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Why Did the Native American People Convert to a Foreign Religion?

Posted: 10/19/11 11:14 AM ET

It is written (Niehardt -- Black Elk Speaks -- 1932) that in the end, Black Elk converted to Catholicism and it is also well-known that Lakota Chief Red Cloud also converted to Catholicism and this brings us to ask: Why?

There have been many very traditional Lakota who never gave up their inherent spirituality for Catholicism or any of the other foreign religion that came from Europe. Crazy Horse, one of the truly great Lakota leaders, went to his grave still holding on to the traditional spiritual beliefs of his ancestors. Why did so many Lakota, Navajo, Pueblo, and other tribal people give up their centuries old beliefs and convert to a foreign religion?

Were the traditional religious beliefs of the indigenous people so weak that its practitioners could give it up so willingly? Or were the persuasive powers of the missionaries so overwhelming that they could cause a people with spiritual beliefs much older than their own to toss them aside and embrace their religion?

This begs the question: How strong were the traditional beliefs of the indigenous people? The Bible says that Christians felt so strongly about their religion they marched into the den of hungry lions singing the praises of their creator. We may never know how many Indians reacted in the same fashion when asked to give up their traditional beliefs and accept a new one. We do know that many Indians chose death before they would accept a new belief.

It is said by Christians that it doesn't really matter if one believes in the Indian way or in the Christian way because we all worship the same God. If that is true, why were Native Americans forced to push aside the way they worshipped their God and forced to accept worshipping another God in another way?

The invading Christians labeled the indigenous people as heathens. They set out with a vengeance to cleanse the land of these heathens. The dictates of the Spanish conquerors were, "convert or die."

The Christian's concept of heaven was that if the heathen Indians were not Christians they would never enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Heaven seemed to be the ultimate goal of the settlers and they never considered that that indigenous people had their own version of heaven.

After his conversion Chief Red Cloud gave up the land where Holy Rosary Mission was built. He asked to be buried at the Holy Rosary cemetery in the black robe of the Catholic priests. He was granted his wish. He and other tribal leaders then proceeded to give up land for other religious orders to build their churches and schools.

Would Crazy Horse have done the same if he had surrendered his freedom to become an Agency Indian?

We will never know the answer to that question, but perhaps Native Americans in the year 2011 should re-examine their concept of Christianity and look back on all of the spiritual beliefs they gave up. The beliefs of the indigenous people appear to be far superior to those of the doom and gloom religions of the European settlers. The "Happy Hunting Grounds" cliché that has become a part of the vernacular would suggest that the Indians preferred happy to hell, fire and brimstone.

In my observance and participation in the spiritual practices of the Lakota, I find that these traditional ways are so much more profound, or down to earth, than the practices of the religions that came across the ocean. It is no wonder that the Native Americans that met the first settlers had a hard time understanding their apparent lack of humor and the shame they felt about the human body.

Because the Indians dressed to accommodate the seasons, they were immediately called naked savages. The Indians had no shame of their bodies, but it was not long before the Indian women were forced to cover their naked breasts by the invading Christians. The settlers forced their self-shame upon the women.

Perhaps it was an act of white supremacy that caused the settlers to totally block out and begin to destroy the faith and ideologies of the indigenous people. There was never an effort made to understand their beliefs. It was automatically assumed that they were inferior and therefore their spirituality and traditions were worthless. They took from the indigenous people the tools to survive and cast aside all others. If they converted to Christianity they would be saved and much more, they would be civilized. Thousands of converted Christian Indians still died at the hands of the settlers. Many died while on their knees praying to their new god.

I am still left with the question that has bothered me all of my life: Why did so many indigenous people convert to the religions that came from a foreign land with a Bible in which not one indigenous tribe in the Western Hemisphere is ever mentioned?

 

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12:08 AM on 10/26/2011
What's interesting is that the earliest Christians, (pre-Constantine) actually held similar beliefs as many indigenous peoples, and thought of creation as sacred and spiritual much the same way. But sadly at the time it was introduced to Native peoples, it had morphed into something much different, and so many atrocities were committed in it's name.

Here is blog that explores some really interesting theology out of Australia, from the Aboriginal Rainbow Spirit spirituality merging with Christianity.

"Most aborigines did not outright reject Christianity. They instead did something that something that missionaries didn’t expect, they found ways to combine the old and new in a process known to anthropologists as syncretism, whereby “the merging of elements from different, even seemingly irreconcilable, world views, is a feature of all religious systems as they seek to adapt to their environments” (Edwards, 1994, 77). This allowed them a means to practice their traditional spirituality while adapting to their new environment. This explanation should not be used to oversimplify the devastating effect that colonisation had on traditional spirituality but it is the beginnings of an aboriginal theology."

http://religionandsociety09.blogspot.com/2009/06/towards-aboriginal-christian-theology.html

And more on this idea from a Christian peace/eco-activist:

http://paceebene.org/blog/jarrod-mckenna/rainbow-spirit-quotes
05:41 PM on 10/25/2011
One of my inspirations is Hatuey- a Taino leader (cacique).

He was captured by the Spaniards and sentenced to die by fire... Before his execution, a Spanish priest tried to convert him to Christianity - by force, which is how most of our ancestors became Christians. The priest explained to him that if he agreed to be baptized, that he would be cleansed from all sins against the Christian God. Hatuey asked the priest: 'After being baptized, where do people go after death?' The priest replied: 'To Heaven', to which Hatuey asked: 'And the Spaniards, where do they go?' The priest answered: 'If they are baptized, of course they shall go to Heaven like all good Christians.' As soon as the honorable Cacique heard that response, he bravely uttered: 'If the Spaniards will go to Heaven, then I certainly do not wish to go there! So, do not baptize me, I'd rather go to Hell!'

(from: http://haitianarawak.com/documents/essays/hatuey.php)
11:26 AM on 10/25/2011
fear
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
09:09 PM on 10/24/2011
"Or were the persuasive powers of the missionaries so overwhelming that they could cause a people with spiritual beliefs much older than their own " Given the paucity of evidence regarding religious beliefs in North America during the first millennium CE how do we know Black Elk's ancestors had the same beliefs he did before he converted to Catholicism?
11:59 PM on 10/22/2011
Most people follow the crowd. True spirituali­ty is not to be found in the crowd. Sometimes the few who resist are just crazy, or just stubborn. But sometimes that craziness and stubbornne­ss are essential allies of the truth. What, after all, does a name like "Crazy Horse" mean? It means one who is a true individual­. "Crazy" in the sense of not like the rest. A "Horse" in the sense of intrinsic strength and vitality. The Spirit of Crazy Horse will never die. It cannot be killed.
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
05:55 PM on 10/19/2011
If you can't beat them, join them?
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michelesda
My micro-bio is empty.
02:44 PM on 10/19/2011
Why did the native American people convert to a foreign religion? For the same reason as the white man did; culture and commerce normally trump conscience in our religious choices. We need no more than recollect the conversion of Europe to Christianity, a foreign-invasive religious species from the Middle East, in Mediaeval times, as the final climax of a five hundred year blood bath. Rome fell to the barbarians, but ultimately got its revenge when the barbarians fell to the Roman religion. Unable to conquer Europe by the sword, Christianity finally prevailed by politics and commerce, thanks to the infiltration of the political power of the Roman church into every European government, schoolhouse and market place, to the point where you couldn't get any business done, protect yourself from neighboring powers, get an education, form trade agreements or advance yourself in the world without the pope's imprimatur and daily prime-signing yourself as a putative Christian. The old folk religions were relegated to the poverty-stricken countryside, there to wither away with the coming of coinage, the burgher class and the Age of Towns. Most people today hardly realize that Christianization was as painful a cultural tragedy for Europeans in its day as it later was for Native Americans, and that today's European Christian worshipping a Middle Eastern God is merely a slave who, over the generations, came to fall in love with his chains.
01:01 PM on 10/23/2011
Very well put. I couldn't have said it better myself...
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michelesda
My micro-bio is empty.
03:17 PM on 10/24/2011
Thanks. One of those obscure little historical angles that IMO ought to be better known.
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whirlpool
founder walnut tree congregation
11:41 AM on 10/19/2011
Probably most converted because they were coerced to do so by both direct and subtle means. However having studied petroglyphs for many years, I came to the conclusion that the shamans made many of them to depict the various stages of their trance flights. Surprisingly the same shamanic elements and symbols occur in Catholicism although I am certain that the priests are not aware of it. In other words the religions of the Native Peoples and Christianity came from the same root stock.
10:59 PM on 10/19/2011
In Canada, we are taught the Jesuits were so successful with the Algonquins because they incorporated/integrated the natives' sacred imagery. They even had a missionary school for it before they sent them out. In BC the Catholics had something called the Catholic Ladder which, I think, taught Catholic dogma with First Nation imagery.
Not surprising, and Catholic church is rife with pagan imagery (no offense anyone) but the RC's were always real good of adopting useful images. (eg Christmas, Easter, etc.) The best part, is my Catholic friends seem cool with it.
Happy All Hallows Eve everybody!
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whirlpool
founder walnut tree congregation
10:50 AM on 10/20/2011
Interesting. I am part Native myself but I spent 20 years as an avocation trying to understand the petroglyphs on the Oregon desert. As a scientist I found my methods didn't work so I began a study of shamanism, mythology, archetypes and the theory of art. I finally concluded that the art was made by the shamans to depict the various stages of their trance flight journeys to the heavens. The correspondences between the various components of this ritual is startling similar to the rituals and symbols in Catholicism particularly the crucifixion/resurrection. I think this is more of a archetypal/collective unconscious phenomenon. Shamanism goes back about 10,000 years and its under tows can certainly be seen in religion. There is certain images on the petroglyphs that can also be seen in modern art and children's art including the stretched man image.