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American Buffalo
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SYMBOL OF STRENGTH
In bringing back the buffalo, the ITBC is attempting to restore a key part of Native American culture. Once, dozens of prairie tribes depended on the bison for food, and their lives revolved around the annual buffalo hunt, which was celebrated in song and ritual like those seen on AMERICAN BUFFALO. The "buffalo people," as some tribes called the animals, were revered for their power and the good fortune they brought the tribe. "I really believe, like the old people do, that these [animals] have a spirit," says Gerard Baker, a Plains Indian who appears in SACRED BUFFALO PEOPLE, a documentary film made by the Native American Public Broadcasting Consortium in 1992. "When you shoot them, you can almost feel that spirit around you for a while."
One place that spirit is now being felt again is the Fort Belknap Reservation, of the Assiniboine and Grow Ventre tribes in northern Montana. There, modern buffalo hunters use helicopters to help manage a herd of 250 bison -- part of a larger effort to restore many native animals to the land. On the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, however, Lakota herdsmen still go out on horseback to round up the herd, which has become an important source of meat. The annual event is followed by a slaughtering ceremony that attracts widespread attention. Indeed, selling bison meat has become a $650 million industry -- one that many Native Americans are eager to join. Bringing back buffalo herds, they say, will not only bring in some sorely-needed cash, it will also help realize an old tribal vow. "I love the land and the buffalo," a Kiowa elder once said, "and I will not part with it. I want you to understand well what I say." Today, a new generation of Native Americans seeking to restore buffalo to their lands say they understand all too well.
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