Hundreds gather in Zorn
Honoring Education Pow-Wow draws many tribes
Tara Bannow
Issue date: 4/21/08 Section: News
|
For Kathy White, a member of the Ho-Chunk nation, whose recent health battle left her in a walker, a pow-wow is for healing.
"This makes me happy," she said, wearing a bright red regalia, ceremonial outfit, with beaded necklaces, feathers and streamers flowing from her long, black ponytail. "It helps me heal."
White and the hundreds of others who attended this year's Honoring Education Pow-Wow Saturday were treated to a spectacle of dancers, young and old, in vivid colors, feet cavorting tip-toe style across the gym floor to wild drum beats. The senses were tickled by celebratory songs and the scent of fry-bread.
The event, held in Zorn Arena, was sponsored by UW-Eau Claire's Native American Student Association and Office of Multicultural Affairs. It included a grand entrance, inter-tribal singing and dancing, a feast, the fifth-annual hand drum competition and dance exhibitions from tribal men and women in categories such as traditional, grass, fancy and jingle dress.
This year, White and her husband, Fransico Hernandez, of the Seneca Nation, both of Black River Falls, brought their grandson, Dean White, to teach him to dance in his first pow-wow - just as Kathy White's father had done for her when she was four months old.
White said it is common for parents to make their children regalia to wear at pow-wows. This year, she made her grandson's first regalia. One outfit, she said, takes up to a year to craft, unless the whole family is involved in the production. She encourages her children to watch her make their regalia so they can one day make their own.
"We like to see our kids make the stuff and then teach their kids how to dance," Hernandez said. "So that when they get older, they'll teach their grandbabies ... so it doesn't disappear."
Spring Break


Be the first to comment on this story