Native Americans fight to keep traditions alive after COVID
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[May 05, 2022] By
Maria Caspani and Vanessa Johnston
PEARL RIVER, Miss. (Reuters) - One of the
fondest memories Shemah Crosby has of her grandmother Lena is the time
they spent together hand crafting Choctaw Indian traditional dresses,
sowing elaborate appliques onto colorful fabrics.
When her "pokni," the Choctaw term for grandmother, died of COVID-19 in
the early months of the pandemic in 2020, the 20-year-old student lost
not only a beloved family member but a wealth of knowledge about her
Native American tribe, the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians.
It was a wake-up call for Crosby, who began playing a more active role
in her community, learning the tribe's language as well as ancient
practices like beading and dress-making. Last summer, she won the
Choctaw Indian Princess pageant, becoming her tribe's official
ambassador for the year.
"I truly was going be the one to kind of sit back," she recalled on a
recent afternoon as she stood in front of a large wooden cross the tribe
has erected on the shores of Lake Pushmataha, a reservoir on the Choctaw
reservation in Mississippi, in memory of those who died of the virus.
"But now because time is precious I feel I have to take that role, to be
the teacher," she said.
As the death toll from COVID-19 in the United States nears the 1 million
mark, members of the tribe are trying to cope with the devastation
caused by the virus, which knifed swiftly through their community,
killing scores and leaving few families untouched by death.
The death toll included many Choctaw tribal elders, storytellers,
musicians and artisans who were the keepers of traditions that have
shaped the tribe's history and culture for centuries.
COVID-19 has taken a disproportionate toll among Native Americans due in
part to widespread chronic disease in their communities and the historic
underfunding of Indian healthcare systems.
As of early May, 130 Choctaw in the Mississippi reservation had
succumbed to the virus, according to local health officials, a per
capita death rate of 1,300 out of every 100,000 residents. That is three
times higher than the state average, according to a Reuters tally of
public health data. Mississippi leads the nation in deaths per capita.
Indigenous communities across the globe have suffered a disproportionate
negative impact from the pandemic which laid bare long-standing
inequalities and exacerbated challenges including poverty and access to
healthcare, experts say.
By attacking the elderly, COVID-19 threatened the very essence of native
people - their traditions and languages of which the elders were the
guardians. From Latin America to Canada, tribes moved to shield their
culture keepers as much as possible, barricading villages and
prioritizing the elderly for vaccinations. Still, many died carrying
with them their people's knowledge.
STEPPING UP
The Mississippi tribe is no stranger to extreme hardship.
In the early 19th century, the Choctaw tribe was the first of the Indian
nations to be driven from ancestral land in the southeast of the United
States by the government.
Thousands died of starvation, illness and exposure to the elements on a
500-mile (805-km) long journey on foot to what is now Oklahoma after
President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act.
Today, Oklahoma is home to the largest Choctaw community in the country,
followed by Mississippi.
Crosby, an anthropology student, is not the only member of her tribe who
wants to preserve the tribe's traditions after it lost so many
custodians of its culture over the past two years.
Mag Willis, 35, said the pandemic inspired her to create a Facebook
group for Choctaw artisans where people could connect with the crafters,
watch tutorials, and buy pieces such as beaded sandals, elaborate
necklaces and colorful earrings.
"I think there's a lot of people (who are) starting to realize, 'Hey, I
think I need to learn'," said Willis, who lost her grandfather, one of
the tribe's fiddle players, to COVID-19.
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Choctaw Indian Princess Shemah Crosby poses for a photo at Lake
Pushmataha where the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians erected a
COVID-19 memorial in March of 2021. Shemah lost her grandmother,
Lena Denson, due to COVID-19. Denson was a former First Lady of
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. Shemah says her grandmother was
a dress maker and she regrets not learning more from her about their
traditions before she died. REUTERS/Kathleen Flynn
Lakeishia Wallace, 34, began learning beadwork after
leaving the U.S. military more than a decade ago and struggling to
find a job. The pandemic made her realize the importance of sharing
skills, like how to create intricate bead sets and sow ribbon
skirts, traditional clothing with colorful strips sown onto them.
With many in the community wary of meeting in person,
the mother-of-four recently posted a tutorial on Facebook on how to
make a traditional beaded necklace. Now, she said, she is working on
a series of instructional videos and hopes to publish them across
multiple social platforms.
"It's my turn to step up, my turn to get all that knowledge and pass
it on," she said.
'I QUIT COUNTING'
It is hard to find someone in the tight-knit Native American
communities scattered across 10 counties in eastern and central
Mississippi who has not lost family, friends or acquaintances to the
virus.
Jeremy Bell lost many members of his large family over the past two
years and buried two of his cousins on the same day.
"When you lose the first five you're going to cry, but it got to the
point where I got desensitized," Bell said.
"I quit counting after 30."
Death not only upended his family life but also crept into his work.
Bell, who manages a bus transportation network on the reservation,
said he saw his drivers struggle with the loss of many longtime
passengers.
"It was just overwhelming to the point that when I left I shut the
door, locked it, turned off the lights and I just sat there and
cried," he said.
In the tribe's multi-generational households, it was hard to
implement COVID-19 mitigation measures like isolating a sick family
member. Tribe members were made even more vulnerable by the
prevalence of diabetes, obesity and respiratory disease in their
community.
The arrival of COVID-19 vaccines was met with hesitancy by many in
the tribe where the vaccination rate remains stubbornly low at just
above 48%, which is below the national average of 66% fully
vaccinated.
On the Mississippi reservation, budding hope about a post-pandemic
future can’t hide the deep scars left by the pandemic.
In his Pearl River office, the tribe’s chief, Cyrus Ben, sits behind
a wooden desk that is framed by two flagpoles, with the American
Stars and Stripes on one side and the Choctaw Nation's banner on the
other.
COVID-19 not only led to loss of life, but "we lost pieces of our
culture," Ben said, weeping at one point during an often emotional
interview.
"There's going to be a void for quite some time."
How Reuters has tracked the pandemic
During the coming days, various trackers of the COVID-19 pandemic
will reach 1 million U.S. deaths at different times. This variation
is due to how each organization counts COVID deaths. For example,
Reuters includes both confirmed and probable deaths where that data
is available.
The precise toll of the pandemic may never be truly known. Some
people who died while infected were never tested and do not appear
in the data. Others, while having COVID-19, may have died for
another reason, such as a cancer, but were still counted. The CDC
estimates that 1.1 million excess deaths have taken place since Feb.
1, 2020, mainly from COVID. Excess mortality is the increase in
total number of deaths, from any cause, compared with previous
years.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani and Vanessa Johnston in Pearl River,
Mississippi; Editing by Ross Colvin and Lisa Shumaker)
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