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Medicine Women |
| Plains Indians used various wild berries and herbal
plants in ceremonial rites that celebrated the gift of life from
Mother Earth and the continuation of its people. The women gathered
herbal plants and stored them for seasoning or flavoring and for
medicinal purposes in healing. The knowledge of herbal medicine was
not confined to the women, but generally women seemed to be more
familiar with various herbal potions and brews. In some tribes, a
woman - usually the wife of a medicine man - learned secrets in
healing natural illness with herbs by assisting the medicine man. In
other tribal communities women learned the art of doctoring with
herbs from their mothers and grandmothers. In general, if a woman
inherited the right to become a medicine woman, her powers still had
to be validated by a dream in which a spirit, in the form of a
human, an animal, or perhaps just a voice, gave her personal
knowledge. Women who had the gift for curing spent considerable time
wandering around the areas surrounding their encampment, gathering
herbs and other natural ingredients to prepare their medicines. In
most Plains tribes, a medicine woman was not allowed to practice by
herself until she reached middle age and older. The power to heal
usually remained with a woman until her death.
Like her male counterpart, a medicine woman was considered by early Plains Indians to have a special connection to the spirit world and that link is what empowered her to heal. Emotional afflictions required supernatural remedies to recapture the soul. Generally all healers called upon the aid of an ally from the spirit world to guide them in curing illness. Plains Indians believed that both physical and emotional illness reflect an imbalance between the natural world and the spirit world. A healer's task was to restore harmony and balance using herbs, poultices or spoken formulas. In some tribes, women who acquired supernatural abilities became shamans. Shamans were believed to possess the power to influence the good and evil beings in the spirit world. A woman who wished to become a shaman usually sought training from an established shaman in her community. If the old shaman chose her as successor, the younger woman took over the shaman's position when she passed away. The new shaman used the songs and the formulas she inherited, as well as her own creations, to cure disease, predict the future or control the weather. Plains Indian women gained respect and prestige by practicing medicine in their communities. The realm of medicine women in the culture of early Plains Indians was probably one of the women's most powerful roles. |