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What the Medicine Men
Knew
by Phyllis D. Light, RH, AHG
August 4, 2003
When Europeans first landed on the
shores of North America, they were greeted by Native
Americans who were healthy and strong, tall and
straight-boned, and who generally lived to a ripe old age.
Curious and friendly, the Native Americans showed the
newcomers how to harvest wild foods and grow suitable crops,
and also demonstrated the medicinal use of herbs. The North
American indigenous medical traditions evolved into an
effective system during its long history, estimated at
between 12,000 and 40,000 years. So, herbally, we owe a huge
debt to the Native American willingness to share knowledge
of North American plants. Many of the herbs sitting on the
shelves of natural food stores today were originally found
in the medicinal arsenal of Native Americans, including
black cohosh, echinacea, goldenseal, pleurisy root,
sarsaparilla, red root, black walnut, gravel root and
American ginseng.
Unique Healing Traditions
The number of Native tribes in the United States is
estimated at about 500, and each possesses a unique set of
healing traditions. While the term "Native American
medicine" does not describe a homogenous system of healing,
common, underlying principles can be discerned in many of
these tribal traditions. Most often, these healing
traditions and practices have been handed down in a rich
oral tradition from practitioner to practitioner, rarely
finding their way into written descriptions.
For instance, according to David Winston, a Cherokee
medicine priest and herbalist living in New Jersey,
"Cherokee medicine is based on connection-body, mind,
spirit, family, community and God/Spirit. The Cherokee word
for medicine, Nvowti, means 'power.' Anything that has
power-water, ceremony, songs, stories, herbs-is medicine."
On the other hand, Charles Alexander Eastman, PhD (Indian
name: Ohiyesa), comments in his book, The Soul of an Indian,
"The Sioux word for the healing art is wah-pee-yah, which
literally means 'readjusting or making anew.' Pay-jee-hoo-tah,
literally 'root,' means medicine, and wakan signifies
'spirit' or 'mystery.' Thus the three ideas, while sometimes
associated, were carefully distinguished."
Customized Treatment
Native American healing philosophy advocates a customized
treatment plan for each person's unique health problems.
Consequently, healing techniques focus on the individual,
not the disease, although the overall treatment may
incorporate well-known ways for relieving the specific
discomforts, aches and pains associated with an illness.
Native healers employ herbs, ceremony, song and prayer in a
manner tailored to each person they treat.
Medicinal Sweat
A central tenet in many Native American healing
traditions is the need to sweat. As a result, Inipi, or
Lakota sweat lodges, are located in most areas of the
country. Sweating produces many benefits. It opens pores,
cleanses the skin, enhances circulation, discourages the
growth of bacteria in the body and functions as a
detoxification outlet.
The skin is well-suited for the elimination of toxins:
Experts estimate that during everyday functioning, 30% of
the body's wastes pass through the skin. For the Native
American, the sweat lodge offers spiritual help as well as
physical aid. And the use of sweating is generally not
employed as the only treatment but is always accompanied by
other therapies such as herbs.
Native Americans are not alone in their reverence for
using sweating to treat disease. A technique for sweating is
fundamental to most traditional medicines, including
Ayurveda and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
Native American Herbs
For native healers, herbs offer physical, emotional and
spiritual support. In this tradition, herbs are consumed in
teas, tablets or capsules, or are inhaled after being thrown
onto the hot stones in a sweat lodge or otherwise burned to
release their vapor. Smudging, a ritualized method for
bathing a person or object with the smoke from sacred herbs
such as sweet grass, sage or cedar, is a way of cleansing
individuals, clearing a ritual space or sanctifying
ceremonial tools. Each herb in the smudging process is used
for a specific reason. Sweet grass grows the spirit, while
sage and cedar dispel negativity. Frequently, herbs are
taken as preparation for participation in rituals. "Sweet
leaf is used as a tea before the sweat lodge ceremony in
some Indian communities in South Dakota," notes Matthew
Wood, RH, AHG, author of The Book of Herbal Wisdom (North
Atlantic Books). "It promotes perspiration, relaxes the
nerves, reduces tension and brings harmony and beauty to the
participants."
Connections
The idea that everything in the universe, including
people, is connected is a philosophy shared by many tribes.
When a medicine person assesses an illness, she not only
observes physical problems but also analyzes family and
community dynamics. A person's relationship with God is
believed to influence health. In this vein, prayers like
Mitakuye Oyasin, a Lakota blessing that means "all my
relations," appeals to the interconnectedness of each of us
with other people, with the Earth, and with God.
"Separation and isolation is one of the leading causes of
illness," David Winston says. "There is a connection between
everything-within ourselves and outside of ourselves. When
we isolate and separate ourselves from our family, our
community and from God/Spirit, then we suffer diseases of
the spirit. Ultimately, we are responsible for our own
spirits-to keep them healthy.
"In addition," adds Winston, "from the Cherokee
viewpoint, the nuclear family is seen as too small. There
are too many single parents working too hard and under too
much stress." In a Native American clan-based society, much
of this stress is defused with the support of an extended
family.
Kinship philosophy is a basic part of the Native
perspective, a kinship that extends beyond humans to all
life, including animals, fish, and birds as well as the
Earth itself. Consequently, care of the Earth is an integral
part of kinship philosophy. Indigenous cultures have very
specific knowledge of ecology and environmental ethics. In
the kinship philosophy, damage done by man to the Earth is
then reflected back in the body of man by diseases of the
body and spirit. Man and his illnesses are seen as part of
the ecology of the planet, not a separate, isolated force
with the power to control.
Modern Ills, Ancient Treatments
Winston believes that Cherokee medicine offers the
greatest aid to people with chronic illnesses such as
chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia and some female reproductive
complaints, as well as individuals with stress-related
disorders. It can also offer aid to those who are depressed
and feel alienated or disconnected from society.
Native American medicine can offer balance and healing.
It can be used in conjunction with Western medicine,
providing a holistic and individualized treatments. To find
a Native American healer, check with your local tribal
community. Mitakuye Oyasin.
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