Author Topic: The men's Center Sweat Lodge  (Read 6291 times)

Offline earthw7

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The men's Center Sweat Lodge
« on: August 31, 2007, 05:47:58 pm »
http://www.themenscenter.com/mmg/events.html
Timothy "Bear" Hodges

Welcome to the "Sweat Lodge" part of the MMG Web site. We are please to present two different submissions by our very own Timothy "Bear" Hodges plus a slide show. Just click on the appropriate link. To add your reflections please email our Webmaster.
The ceremony begins in a grassy, level field, where the only sign of human disturbance is a small, overgrown fire ring. Facing East, two men begin the task of invoking the powers of the seven directions. The leader shakes a rattle four times as they begin the sacred work.

"Tunkashila (Grandfather), it is I, Bear Walks Dreaming, and Wise Raven, who come before you! We come with sincere intentions, and in a good way, that we may build the sacred purification lodge upon our Mother Earth for the health, and help, and healing of our brothers!" Each cardinal point is honored. East -- whose color is yellow, symbolizes a new dawn and enlightenment; South -- place of water and deep emotions, whose color is red; West -- place of healing and introspection, whose color is black; North -- home of the White Buffalo Nation, home of the cleansing, purifying winds, whose color is white. Father Sky and Mother Earth are beseeched , then finally the Great Mystery. An early autumn sun warms the men as they gather tools to begin building the lodge. Butterflies, drawn to the energy, dance on the soft wind, and the cry of a hawk is heard overhead. Nearby maples have begun coloring red, and a stand of white paper birch trees leaves kiss the sky with a golden hue. Soon, Cold Maker will come from the North and another winter will begin; but not before the ceremonies of prayer and purification have taken place.

Two circles, one inside the other, are marked with an offering of corn meal. The inside circle -- for holding hot stones -- is dug out and the sod placed to one side. The soil from the pit is placed halfway between the lodge and the fire ring to form an altar on which the sacred pipe and other ceremonial objects will be placed. The circle is marked at intervals for the placing of the sweat lodge poles. Both men wander through the nearby trees to harvest the 12 "standing people" who will give their lives for the ceremonies.

Prayers are said and tobacco offerings made as the saplings are cut. The foliage is stripped from their length, then the saplings are set into the circumference of the circle at proper points. Bending them over, both men tie them off with sisal to create a beehive-like dome about four feet high and ten feet in diameter.

Other men arrive to help. Some gather fire wood; others find stones for firing. A few work to cover the lodge with blankets and tarps. By late afternoon the work is done and the lodge will later be smudged with sage to purify it before the sweats begin. Flags of yellow, black, red, white, blue, and green, are placed inside the lodge to hang above the stone pit and 405 tobacco prayer ties are strung around the lodge in a spiral. Later, these offerings will be consumed by fire to carry the prayers to the Great Mystery.

That evening, after the MMG opening circle, men gather for a brief orientation, where they are given information and background about the ceremony, and where questions are answered.

The following morning dawns clear and calm. A team of men move firewood to the sweat lodge site. The group is swift, efficient, and soon a hot, efficient fire is heating 27 stones. As the stones heat, final preparations are made. Sacred objects are placed on the altar outside the lodge, the sacred pipe is filled. Soon men gather for the ceremony. After a final review the leader enters the lodge. "All My Relations!" he says, taking his place to the right of the door. After a few moments the other men enter, moving sunwise to sit. Following a brief invocation the first of the hot stones is called for. "Welcome Grandfather!" the men say in unison, as a hot stone is guided into the pit. One participant sprinkles sage on each stone, another cedar, and one man touches a braid of fragrant sweetgrass to each Grandfather brought inside. Before long the men are sweating freely, as each stone is positioned in the stone pit with an antler.

When the final stone is placed the door flap is closed. The men are enveloped in hot, moist darkness. The thrumming of a drum song fills the lodge. The words, in Lakota, are also sung in English: "Look to the West! Look to the West! Your Grandfather is sitting there listening for your prayers! Pray to him, pray to him. He is listening for your prayers!" The men sing together. Then the powers of all directions are honored. Silence settles in the lodge as the leader pours ladles of water on the hot stones, creating steam. Waves of heat cover everyone. Some sigh as they feel the heat, others moan. This first "round" continues until the leader cries out the command to "Open the door!" Quickly the fire keepers lift the flap letting in cool air. A bucket of water and ladle is passed for the men to drink. Some pour the cool water on their bodies or heads. Everyone checks in on how they're doing.

The flap closes for the second round, a round of prayers of thanksgiving. Another song is sung and more water is poured onto the stones. The lodge becomes hotter. At the next break, some men elect to leave the lodge to take cool air, others elect not to return, having felt taxed perhaps by the heat or close quarters.

Round three consists of prayers for others who need health, help, or healing, and round four -- perhaps the hottest round -- is the one during which men pray for their own needs. At this point some have already found their limit of endurance, others manage to stay to the end of the ceremony.

The final door opens and the men exit with calls of "All My Relations!" Steaming bodies sprawl on the grass in the sunshine, allowing time to recover. Eventually, the men take water, don clothing, and circle up to pass the sacred pipe. Smoking the pipe, or lifting it four times, closes the lodge ceremony.

While some men depart for lunch or a refreshing swim or shower, the leader continues his fast and makes preparations for the next sweat -- a lodge of healing. Above the field a hawk soars, its cry a sharp piercing the still air. Hawk is a spiritual messenger of transformation, who will continue to fly above the purification lodge during the rest of the day.

Back to Sweat Lodge home page...
In Spirit

Offline Moma_porcupine

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Re: The men's Center Sweat Lodge
« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2007, 06:36:59 pm »
For some reason the webpage in the link earth posted doesn't bring up anything about this mens center using a Sweat Lodge Ceremony , but the links below , which are part of the center do .

One has the article posted by earth .

http://www.themenscenter.com/mmg/reflections_purification.html


http://www.themenscenter.com/mmg/reflections_restoring.html


http://www.themenscenter.com/mmg/reflections.html

Offline ironbuffalo

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Re: The men's Center Sweat Lodge
« Reply #2 on: August 31, 2007, 07:06:44 pm »
Quote
Quote
The Massachusetts Men's Gathering is a participant-organized and participant-led weekend that happens twice a year at a summer camp/ retreat center. Like similar format retreats throughout New England and in several other states, MMG does not hire "experts" to run workshops or provide the entertainment, but trusts in the abilities of whoever shows up!

 And there it is folks. "Whoever" shows up provides "entertainment", which if it wasn't dangerous to mess with these ways like that, is all it would amount to.

Offline earthw7

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Re: The men's Center Sweat Lodge
« Reply #3 on: September 01, 2007, 11:21:22 pm »
Thanks for getting the right site for me.
Who gave these people permission to do this?
In Spirit

frederica

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Re: The men's Center Sweat Lodge
« Reply #4 on: September 02, 2007, 03:41:07 am »
Usually they do not think they need permission, or they were given permission by an "NDN" they met on the streets of Boston, who said, "they didn't mind".  Here is a good article, but is too long, so will just use conclusion and URL. "The Plastic Medicine People Circle" by Helene Hagan http://www.sonomacountyfreepress.com/features/spirg-hagan.html      "Many say that in ancient European traditions there were sweatlodges and medicine circles, and that they are therefore just reviving old traditions of their own Caucasian origins. If so, then, why do they use American Indian language and paraphernalia at all? The contention that sweatlodges and vision quests existed long ago among Celtic or Nordic people is not verifiable. Ther is no continutiy of tradition in this regard in Europe. And if there is in their mind, they must adhere to the European mode of conducting these ceremonies and follow the Caucasian ways. Spirituality is enbedded in language and collective memory. The fact is that no Westerner, European, or Caucasian carries in his or her psyche the collective memory of American Indian of this continent. To pretend to that memory is a blatant falsehood which cannot be maintained. Both common sense and scholarly expertise recognize such falsehood."
« Last Edit: September 02, 2007, 02:24:30 pm by frederica »

Offline Defend the Sacred

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Re: The men's Center Sweat Lodge
« Reply #5 on: September 03, 2007, 10:45:30 pm »
Usually they do not think they need permission, or they were given permission by an "NDN" they met on the streets of Boston, who said, "they didn't mind". 

Agreed.  Either it never occurs to them they would need to ask, or they say, "information is free," or they do the classic racist thing of thinking one Native person can speak for all Native people.  When  the Declaration of War was released, I saw some white people seize onto any Native dissenters they could find, in order to feel justified in their continued theft. 

Quote
Here is a good article, but is too long, so will just use conclusion and URL. "The Plastic Medicine People Circle" by Helene Hagan http://www.sonomacountyfreepress.com/features/spirg-hagan.html      "Many say that in ancient European traditions there were sweatlodges and medicine circles, and that they are therefore just reviving old traditions of their own Caucasian origins. If so, then, why do they use American Indian language and paraphernalia at all?

This is a really sad thing, that I've been unfortunate to see up close and personal, and because of this I have had to end relationships with some I used to collaborate with.  The surviving lore we have about the spiritual aspects of Gaelic sweathouses is incomplete.  We do have some surviving Latvian ceremonies where prayers are made, but they are rather simple.  There is the possibility that some of the Gaelic and Norse ceremonies were more elaborate at one time, but what I've been able to piece together from the lore presents a very different ritual complex than what one sees with Inipi.

Sadly, everyone I am aware of who is claiming to do some sort of "Celtic" sweat ceremony is just doing their idea of an Inipi but swapping out a few misunderstood (and usually misspelled and mispronounced) Gaelic terms for Lakota ones.  It's awful, because it not only misrepresents and obliterates Native American traditions, but it also obscures the actual Gaelic ones we do have.  In this way the actual practices of both cultures are threatened.  :(