m on the prairie 3 ' 7 -":. 1 : ft Each year during the moon when the cherries ripen (in August) the Oglala Sioux supplicate to their Great Spirit in a religious ceremony called the Sun Dance. The ceremony, once banned by the government because of its "unusual cruelty," takes place in a circular area located on the outskirts of Pine Ridge, S.D. Toward the end of the ceremony, after many offerings of peace pipes to the sun, participants attach ropes tied to the top of an aspen in the center of the arena to small pieces of wood skewered under the skin of their breasts. The dancers then run away from the tree as hard as they can until the skewers are torn loose and the skin is broken. The ceremony is a very exhausting one involving four days of fasting and praying culminating with the piercing. These days the affair is not as rigorous as it once was due to government intervention when one ceremony resulted in the death of one of the dancers some years back. Reasons for participation are varied-some come to give thanks for good fortune, others to ask for help in solving problems of illness and still others simply to show faith in the Great Spirit and in Indian ways. The presentation of these photographs is in no way a claim to impart the essence of the Sun Dance. That is impossible and only can be understood by the experience of being there and being Indian. They are, instead, only meager images of a scant few of the observers and participants in a very beautiful and very religious ce Qmony. They are only a little bit of captured light taken from that particular time and place, a small reflection of life on the prairie. if .1 'r ( rt If I 1 T' ., , "-'O ,?L'i-V Photos and story by Dan Ladely thursday, October 5, 1972 ' 1 1 o l 7 a f daily nebraskan I 1.1 f i jtir in m mil hiiiih ml 4' I1 V HIM V, -Ill .. v:mh " : " t -A 1J Vn,