An alleged "rainbow prophet" carrying a strange "rainbow bundle" that is put on display for journalists to photograph. And he freely admits time in a mental hospital.
But at one time he was involved in serious activism.
http://nativenet.uthscsa.edu/archive/nl/9301/0027.html-------------------------
http://www.mytown.ca/ev.php?URL_ID=82629&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201&reload=119423905311 January 2004
....His story unfolds like water flowing through a long familiar stream bed. It is a story he has told for over ten years now, as he has walked his spirit journey across the continent and beyond. Andrew Big Smoke, of the Cree Nation, left Saskatchewan with a message for The People and a sacred bundle. They call him the Rainbow Prophet as he carries one of the "rainbow" bundles with him in his travels. To those of the First Nations it will be no surprise, but to others it will raise their curiosity to be told that no one knows what is in this sacred rainbow bundle except the elders who prepared it, blessed it, and gave it to Andrew to carry on his journey. The bundle is decorated lavishly with feathers, leather, and bone, and draws the attention of journalists and photographers at every stop Andrew makes on his quest. In their fascination with the bundle, they stop to photograph it and while they are stopped, for that long, they will hear the prophet’s story. Perhaps the elders had that in mind as they prepared it, for in this modern world something must make the people stop in their headlong race through their days long enough to listen.
Soon the prophecy says, Manitou, the Great Spirit, will purify the Earth with fire, cleansing it of all the evil that humanity has done. After the fires, the people who remain will live in peace for a thousand years. After the fire, there lies hope.
The message the prophet carries speaks of treating all people with respect and, above all, of treating our mother, the Earth, with respect. Further, the prophet tells us we must go back to the old ways of prayer and we must seek to do no harm to anyone or anything. He himself says a prayer as he passes through a truck stop asking for a ride, praying that his presence there will cause no harm to the truckers who will help him on his journey nor those who will refuse him aid.
Andrew Big Smoke recounts his time in a psychiatric hospital freely, and openly admits that he expects some people to dismiss his message on that basis.