On This Page You Will Find The Story That Is The Legend Of The White Buffalo. The White Buffalo Is Very Sacred To American Indians.
When I Was a Child My Tunkasila (Grandfather) Who Is Oglala Sioux Indian Told Me The Legend Of The White Buffalo. I Love It Today As Much As I Did Then. I Hope That You Will Also Enjoy It.
Toksa Ake
White Feather
The Sacred White Buffalo
WHITE BUFFALO CALF WOMAN
Brings The First Pipe
As told by: Joseph Chasing Horse
We Lakota people have a prophecy about the white buffalo calf. How that prophecy originated was that we have a sacred bundle, a sacred peace pipe, that was brought to us about 2,000 years ago by what we know as the White Buffalo Calf Woman.
The story goes that she appeared to two warriors at that time. These two warriors were out hunting buffalo, hunting for food in the sacred Black Hills of South Dakota, and they saw a big body coming toward them. And they saw that it was a white buffalo calf. As it came closer to them, it turned into a beautiful young Indian girl.
That time one of the warriors thought bad in his mind, and so the young girl told him to step forward. And when he did step forward, a black cloud came over his body, and when the black cloud disappeared, the warrior who had bad thoughts was left with no flesh or blood on his bones. The other warrior kneeled and began to pray. And when he prayed, the white buffalo calf who was now an Indian girl told him to go back to his people and warn them that in four days she was going to bring a sacred bundle.
So the warrior did as he was told. He went back to his people and he gathered all the elders and all the leaders and all the people in a circle and told them what she had instructed him to do. And sure enough, just as she said she would, on the fourth day she came.
They say a cloud came down from the sky, and off of the cloud stepped the white buffalo calf. As it rolled onto the earth, the calf stood up and became this beautiful young woman who was carrying the sacred bundle in her hand.
As she entered into the circle of the nation, she sang a sacred song and took the sacred bundle to the people who were there to take of her. She spent four days among our people and taught them about the sacred bundle, the meaning of it. She taught them seven sacred ceremonies.
One of them was the sweat lodge, or the purification ceremony. One of them was the naming ceremony, child naming. The third was the healing ceremony. The fourth one was the making of relatives or the adoption ceremony. The fifth one was the marriage ceremony. The sixth was the vision quest. And the seventh was the sundance ceremony, the people's ceremony for all of the nation.
She brought us these seven sacred ceremonies and taught our people the songs and the traditional ways. And she instructed our people that as long as we performed these ceremonies we would always remain caretakers and guardians of sacred land. She told us that as long as we took care of it and respected it that our people would never die and would always live.
When she was done teaching all our people, she left the way she came. She went out of the circle, and as she was leaving she turned and told our people that she would return one day for the sacred bundle. And she left the sacred bundle, which we still have to this very day.
The sacred bundle is known as the White Buffalo Calf Pipe because it was brought by the White Buffalo Calf Woman. It is kept in a sacred place (Green Grass) on the Cheyenne River Indian reservation in South Dakota. it's kept by a man who is known as the keeper of the White Buffalo Calf Pipe, Arvol Looking Horse.
When White Buffalo Calf Woman promised to return again, she made some prophecies at that time
One of those prophesies was that the birth of a white buffalo calf would be a sign that it would be near the time when she would return again to purify the world. What she meant by that was that she would bring back harmony again and balance, spiritually.
No matter what happens to Miracle in the coming months and years, Joseph Chasing Horse says the birth is a sign from the Great Spirit and the ensuing age of harmony and balance it represents cannot be revoked. That doesn't mean, of course, that the severe trials Native Americans have endured since the arrival of Europeans on these shores are over.
Indeed, the Lakota nation mounted the longest court case in U.S. history in an unsuccessful effort to regain control of the Black Hills, the sacred land on which the White Buffalo Calf Woman appeared 2,000 years ago.
Still, despite their ongoing struggles, Native Americans are heartened by the appearance of a white buffalo in Janesville, and have hope for a harmonious and prosperous future.
"Mention that we are praying, many of the medicine people, the spiritual leaders, the elders, are praying for the world," says Joseph Chasing Horse. "We are praying that mankind does wake up and think about the future, for we haven't just inherited this earth from our ancestors, but we are borrowing it from our unborn children."
Traditional Story copyright Joseph Chasing Horse, 1995.
The Blessing
by Donald Vann -
In "The Blessing" the appearance of the White Buffalo signals, in many traditions, the coming of the most sacred of all blessings.The symbolic appearance of the buffalo, a major source of sustenance for the Plains Indians, meant many things to the different tribes. In their ancient White Buffalo Dance, the Fox Indians of Wisconsin shadow the vision of a legendary hunter, who could turn himself into a white buffalo at will, after it appeared to him in a dream giving the hunter special power over his enemies.
In the Lakota tradition three hunters encountered a white buffalo calf. The white buffalo turned into a woman who instucted the hunters to return to their village and prepare for her arrival. When she came four days later, she carried a sacred pipe which was the Great Spirit's promise of abundance and plenty.
In 1994, a white buffalo calf named Miracle was born on Dave and Valerie Heider's farm on the banks of the Rock River in southern Wisconsin. Of the thousands of visitors to the farm every weekend, many speak of a hope of a return to a way of life that honors the Great Spirit in all of nature. Buffalo Medicine, or power, is a reminder to many that one achieves nothing without the aid of the Great Spirit, and one must be humble enough to ask for that assistance and then grateful for what is received.
Click On Miracle To Go To The Next Page About Her
Words of Wisdom from Great Indian Men
Sioux Prayers
The Lakota Story of The Creation of The Universe
The Lakota Story of The Flute
White Feather The Giant-Killer A Dakota Story
My Sioux Heritage
The Ghost Dance
The Sundance
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