![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9ot6xsxaCAYN_3i3ClleP3wavxtlUYZEir_zE3lHqvDN_FICa4MytAH05g9GImixEMpBw8MC1Oum6PVPBfBeF44zONIE6JLt5PCKI26i4_TzBccWGardCYZc5Ag7qn_veIJN1mndo2_E/s400/2009-10-26-1TwoSpiritsNavajosamesexcouple.jpg)
This video beautifully presents the two-spirit tradition. It emphasizes that the two-spirit role is a spiritual one, which makes it different from gay or lesbian identity, which is based on the physical and social.
"Traditionally, the Two-spirited person was one who had received a gift from the Creator, that gift being the privilege to house both male and female spirits in their bodies. " Having both male and female within gives two-spirit people the ability to transcend boundaries, including the boundary between the earth and the spirit world. Thus they can provide a conduit to the spirit world. For this reason, two-spirit people were traditionally respected, and held powerful and important roles as teachers and healers.
Native American writers Sandra Laframboise and Michael Anhorn say, "Many tribes had rituals for children to go through if they were recognized as acting different from their birth gender. These rituals ensured the child was truly two-spirit. If parents noticed that a son was disinterested in boyish play or manly work, they would set up a ceremony to determine which way the boy would be brought up. They would make an enclosure of brush, and place in the center both a man's bow and a woman's basket. The boy was told to go inside the circle of brush and to bring something out, and as he entered the brush would be set on fire. The tribe watched what he took with him as he ran out, and if it was the basketry materials they reconciled themselves to his being a 'berdache'."
Sandra Laframboise and Michael Anhorn have posted a detailed article on two-spirit people written from a positive gay identity. They point out the controversy between traditionalists and two-spirit people, in the post-colonial context of today's America, and urge us all to learn from this heritage, which can enrich all of us.
Rachael,
ReplyDeleteI, too, have been told that Native peoples consider gay people more spiritual and a gift to their villages. I was also told by a Cherokee teacher that what the Creator is most concerned about is how much love is being pumped into the Universe, regardless of whom is feeling love for, man or woman for man or woman. It makes no difference to the Creator.
thank you for this beautiful posting.
blessings,
mare
Marc,
ReplyDeleteI read a lot of near-death literature at one point, and it confirmed what the Cherokee teacher told you. In the life review, apparently, the one thing that matters is how well you loved. Nothing else. Thank you for your thoughtful and loving comment.
Hi, I work with Native Transgender individuals on the Navajo Nation. I provide a session on the History of Transgender indviduals in our native culture. I would like to know when this picture was taken and of which tribe are they coming from. This is a wonderful pic by the way! Thanks! Sasha
ReplyDeleteHi Sasha, I'm sorry, I don't know the history of that lovely photo, and I see that the link it came from has died. (I've left the link, at least for a while, just in case McGill restores it.) Do you have a link to some of your work? If so, please post it.
ReplyDelete