White Deerskin Dance
The White Deerskin Dance, or Xonsil-ch´idilye, is a significant ceremonial event for the Yurok, Hupa, and Karuk tribes, occurring in late summer or fall and lasting between ten to sixteen days. This ceremony serves as a world-renewal ritual that celebrates and restores the cycles of life within the natural world, particularly emphasizing the life cycle of the salmon, which is crucial to the Yurok people's sustenance. Beyond a mere retelling of the Yurok creation story, the dance functions to realign the relationship between the human community and nature, ensuring that seasonal cycles continue harmoniously.
The ceremony consists of multiple components, culminating in additional rituals such as the Ta:´altul, or "Boat Dance," which gathers prayers from the past and present, followed by the Xay-ch´idilye, or "Jump Dance," aimed at dispelling evil and promoting prosperity. The term "White Deerskin Dance," attributed by non-Indigenous observers, refers to the decorated deerskins used in the ceremony, which symbolize purity and clarity rather than a specific color. The concept of "white" in this context embodies higher virtues and represents an ancient lineage of noble beings within Indigenous traditions, reflecting deep cultural significance and respect for ancestral values.
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White Deerskin Dance
- TRIBE AFFECTED: Yurok, Hupa, and Karuk
SIGNIFICANCE: This world-renewal ceremony celebrates the continuing cycles of life
The Xonsil-ch´idilye, or the White Deerskin Dance, is one of three ceremonies performed in succession during the late summer or fall, lasting from ten to sixteen days. While essentially a reenactment of the Yurok creation story, it is much more than a retelling: This Native American dance itself is thought to put the world back in order. The ceremony is designed to correct temporary flaws in the relationship of the human community to the natural world and thus enable the seasonal cycles to continue properly. At the center of the story is the life cycle of the salmon, the main source of sustenance along the rivers of the Yurok homeland. Near the end of the ten days, another religious ceremony, the Ta:´altul, meaning "Boat Dance," is conducted to gather past and present prayers. The final ceremony is the Xay-ch´idilye, or "Jump Dance." Special Jump Dance baskets are weaved for the ceremony, which aims to remove evil from the world and bring in prosperity.
The name “White Deerskin Dance” was given to this ceremony by non-Indian people and is something of a misnomer. “White” refers to specially prepared deerskins, decorated with feathers, shells, and other materials, that are held up on poles by the dancers during the exoteric portion of the ceremony. The skins are not always white in color.
White, for the Yurok and other Indigenous peoples who engage in the ceremony, represents not only a color but also a concept of something pure and clear. It also refers to a tradition of an ancient race of people, called “white” or “clear,” who embodied the highest virtues and nobility.
Bibliography
"About the Yurok Tribe." Yurok Tribe, www.yuroktribe.org/about-us. Accessed 20 Nov. 2024.
"California/Great Basin." National Museum of the American Indian, americanindian.si.edu/exhibitions/infinityofnations/california-greatbasin/002182.html. Accessed 20 Nov. 2024.
Graybill, John. "Obsidian Bearer, White Deerskin Dance - Hupa, 1923 by Edward Curtis in Vol 13 of the North American." Curtis Legacy Foundation, 27 Mar. 2020, www.curtislegacyfoundation.org/post/obsidian-bearer-white-deerskin-dance-hupa-1923-by-edward-curtis-in-vol-13-of-the-north-american. Accessed 20 Nov. 2024.
"Religion." Yurok Tribe, www.yuroktribe.org/religion. Accessed 20 Nov. 2024.