Search

Top News

Bear Butte gathering seeks spiritual unity

Previous Next
Previous Page
Share
Print
Email

About 150 people are gathered at the base of Bear Butte near Sturgis this weekend to pray, share stories and feel the spiritual presence of a mountain held sacred by Native American tribes.

The Spiritual Unity of Tribes Gathering of Eagles, which is being held at Free Spirit Campground, began Thursday and will conclude Sunday evening, June 29, with most of the participants expected to depart Monday afternoon.

By then, they hope to have made human connections in ways that can spread throughout the world.

"We're here to experience community. There's people here from all over the world -- Australia, Alaska, Arizona, New Mexico -- and a lot of people from around here," organizer Clayton Uptain of Rapid City said. "The idea is to get together and learn how to get along with each other and live in unity."

Based in part on a vision of unity expressed by the Lakota holy man Black Elk, the spiritual-unity gatherings began in Canada 19 years ago and have been held in South Dakota and other states each year since.

Australian John Palmer is among those who have been camped at the Free Spirit Campground since Thursday. Palmer works with aboriginal people in Australia, and he came to Gathering of the Eagles, drawn by the sacred butte that looms above the campground.

Kimberlaine Willoughby felt the same spiritual pull. She is a member of the Bitter Water Clan of the Navajo Nation, and she joined the gathering from her home in Mexican Springs, N.M.

"I haven't climbed the butte yet, but I'm drawn to it," she said.

She first came to the gathering in 1996 with her late grandmother. This year, she's back with her mother, Edith, and other family members.

"It's my honor to bring my mother to this now," she said.

The group held sessions under a pine-bough-covered arbor, where they've kept a sacred fire burning night and day, Uptain said.

For more information about the gathering, go to www.sut-gatheringofeagles.org.

Journal staff writer Mary Garrigan contributed to this story.

Contact Kevin Woster at 394-8413 or kevin.woster@rapidcityjournal.com

Rapid Reply

Send us your Rapid Reply

(optional)
   
The preceeding are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Rapid City Journal or Lee Enterprises.

The opinions above are from readers of rapidcityjournal.com and in no way represent the views of the Rapid City Journal or Lee Enterprises.

Rapidcityjournal.com provides this community forum for readers to exchange ideas and opinions on the news of the day. Passionate views, pointed criticism and critical thinking are welcome. Name-calling, crude language and personal abuse are not welcome. Moderators will monitor comments with an eye toward maintaining a high level of civility in this forum. Our comment policy explains the rules of the road for registered commenters.

If you don't see your comment, perhaps...

  • you called someone an idiot, a racist, a dope, a moron, etc. Please, no name-calling or profanity (or veiled profanity -- #$%^&*).
  • you rambled, failed to stay on topic or exhibited troll-like behavior intended to hijack the discussion at hand.
  • YOU SHOUTED YOUR COMMENT IN ALL CAPS. This is hard to read and annoys readers.
  • you named a business or identified a business in a way good or bad. Contact the business directly with your customer service concerns or your praise – they’ll likely appreciate your feedback.
  • you believe the newspaper's coverage is unfair. It would be better to write Jerry Steinley at jerry.steinley@rapidcityjournal.com or call him at 394-8427. This is a forum for community discussion, not for media criticism. We'd rather address your concerns directly.
  • you included an e-mail address or phone number, pretended to be someone you aren't or offered a comment that makes no sense.
  • you accused someone of a crime or assigned guilt or punishment to someone suspected of a crime.
  • your comment is in really poor taste.

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Top Jobs

Featured Dealers

Newspaper Ads

RCJ Extras

Advertisement