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Contradictions of indigeneity in the symbol and cult(ure) of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha

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Abstract

The purpose of this article is to critically examine the practical and symbolic contradictory dimensions of indigeneity in the contemporary cult of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha as it is practiced by and implemented for indigenous North American peoples, focusing in particular on her own people: Mohawks. I take a theoretical approach rooted in political economy to understand the basis and structure of these contradictions, tensions, and the social terrain in which indigenous people live, and in which these meanings are produced. The ethnographic dimension centers on a group of Mohawks that make regular/seasonal pilgrimages from their reserves/reservations along the Saint Lawrence River (Akwesasne and Kahnawake) to her shrine in the Mohawk valley. The shared meanings that exist for her devotees are embedded in material processes of exploitation and unequal power, and have been since the beginning. Kateri Tekakwitha’s entire life was produced within the context of and as a result of the social devastation of imperialism and colonization. Since the late nineteenth century, the Catholic Church has actively promoted the figure of Kateri Tekakwitha as the Catholic face of the United States and in particular since at least the early twentieth century as the Catholic face of North American indigeneity. I explain indigenous participation in the cult of the saint as representing the struggle within and against domination as well as the struggle within and against indigenous ‘culture’ and ‘tradition’.

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Notes

  1. Also known as the National Shrine of North American Martyrs.

  2. Pseudonyms used throughout except in the case of Sister Kateri Mitchell.

  3. Though there have been occasions throughout the years where in certain political moments their resistance to outside society has manifested against her. Greer (2005: 200) notes the example of during the Oka crisis there was apparently talk within the Warrior movement about destroying her shrine in Kahnawake as a symbol of spiritual conquest and oppression. Also, when I traveled to the church in Kahnawake they told me a story from a few decades back about an effort by an unknown person to try to steal Kateri Tekakwitha’s body. The person was able to get about halfway across the frozen Saint Lawrence River while being pursued before they abandoned the body for the sake of their escape.

  4. Theme of repatriation also used by Holmes (2001) for how Native Catholics have tried to make the saint their own.

  5. And he emphasized that it was particularly those lower class and marginalized native people that converted.

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Rose, S.W. Contradictions of indigeneity in the symbol and cult(ure) of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha. Dialect Anthropol 45, 135–150 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10624-020-09596-0

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