Paiute influence The
Northern Paiutes living in
Mason Valley, in what became the
U.S. state of
Nevada, were known collectively as the Tövusidökadö () at the time of
European contact. The Northern Paiute community at this time was thriving upon a subsistence pattern of fishing, hunting wild game, and foraging for
pine nuts and roots. The Tövusidökadö tended to follow various spiritual leaders and community organizers. Community events centered on the observance of seasonal ceremonies such as harvests or hunting. In 1869,
Hawthorne Wodziwob, a Paiute man, organized a series of community dances to announce a vision. He spoke of a journey to the land of the dead and of promises made to him by the souls of the recently deceased. They promised to return to their loved ones within a period of three to four years. Wodziwob's peers accepted this vision, likely due to his reputable status as a
healer. He urged the populace to dance the common circle dance as was customary during a time of celebration. He continued preaching this message for three years with the help of a local "weather doctor" named Tavibo, father of
Wovoka. resulting in widespread psychological and emotional trauma. The disruption brought disorder to the
economic system and society. Many families were prevented from continuing their
nomadic lifestyle.
Round Dance influence A
round dance is a circular community dance held usually around an individual who leads the ceremony. Round dances may be ceremonial or purely social. Usually, the dancers are accompanied by a group of singers who may also play hand
drums in unison. The dancers join hands to form a large circle. The dancers move with a side-shuffle step to reflect the long-short pattern of the
drum beat, bending their knees to emphasize the pattern. During his studies of the
Pacific Northwest tribes the
anthropologist Leslie Spier used the term "
prophet dances" to describe ceremonial round dances where the participants seek
trance, exhortations and
prophecy. Spier studied peoples of the
Columbia plateau (a region including
Washington,
Oregon,
Idaho, and parts of western
Montana). By the time of his studies the only dances he was allowed to witness were social dances or ones that had already incorporated
Christian elements, making investigation of the round dance's origin complicated.
Ghost Dance ceremony Eyewitness accounts of the Ghost Dance prior to the
Wounded Knee Massacre include
Ella Cara Deloria and
Elaine and Dora Goodale. The Ghost Dance included hundreds of participants in its peak, with many visiting from nearby reservations to participate, with those participants fasting for one to two days prior to the ceremony. On the day of the dance, men and women enter a separate
Sweat lodge. During a period of two to four days dancers hold hands with their heads looking upwards and slowly sideways shuffle their feet in a clockwise formation while singing Ghost Dance songs. Shamans will wave eagle wing fans in the faces of the participants. The Ghost Dance is danced with Ghost Dance songs.
Leonard Crow Dog recalls in his memoir during the
Wounded Knee Occupation of 1973 the chants they were singing: "The whole world is coming, a nation is coming, a nation is coming, the eagle brought the message, says the father, says the father, the whole world is coming, the buffalo are coming, the buffalo are coming, the crow has brought the message, says the father, says the father. The crow nation is coming, says the father, says the father." == The Prophet ==