From: Sharon Lennartson
[mmdc01@comcast.net]
Sent: Wednesday, December 21,
2011 10:51 AM
To: James Anderson
Subject: FW: Eddie Benton Benais
testimony (below & attached)
Attachments: Eddie Benton Benais
testimony.docx
Jim please read, I would like to add this to the website. auntie
From: Susu Jeffrey
[mailto:susujeffrey@msn.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2011 10:32 AM
To: Sharon MMDC
Subject: Eddie Benton Benais testimony (below & attached)
Excerpts of
the testimony of Eddie Benton Benais, Ojibway spiritual elder, to Minnesota state archeologist Joe
Hudak, MnDOT staff and a consultant, under mediation ordered by state Judge
Peter Albrecht regarding sacred land and traditional cultural property rights
claimed by the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community, the Iowa people
(pre-Dakota), Anishinabe people and other indigenous peoples.
March 19, 1999,
Minnesota State Office Building, Room 400, St. Paul Capitol grounds
Mr. Benais
credentials include:
-Grand Chief of
the Mdewiwin Society, also called the lodge or the Medicine Lodge
-fullblood
Ojibway (Anishinabe)
-currently living
on the Lac Courte Oreilles Indian Reservation in Northern Wisconsin
-works as a
Native Education Consultant
-bachelor’s
degree University of Minnesota
-Master’s of
Educational Administration, California Western University
-25 years in
Indian education, notably with the Red School House in St. Paul
-published
curricula for Indian education
-Previous to his
education career, he worked as a journeyman steel construction worker for 14
years.
-Mr. Benais was
active in DFL politics, mentioned his lobby background and said Minnesota was a
leader in Indian education in the mid-1980s.
Excerpts
About 900-950 AD the
forebearers of the Ojibway people migrated from the mouth of the St. Lawrence
River westward across the Great Lakes. These people brought a particular
philosophy or spirituality with them. “We have a different relationship with
the Creator, and thus with the Creation.” The Ojibway Creator is “kind,
forgiving, nurturing, encouraging, it is that kind of relationship.”
Mr. Benais talked about “the
rampant use of free will without discretion” which “brings us to where we are
today.” He spoke of a 300 year old prophecy, inconceivable at the time, about
rivers running with poison. The Mdewiwin [M’day-wi-win] Lodge teaching about
the need to protect waters is “to show the world how to love fish....How we
take care of the water is how it will take care of us...Water is sacred.” He
called for a “covenant or relationship” with the earth as “the mother of all
living things.” He invited us to “come to the door of the (Mdewiwin) lodge and
ask, ‘How can we stay alive’...There is a new thinking,” he said. It is
respect. “The first commandment of our spirituality is respect.”
The elder also talked about
the importance of oral history. “The Bible itself is a result of oral history.
Yet we hold it to be sacred.” He compared swearing on the Bible to touching the
sacred pipe. “Our history is valid....It is time for us to share our story. Our
story goes back 50,000 years.” This period of time now, holds the possibility
of “a new brotherhood of the nations and the beginning of the Great Peace. Or
not.”
Mr. Benais began speaking
specifically about the land between Minnehaha Falls and Coldwater Springs, near
the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers.
“We know that the falls which
came to be known as Minnehaha Falls, was a sacred place, was a neutral place, a
place for many nations to come. And that (to) further geographically define
(it), the confluence of the three rivers, which is actually the two rivers.
That point was a neutral place. And that somewhere between that point and the
falls there were sacred grounds that were mutually held to be a sacred place.
And that the spring from which the sacred water should be drawn was not very
far. I’ve never heard any direction from which I could pinpoint, but that
there’s a spring, near the lodge, that all nations used to draw the sacred
water for the ceremony. That’s in the words of our water people of the
(Mdewiwin) lodge.
“The people that are concerned,
the people that are identified are the Dakota, the Sauk, the Fox, the
Potowatamie, the Wahpeton Dakotas, the Mdewakanton Dakotas, the Mesquakie
people as all having used and recognizing and mutually agreeing that that is
forever a neutral place and forever a sacred place. That is confirmed by our
oral history.
“It is difficult to even
estimate when the last sacred ceremony was held inter-tribally there. But my
grandfather who lived to be 108, died in 1942. [born 1834] I will tell you this.
Many times he retold how we traveled, how he and his family, he as a small boy
traveled by foot, by horse, by canoe to this great place to where there would
be these great religious, spiritual events. And that they always camped
between the falls and the sacred water place. Those are his words....
“And I, having been born into
an Ojibway/Anishinabe family, having been raised in this tradition, and having
been now entrusted with teaching this tradition and articles of faith, I can
say that to you....
“Some of the research that correlates with the oral tradition is from” Indian
Notes and Monographs volume IV: A Series of Publications Relating to the
American Aborigines, Allison Skinner, 1920, NY Museum of the American
Indian, “Medicine Ceremony of the Menominee, Iowa and Wahpeton Dakota With
Notes on the Ceremony Among the Punka, Among the Ojibway and Potowatamie
People.”
“The lodge to which we refer
is now known as the Mdewiwin Lodge-- was common to all of those people. And
this study indicates that the people known as the Ojibway were the carriers and
the people who first brought this belief system and this theology into this
area.
“But I want to make special
note of this, again, it characterizes something about Indian people, and that
is-- we share that which we have. There was respect among us, even as
different-speaking people. Respect of the land, the same respect for the land,
the same respect for the sacred....And the people were given access to this
spiritual teaching, to the lodge, and then at some point were given, were
given the lodge for them to worship and to practice.
“Within my physical memory,
visiting the Prairie Island Dakota Nation as early as the 1940s there were
still elders in that community who were still members of the Mdewiwin Lodge,
along with the Winnebago of Wisconsin....There was a great dialogue-- there was
always dialogue among our people and those of the Prairie Island Community
regarding the lodge. That’s how we have always known this way of life and
practice, as the lodge, meaning the Mdewiwin Lodge, the system of belief.
“With the passing of the
Honorable Amos Owen, who was the last person of that community who I ever heard
refer to the time, as ‘when we belonged to the lodge.’ He’s the last person
that I ever heard of talk about that mutually sacred place, meaning the falls
and the spring from which sacred water would be drawn-- Coldwater.”
Mr. Benais noted that the
Indian Monographs book is centered on the Medicine Ceremony of the Menominee
but it also includes Dakota words for the Initiation Ceremony and the
Reinstatement, ceremonies of the lodge. “It goes on to describe the Iowa
Medicine Dance and includes the Dakota origin myth, the initiation by purchase.
In the initiation by purchase I have discovered that the Wahpeton Dakota people
actually purchased the rights to have, maintain, and to carry on the lodge from
the Ojibway people. That purchase was not monetary. It was not goods of any
kind. They purchased to right to have and maintain it, by their faith. Nothing
else....
“It is our belief that the
prophesies contain a promise. The new people, the new awareness is here among
us, among all people. There’s a growing awareness that we need to care for the
earth, we need become concerned with the water, the air and all of creation. We
need to do this together....We have to begin to reach out and say, ‘Brother, we
are of the earth.’ That all prayer originates at the same place and arrives at
the same place. That is what I believe.”
Transcribed from an audio-visual tape of
the testimony,
by Susu Jeffrey, April 1999.