Canoeing in the Algonquin |
When
after the American Revolution the loyalists moved to Canada, they
settled in Southern Ontario. It is a fertile country so the forests
were cut down and land ploughed over. The northern part of the
province has not been ploughed over because it is rocky and uneven,
but it is extremely picturesque. Rocky hills covered with virgin
forest, innumerable lakes and rivers between them – a paradise for
landscape painters if they are prepared to spend some time in the
wilderness. The most picturesque corner of Northern Ontario, which
now forms the Algonquin Park, was indeed discovered early in the 20th
century by Canadian painters known as “The Group of 7”. Charming
canvases of those painters must have contributed to the popularity of
the park.
It is an area of carefully maintained wilderness. Apart
from highway 60 that cuts the park in two there are almost no roads.
There are no hotels but there are camp sites - some of them with hot
showers – where you can put up a tent if there is space. You can
hire a canoe and paddle somewhere deep into the wilderness. Once upon
a time a canoe was the most important means of transport in Canada –
in Algonquin Park it still is. The area is covered by a network of
interconnected lakes and rivers, you can get your tent into a boat
and paddle as far as you can and then camp on a lake shore. There
will be no hot showers there and you will have to watch for bears –
they may want to steal your food. Don't ever keep your food in the
tent or a bear may want to join you there. You don't want that kind
of a Teddy in your sleeping bag – they are fluffy to be sure but
they have other qualities as well.
Sacred fire |
There are a lot of paddling trails criss-crossing the
park. There are not many walking trails, though, which is a pity as
the area is really beautiful. There are rocky hills over the lakes,
sometimes forming granite cliffs just over the shore. The views from
those cliffs are stunning – virgin maple and spruce forest, islands
in the middle of the lakes, rivers winding through swamps. The view
from the cliff over Whitefish Lake is so breathtaking that one can
almost feel the majesty of the Creator manifested there. I was
walking the trail along this cliff with Ania and Ola when we heard
somebody laughing in front of us.
“Hahahaha!
I thought I heard voices!”
It was a man dressed a bit like an Indian but without
Indian features and speaking with distinctly English accent.
“You
heard our voices, didn't you?” I said.
“I
meant spiritual voices. This is a sacred rock on the Indians, they
come here for a vision. The Indians are here today, on that peninsula
on the lake, they have a pow wow today and tomorrow.”He pointed to
the triangular peninsula in the middle of the lake. There was indeed
the sound of drums coming from that direction.
“A
pow wow? Here? And what tribe is it?”
“Algonquin.”
“Algonquin?
I thought they didn't exist any more.”
”Oh
yes they do. And they have their pow wow right now.”
“Can
the non-Algonquins go to their pow wow as well?”
“Of
course. Tomorrow at six in the morning there is the ceremony of
greeting the sun and at noon the dances start.”
Veteran with his orders |
It poured down at six and we didn't want to get out of
the tent but it stopped later and at noon we were by the lake. There
was quite a big camp at the peninsula, tents, cars, families with
children. Some young men under a free standing roof structure tried
the sound of a big drum. Away from the camp near the woods there was
a camp fire where two girls in what looked like Indian dresses slowly
moved their drum over the smoke. We wondered, though, were the
Indians where. Most of those who camped there had neither facial
features nor skin colour on Indians. Some people wore some kind of
Indian clothing, there was even a new shop-bought tipi there, but it
all looked a bit artificial. Some outfits look odd to say the least
and didn't look Indian at all. For example there was a man in fringed
leggings, trainer shoes and a red shirt with a long row of military
orders. He approached us and said:
“It
will start a bit later, the grand entry will be at one. We ask not to
take pictures during the Grand Entry. You don't know what the Grand
Entry is? Every pow wow starts with one, when all the dancers enter
the holy circle around the drums. We always dance clockwise around
the drums, this is the direction in which the sun moves round the
Earth. The veteran warriors open the procession. These days they are
usually the ones that serve in the army. Behind them are men dancers
in various styles, followed by the women and the children. No
pictures are to be taken during the Grand Entry as well as during the
Veteran Dance and the Flag Dance. The spiritual aspect of the
ceremony has to be respected. You also have to stand during those
dances and take your hat off, unless you have an eagle feather in it.
During other dances you can take pictures and during the inter-tribal
dance you can join in. The songs we sing have no lyrics, we chant
just meaningless syllables. This is because the pow wow was
traditionally a meeting of various tribes speaking different
languages. We sing without words so no language is privileged.
The Grand Entry started at one o'clock – some fellas sat around a big drum and started playing monotonous rhythm. They
also sang, this was the traditional Indian choral music with
piercingly high falsetto voices. There was no single dance step that
everybody would dance, each dancer danced in his or her own style.
The veterans walked majestically touching softly the ground with
their feet before each step as if checking if the ground is hard
enough to stand on. The grass dancer behind them danced wildly
shaking the huge amount of fringes he had at his arms and his legs.
Women dancers in traditional dresses with arm fringes reaching the
ground stepped gracefully, the fringes swinging there and back with
each step. Young women dressed in bright colours with equally bright
shawls in their hands jumped high and the shawls unfurled behind
their backs. There were also girls in jingle dresses who jingled as
they jumped because they had hundreds of little bells attached to
their shifts. Last went children who tried to emulate dance steps of
the adults.
Jingle dress |
Well beyond the circle of dancers,
near the woods, there was a camp fire carefully tended by two men. I
wanted to approach this fire but the fire keeper told ma that this is
the sacred fire and it can only be approached from the east. The
circle around the fire is sacred as well. The eastern approach has
been marked by two stones and one can circle it only clockwise –
the way the sun circles the earth. By the entry to the sacred circle
there was a container with prayer tobacco. If you want to pray, take
a handful of tobacco, stand beyond the fire facing east and when you
finish praying throw the tobacco into the fire – the smoke takes
the prayers to the Creator.
While I was talking to the fire keeper some girls in
jingle dresses came with handfuls of tobacco and threw it to the
fire. Why?
“Because
the jingle dress is a prayer for somebody's health. The jingle dance
is in itself a prayer. Usually the family of the sick person ask a a
girl for a prayer and gives her a handful of tobacco, after the dance
she comes and throws the tobacco into the fire.
What? Is he serious? Can you pray while dancing? These
Indians are crazy, aren't they?
If these were stately dances at least. Some of them are
not only not stately but hardly serious. For example the potato
dance. It has to be danced in pairs – the potato in question is
held in place between the two foreheads. Hands of course are to be
held behind their backs. There is a prize for the pair which holds
the potato the longest.
In the evening there is food – everyone is invited. Of
course traditional Native American cuisine is served. There are rules
about who is being served first – the elderly first, then women and
children, then the warriors and the chief in the end. Of course those
who come first have to remember that there has to be enough for those
who come last.
I learned also who are these Algonquins who organize
this pow wow, apparently every year in the same place. They are
descendants of the Algonquins who once hunted here and now live in
the surrounding towns. Racial purity is not important. The fact that
Canadian authorities do not consider them “Native Americans” is
not important either. The musicians, dancers and veterans sometimes
come from far away. Pow wows like this are nowadays organized all
over America, it is a pan-Indian movement both in the U.S. and
Canada. Some of them are organized in the middle of the wilderness
(sometimes carefully maintained, like the Algonquin Park), sometimes
on reservations and sometimes in the centres of big cities. And the
music – which for a white ear sounds like a wild scream – is a
proof that this is not tourist attraction. This is modern Native
American culture created for Native American consumption.
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