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The Mescalero Apaches
| Article
# : |
11370 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
11 / 1986 |
7,854 Words |
| Author
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Claire R. Farrer and Bernard Second Claire Farrer, the senior author, is an anthropologist
folklorist who has worked With the Mescalero Apache
intensively since 1974 and periodically since 1964. During
much of that time, she has been instructed by Bernard Second,
a Mescalero Apache Singer of Ceremonies. While the writing
responsibility is hers, she would often have little to say
without having worked closely with him. Farrer teaches
anthropology at California State University at Chico, while
Second lives and sings at Mescalero. |
Apaches! The name is seldom mentioned, even in thought, without an exclamation point. What is the reality behind the term? Are they really the bloodthirsty, heathen savages described in frontier novels and portrayed in Hollywood and spaghetti Westerns? And, indeed, do they still exist? These often-asked questions have simple answers: No, they are not as described in the media, and yes, they do exist. But there is a complexity behind the simple answers.
In the past twenty years there have been many changes on the Mescalero Apache Indian Reservation, a preserve of over 460,000 acres in the mountains and high plains of south central New Mexico. Most of the changes are improvements, whether the perspective is that of Indians or Anglos, a term used in the Southwestern part of the United States to characterize non-Indian, non-Hispanic, non-black people. With the ever-increasing standard of living on the reservation, there are also fears that the traditional ways and culture will be lost in the headlong rush to modernization. Maintaining the precarious balance between living within the confines of the larger, mainstream American culture and living according to ancient dictates presents the tribe with perhaps its greatest challenge.
Challenge or no, the people remain as they have always been. Most are generous and proud, with a finely honed sense of humor and hospitality, but some are hostile, tending toward verbal or physical abuse, usually when drinking. They are, as are all humans, a mixture of the desirable and shadowy aspects of potential human characteristics. More saliently, they have endured centuries of efforts to force them to assimilate and programs designed to eliminate them entirely. Their endurance, the people themselves say,
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