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Resistance and HealingPicking
up where our ancestors left off
Addiction and Recovery in Native America
Lost History, Enduring Lessons
An article by Don Coyhis and William
L. White
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Resistance
and Healing!
Here are some
of today's People
picking up where our Ancestors left off
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The
dawn of the twenty-first century marks a time of great cultural
renewal and individual and collective healing among the Native
peoples of North America. The growing sobriety movement in
Indian Country represents just one dimension of this larger
process of personal and tribal revitalization.
The
authors are collaborating on researching the history of addiction
and recovery among the indigenous peoples of North America
for a book to be published in the near future. This history
is being assembled from archival records and from the oral
testimony of tribal elders. Our first report of this research
- Explores
the historical roots of Native alcohol problems
- Challenges
the "firewater myths" that have long permeated
conceptions of the etiology of Native alcohol problems
- Details
the role Native leaders played in organizing America's
first sobriety-based, mutual aid societies, and
- Describes
the recent "Indianization" of Alcoholics Anonymous,
the revival of Native cultural revitalization and therapeutic
movements, and the development of culturally meaningful
alcoholism treatment philosophies and techniques
In
this article, we will identify the movements that, for more
than 250 years, have provided frameworks of alcoholism recovery
for Native peoples, and explore what can be learned from these
historical movements to enhance the quality of contemporary
addiction counseling.
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Five
overlapping movements have provided a framework for
alcoholism recovery within and across Native American
tribal cultures.
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Five
Movements
Five overlapping movements have provided a framework for alcoholism
recovery within and across Native American tribal cultures.
- The
first to emerge were the eighteenth and nineteenth century
recovery "circles" and abstinence-based cultural
revitalization movements of the Delaware Prophets Papounhan,
Wangomend, Neolin, and Scatttameck, the Shawnee Prophet
Tenskwatawa, and the Kickapoo Prophet Kennekuk. These prophetic
leaders used their own recoveries from alcoholism to launch
abstinence-based, pan-Indian movements that called for the
rejection of alcohol and a return to ancestral traditions.
- Native
preachers like Samson Occom, William Apess, and George Copway
used their own lives as living proof of the power of Christian
conversion and worship to cure alcoholism.
- The
development of new abstinence-based Native religions continued
in the nineteenth century, including the Longhouse Religion
(Code of Handsome Lake), the Indian Shaker Church, and the
Native American Church. These Native religions constitute
the most historically enduring frameworks for alcoholism
recovery within Native communities.
- The
fourth movement, the "Indianization of Alcoholics Anonymous"
(A.A.) began in the 1960s, and represents the growing adaptation
of A.A. steps and meeting rituals to enhance A.A. effectiveness
within Native communities.
- The
threads of these earlier movements are being woven into
the contemporary Wellbriety movement. White Bison, Inc.,
an American Indian nonprofit organization and one of the
leaders of this new movement, is working to expand recovery
support structures within Native communities across North
America. This goal is being achieved through recovery education
(Well Nations Magazine and Wellbriety! Online Magazine),
national recovery awareness walks (Hoop Journeys), training
indigenous leaders to organize recovery circles (Firestarters
program), hosting recovery celebration events in local Native
communities, and advocating for culturally-informed social
policies and treatment approaches. One of White Bison's
most recent projects is publication of The Red Road To
Wellbriety, a Native adaptation of the basic text of
Alcoholics Anonymous. (see www.whitebison.org).
These
five movements share many characteristics. They were created
by Native men and women who entered recovery after each had
been wounded by alcoholism. The religious and revitalization
movements they created provided an opportunity, in healing
themselves, to heal their families and communities as well.
The tradition of "wounded healers" in the arena
of alcoholism recovery begins in eighteenth century Native
America. This practice drew deeply from the belief in many
Native cultures that a dramatic recovery from an illness was
a potential sign of one's calling as a healer. The Native
leaders of America's first mutual aid societies assumed
this role more through ecstatic (experiential) initiation
than didactic (formal education) initiationa practice
that was later emulated in the rise of alcoholism counseling.
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The
tradition of "wounded healers" in the arena
of alcoholism recovery begins in eighteenth century
Native America.
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Native
American recovery movements rose from the prophetic visions
of their leaders. These visions portrayed alcohol as a weapon
of cultural conquest and sobriety as a strategy of cultural
resistance. The movements identified above were multidimensional
movements, with each containing a unique combination of spiritual/religious
rebirth, cultural revitalization, personal healing, and, in
some cases, political advocacy. All provided a pathway and
framework for recovery from alcoholism that inextricably linked
the sobriety and health of the individual to the survival
and health of the tribe.
Therapeutic
Functions
Viewed as a whole, these indigenous movements provide a striking
list of therapeutic benefits. In fact, one might assess current
treatment designs by their ability to achieve these very utilities.
Here's some of what they provided:
- Commitment:
culturally framed rationales for radical abstinence and
a call for sobriety and sacrifice to a higher purpose than
self (the People).
- Purification:
rituals of physical and emotional detoxification (fasting,
purging, sweating, herbal medicines) and spiritual connection
(vision quests).
- Substitution:
replacement of alcohol with other sacred substances, e.g.,
the "Black Drink," peyote, tobacco, sage, cedar.
- Identity:
affirmation of personal and cultural identity--connection
with ancestral traditions and innate knowledge (the ancestors
within).
- Reconciliation:
mending of family and social relationships.
- Prescriptions
for living: a reconstruction of values and daily lifestyle
(e.g., the Code of Handsome Lake, Peyote Way, the Red Road).
- Re-connection
to Community: sustained affiliation with a stable network
of recovering people supported by a larger cultural community.
- Ceremony:
participation in rituals that solidify pro-recovery values
and relationships.
- Story:
the transmission of life-changing ideas through the ancient
oral tradition of storytelling.
- Meaning:
a worldview of oneself and one's sobriety within the
context of Native history, culture and religion.
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Native
American recovery movements rose from the prophetic
visions of their leaders. These visions portrayed alcohol
as a weapon of cultural conquest and sobriety as a strategy
of cultural resistance.
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Legacies
and Lessons
What can today's addiction counselor draw from these
movements? We would suggest at least five interrelated lessons.
1-Interconnectedness
Alcohol and other drug problems in Native America are rooted
within complex historical, cultural, political, and economic
processes, and the resolution of these problems must reflect
a deep understanding of such processes. Native alcohol problems
emerged and continue to emerge through a collision of context
and person. While the understanding of the unique vulnerability
of each client is essential, so also is an understanding
of the ecology within which Native alcohol problems arose
and have continued. More specifically, this ecology must
be understood in terms of the interconnectedness between
the wounding and intergenerational healing of the individual,
the family and a people. This can be understood by the words,
The honor of one is the honor of all
The hurt of
one is the hurt of all. The resolution of Native alcohol
problems must be linked to hope for a people as well as
hope for the individual being counseled.
2-Tribal
Cultures
The most viable frameworks of addiction recovery for Native
Americans tap the deepest roots of tribal cultures. The
job of the conscientious addiction counselor is to become
a student of these cultures--their histories, their organization,
their values, their ceremonies and folkways, and their systems
of healing. The addiction counselor can help forge a bridge
between the treatment agency and tribal cultures by encouraging
the involvement of family elders, tribal elders and traditional
medicine people (herbalists, shamanic healers, spiritual
advisors) in the design and delivery of treatment services
for Native clients. The goal here is to create a menu of
words, ideas, rituals and experiences within the counseling
milieu that can be selectively used by Native people who
bring enormous diversity in terms of their personal histories,
personalities, religious and spiritual beliefs, and degree
of acculturation Such an approach recognizes the multiple
sources and patterns of Native alcohol problems as well
as the multiple pathways and styles of long-term recovery
among Native peoples.
3-Bridging
the Gap
Traditional treatment and mutual support require significant
adaptation to enhance their effectiveness with Native Americans.
Native purification and healing practices (sacred dances,
the sweat lodge, and talking circles) may have special applicability
to Native people suffering from alcoholism who are also
estranged from tribal identity, language, and ceremonies.
Dr. Wolfgang Jilek has described the potential therapeutic
effects of ceremonies (the Spirit Dance, the Sun Dance and
the Gourd Dance) and the potential value in the cross-cultural
collaboration between Western and Native healers in the
treatment of alcoholism.
Bridging the gap between Native and Western healing practices
begins with the mastery of cultural etiquette--the etiquette
of respect inherent within verbal and non-verbal (e.g.,
eye contact, touch, boundaries of personal space) communication
rituals, and the recognition that such etiquette varies
across and within tribes. Bridging that gap requires delivering
such assistance within the elements of particular Native
cultures. Such elements include: values (e.g., patience,
generosity, cooperation, humility), teaching metaphors (e.g.,
the medicine wheel), symbols (e.g., the sacred pipe, eagle
feathers), rituals (e.g., sweat lodge, smudging ceremonies),
traditional skills (e.g., carving, silversmithing), stories,
and cultural events (e.g., powwows). It calls for the presence
of Indian men and women within the treatment milieu who
offer living proof of the redemptive power of recovery and
cultural re-connection. The addiction counselor is best
viewed as a midwife who helps combine and elicit these healing
experiences rather than as the expert who "treats"
the client.
4-Wellbriety
Personal recovery for Native Americans is best framed within
a broader umbrella of Wellbriety--physical, psychological,
relational, and spiritual health. The concept of Wellbriety
is an affirmation of the interconnectedness of all aspects
of one's life. At its most practical level, the focus
on Wellbriety calls for global rather than categorical assessment,
treatment plans that reflect the total vulnerabilities and
assets of the person/family/tribe, and advocacy for sustained
recovery support systems in the client's physical and
cultural environment.
5-A
Wider View of Health
Addiction treatment and recovery support services are best
framed within a broader concern for the global health of
Native communities, rather than through a singular focus
on alcohol- or other drug-related problems. The danger in
the sometimes exaggerated and narrow focus on Native alcohol
problems is that one comes to see alcoholism treatment and
alcoholism recovery as a panacea for individuals and tribes
instead of viewing Native alcoholism as nested within a
much more complex network of political, economic and social
problems that are linked to the history of Native tribes
within the United States. It is this nexus between the individual,
the community and history that has long given religious
and cultural revitalization movements an important role
in the resolution of Native alcohol problems. This fifth
principle, by affirming the inextricable link between personal
health and community health, calls upon the addiction treatment
agency and the addiction counselor to become actively involved
in the communities within which their clients reside or
to which they identify.
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The
addiction counselor can help forge a bridge between
the treatment agency and tribal cultures by encouraging
the involvement of family elders, tribal elders and
traditional medicine people (herbalists, shamanic healers,
spiritual advisors) in the design and delivery of treatment
services for Native clients.
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The
Healing Forest
This person-community link is being conveyed to Native communities
across the country within the cultural model of the Healing
Forest. When a sick tree is removed from diseased soil,
treated, and returned and replanted in the same diseased soil,
it gets sick again. What is called for instead is a healing
of the tree AND the replacement of diseased elements in the
soil with nurturing elements. Personal recovery flourishes
best in a climate of family health, cultural vitality, political
sovereignty, and economic security. What White Bison and other
Native recovery advocacy organizations are trying to do is
mobilize all segments of Native communitiesthe tribal
councils, schools, churches, service programs, and political
and cultural organizationsto forge and then actualize
a healing vision for the community. The goal is to create
a Healing Forest that creates a synergy between personal and
community wellness. Such a synergy is reflected in the words
of Andy Chelsea, who as the Shuswap tribal chief at Alkali
Lake, declared, "The community is the treatment center."
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The
capacity of addiction counselors to be part of this
era of healing and renewal will be enhanced if we enter
into partnership with Native communities, or serve these
communities from within, as observers, as listeners,
and as students.
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A
Closing Thought
There is a long history of harm done in the name of good in
the relationship between Native tribes and federal and state
governments and other organizations. One of the most egregious
of such injuries was the enforced removal of Native children
to Indian boarding schools that were designed to destroy the
"Indianness" of these children. The motto of William
Pratt, the founder of the Carlisle School in Pennsylvania,
was "Kill the Indian and save the man." It is instructive
that this systematic dismantling of Native family structure
and deculturation of Native children was implemented with
promises of its potential benefit to Native peoples. A history
of such misguided and harmful interventions calls upon professional
helpers today to enter into our relationship with each Native
client and each Native community with an attitude of quiet
humility, observing the ultimate ethical mandate to "First
do no harm!" The capacity of addiction counselors to
be part of this era of healing and renewal will be enhanced
if we enter into partnership with Native communities, or serve
these communities from within, as observers, as listeners,
and as students.
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