
Crow Dog: Four Generations of Sioux Medicine Men - Paperback
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Four Generations of Lakota Medicine Men
"I am Crow Dog. I am the fourth of that name. Crow Dogs have played a big part in the history of our tribe and in the history of all the Indian nations of the Great Plains during the last two hundred years. We are still making history."
Thus opens the extraordinary and epic account of a Native American clan. Here the authors, Leonard Crow Dog and Richard Erdoes (co-author of Lakota Woman) tell a story that spans four generations and sweeps across two centuries of reckless deeds and heroic lives, and of degradation and survival.
A Chronicle of Lakota History and Resistance
The first Crow Dog, Jerome, a contemporary of Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, was a witness to the coming of white soldiers and settlers to the open Great Plains. His son, John Crow Dog, traveled with Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. The third Crow Dog, Henry, helped introduce the peyote cult to the Sioux. And in the sixties and seventies, Crow Dog's principal narrator, Leonard Crow Dog, took up the family's challenge through his involvement with the American Indian Movement (AIM).
Spiritual Practices and Sacred Ceremonies
As a wichasha wakan, or medicine man, Leonard became AIM's spiritual leader and renewed the banned ghost dance. Staunchly traditional, Leonard offers a rare glimpse of Lakota spiritual practices, describing the sun dance and many other rituals that are still central to Sioux life and culture.
Leonard C. Dog was born in 1942 on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota, where he still lives. Co-authored with Richard Erdoes, this memoir provides an authentic voice from within the Lakota community, documenting both personal family history and broader Native American resistance movements across two centuries.
Edition
Harperperennial Edition
Contributor(s)
Author
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