributors to James Clifton’sInvented Indian(1990) as neocolonial arbiters over what is and what is not “tradition,” especially given their consensus that current perceptions of Indianness are invented and therefore not traditional. Similarly,Ward Churchilllabels this “new racism.”

  1. medicine wheelthe Medicine Wheel Шаманское колесо. Американский астроном Джон Эдди еще в х годах занялся изучением колес которые в великом множестве имеются на всей территории Великих...Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический словарь И. Мостицкого