The Bodewadmi (Potawatomi), Ojibwe (Chippewa), and the Odawa (Ottawa)
were once one people, called the Nishnabe, or Original People. Together, the
three groups were known as the Three Fires Council, in which each group functioned
to serve the Nishnabe as a whole. The Ojibwe were the keepers of the medicine
and the Odawa were the keepers of the trade. The Bodewadmi were the keepers of
the fire, and the word Potawatomi means “People of the Place of the Fire.”
The Nishnabe originally lived along the Eastern Seaboard, occupying the
area from present-day New Brunswick, Canada to the state of Maine. It was
during this time that the Nishnabe were visited by seven prophets. Each prophet
spoke of a prophecy that would manifest in time. It is from this time forward
that the Nishnabe refer to the prophecies as the Seven Fires.
The first six fires
described the Nishnabe’s migration from the Atlantic Coast to the Great Lakes
Region, and the critical loss of power within their religious medicine society,
the Medewiwin Lodge. What they foretold has been interpreted as contact with
the Europeans and the devastation that would soon follow: war, loss of lands,
religious conversion, forced assimilation, and the rise of boarding schools.
The seventh prophet was the last to visit the Nishnabe. He was
noticeably different from the others. He was youthful, vibrant, and spoke with
an air of confidence. In the seventh fire, he told of a new people who would
come forward to retrace the steps of their elders, gathering all that had been
left on the trail for them. He explained that the new people would take what
they had gathered and rebuild the old ways of their culture.
We are in the seventh fire. What we have gathered along the trail can
be seen within our Cultural Heritage Center and other tribal programs, where we
see how the old way of life has shaped the way we live today. This knowledge
gathered is a tool used to teach our young ones not only what it means to be
Bodewadmi, or Potawatomi, but also Nishnabe.
-“…since time immemorial…”:
Timeline History of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation
The
assimilation of indigenous people into Euro-American culture has had the effect
of diminishing the physical, cultural, and rhetorical presence of Native
Americans throughout American history. Today, the Native essence primarily
exists in echoes of generations past—the mixed-blood descendants of the former
sovereigns of American soil. With European imperialism perpetually stomping out
the traces of Indian history and culture, contemporary mixed-blood Natives
often wind up in some sort of identity quagmire; where ethnic dualism exists,
one identity may easily overcome the other, and sadly, the identity of the
colonizers often becomes the only identity an individual can express (knowingly
or unknowingly) to society—and themselves. How can Indians identify themselves
as such when all they know of the world, culture, and language exists within
the framework of colonization? Can a mixed-blood, white Native American stake
any claim in the old ways of their people?
Even I have struggled
with the task of identifying myself as Citizen Potawatomi within the confines
of Euro-American culture. The Indian
part of me has always been lurking in the background of my projected identity,
only coming forward within the closed spaces of strictly Potawatomi attendance
and ceremony. When I look in the mirror I see a white woman with blonde hair and
blue eyes, and no matter how closely I inspect my face, I can’t see any
physical manifestation of Indian ancestry. When I speak, English shapes my
worldview: I don’t know Potawatomi. When I try to study Potawatomi, I can’t
seem to leave English behind, and I become frustrated with the structure of
Potawatomi language, wondering how many consonants can possibly be strung
together in one word before a vowel is needed. Is the Indian part of me buried
so deeply in the past that I have no right to try to retrieve it?
When I spoke to
my father of my conflicting thoughts on my identity as a Potawatomi and a
descendant of Europeans, he shook his head and told me that this confusion was
necessary: I was supposed to question my identity as a Potawatomi. He said, “Haven’t
you heard the story of the seven fires? The prophecies of the Potawatomi?” At
this point I hadn’t, and when I told him so, he smiled and continued, “There
are seven prophecies, called the seven fires, that were given to the Nishnabe a
long time ago. The first six fires told us of the coming of the Europeans and
that the Nishnabe would lose their way. But the last fire, the seventh fire,
said that a new generation of Potawatomi, of Nishnabe, would seek to revive the
old ways and direct the people, who had been lost, back to the original path. You are a part of the seventh fire.” He
allowed me to understand something about my heritage that I’d overlooked: that
Indian part of me, somewhere in the background of my identity, lingered there
for a reason—to come forward in the light of the seventh fire.
Beautifully written - thank you for sharing this story!
ReplyDelete