Crow Dog: Four Generations of Sioux Medicine Men
By Crow Dog, Leonard
1996/02 - HarperCollins Publishers
0060926821 - Trade Paper
Our Price $13.00

Related Books: American Indian

From the coauthor of Lakota Woman comes a powerful epic that traces the tumultuous clans of the Sioux nation. Leonard Crow Dog provides a rare glimpse of American Indian mysticism. The famous sun dance and the many ceremonies and rituals that still play an important role in Lakota life are described in dramatic detail. of photos.


Erdoes has recorded Leonard Crow Dog's oral narrative of the history of his family and his people, the Lakota. Mr. Crow Dog discusses "the generations of his family who have carried the name Crow Dog since the American government told them it would be their family name. . . . He tells of his involvement as the spiritual leader of the American Indian Movement and the occupation of Wounded Knee in the early 1970s." (Booklist)

Publisher
The first Crow Dog was born in the 1830s. A contemporary and comrade of Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, he was a leading participant in the messianic Ghost Dance of 1889 that precipitated the massacre at Wounded Knee in 1890. In 1973, his great-grandson, Leonard Crow Dog, was AIM's spiritual leader at the second Wounded Knee. The memories that link the two are intact, and form the spine of a narrative that sweeps across two centuries in the history of the West. Leonard, the book's principal narrator, discovered as a young boy that he had a special spiritual vision, a power, and at thirteen became a wichasha wakan - what white people call a medicine man. Still staunchly traditional in the face of pressure to Christianize, Leonard describes in detail the sun dance and many ceremonies and rituals that still play a significant role in Lakota life. In the sixties and seventies, Leonard took up the family's political challenge through his involvement with AIM, for which he became spiritual leader. He was a key figure in the momentous events in South Dakota and Washington, D.C., that centered on the 1973 siege of Wounded Knee and the notorious raids, murders, and trials at the Pine Ridge Reservation. This is the story of two centuries of struggle and triumph, of reckless deeds and heroic lives, of degradation and survival. It is a saga in every sense of the word.


 

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