Published 10:28 pm Sunday, July 2, 2023
By Staff Reports
Here in full Native American regalia are
Dr. Chuck Borum, left, and David Kelley. Borum is director of the Natchez
Powwow. |
From left are Katy Tingtella, Kelsey
Kelley, David Kelley, Kylin Kelley, Kaylin Kelley, and Jodie Revard, Osage
congresswoman and cousin to David, and Guy Ray Pocowatchit, Jodie’s partner. |
By ROSCOE BARNES III
Special to The Natchez Democrat
NATCHEZ — After years of wondering about his Native
American heritage, David Kelley is now officially recognized — and embraced —
as a member of the Osage Nation.
On May 27, while visiting Pawhuska, Okla., the
nation named him, Wah-shin Sah, which means “Black Bird.”
“It’s black bird, but it’s more than a black bird,” said Kelley in a recent interview. “It’s a spirit bird, more along the lines of the ‘intangible shadow of the eagle’ — a spirit bird, as it was explained to me.”
Kelley said the experience of being named was so exciting
and so meaningful, it is hard to put into words. “It was amazing,” he said,
noting his wife, Kelsey, received the honorary name, Hein Kin Pi, which
means “Has seen and understands” (Treasure for the People).
His daughters, Kylin and Kaylin, are “legitimate
natives” and received Osage names, Kelley said. Kylin was named Maun-Tseh
Tsey Key, which means “Sacred Arrow Staff” (Entrusted by the People), and
Kaylin was named, Hein-Keh Maun-Key. Her name means “Plume Falling into Nest”
(Mother’s Love Always Present).
On June 22, on his second trip to Oklahoma, Kelley took
his seat with the Osage tribe in Pawhuska during the I-Lonschka,
an important ceremonial gathering in Osage culture. “It’s the great
ceremony of the Osage nation,” said Kelley.
“I am now known,” he said, explaining the seating gives
him an official connection with his Osage family. “Before, when I attended
dances, I was only a visitor, but now, wherever I go, no matter what dance, I
will be seated with Osage. I am Osage.”
Osage seating
Kelley said he had to be named before he could be seated.
The seating occurred on the first day of the dance ceremony. Kelley
said he was seated at the 2 p.m. dance on Thursday, June 22. It was a moving
experience, he recalled.
Kelley was standing outside the arbor, which he described
as a big pavilion, when an Osage man, the town crier, approached him. Kelley
covered the man with a Pendleton blanket as a gesture of respect.
The man led him inside the arbor while speaking loudly in
a Native American tongue. Along the way the man cried out Kelley’s name,
saying, “Wah-shin Sah! He is Osage! Wah-shin Sah! He is Osage!” “He is one of
us!”
Kelley went inside and presented five blankets to his
Osage brothers, which included the head men and drum keepers.
The committee man stepped up and gave a presentation on
Kelley’s family lineage “so that everyone could understand my history and know
that I was legitimate and eligible to be seated,” Kelley said. The head committeeman took an immature golden
eagle feather and placed it on Kelley’s headdress, after which, the whip man
came over and placed Kelley in a seat.
At that moment, Kelley officially took his seat as
Wah-shin Sah.
As a sign of his acceptance, his brothers granted him the
right to wear the roach, a traditional Native American male headdress made from
the soft quills of a porcupine.
Dr. Charles Borum’s help
Kelley credits Dr. Charles Borum, director of the Natchez
Powwow, with helping him to learn about the ways of Native Americans in general
and the Osage Nation in particular.
“Without him none of this would have happened,” Kelley
said. “He led me in the right direction, and he assisted me in many other ways.
I’ve learned a lot from him, and I am so grateful to him for everything he’s
done.”
According to Borum, Kelley has been involved with
the Natchez Powwow for the past couple of years. “It was really neat to see him
go through the process and be seated,” said Borum. “I was honored I was able to
be a conduit. I’m proud of him.”
Back in March, Borum said in an interview that Kelley had
approached him seeking information on the Osage people. “He was Osage, but he
did not know about the Osage ways,” Borum recalled. “Since then, he’s gotten
connected with the Osage family.”
Borum said that he and Kelley were attending the Lone
Star War Dance in Granbury, Texas when he introduced Kelley to Otto Hamilton, a
legislator in the Osage congress, and he in turn helped connect Kelley with his
relative, Jodie Revard, who is also a legislator with the Osage
legislature.
“Jodie was my first connection to my family out there in
Oklahoma,” Kelley said.
Osage history
When Kelley initially thought about receiving his Native
American name, he thought the process would be quick. It was not. Kelley met
with Eddy Red Eagle Jr., the designated name-giver for Kelley’s section of the
family. Red Eagle said that Kelley’s family was part of the Eagle Clan known as
Tzi-zho wah-shah-keh.
“Mr. Red Eagle had a big TV and slide projector that he
used to tell our story,” Kelley said. “His objective was to make us understand
the old way.”
Red Eagle urged Kelley to read David Grann’s book,
“Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI”
(Doubleday, 2017) and to watch the movie by the same name. The book and the
movie tell the story of the Osage people.
Kelley said that in the early 1900s, the Osage people
“hit it big time” with oil on their reservation. “The Osage men became rich
during the great depression. Mr. Red Eagle said a lot of people thought we got
lucky because of the oil,” Kelley said. “But we weren’t successful because of
what people brought to us, but it was because of who we are.”
After sharing the history of the Osage Nation, Red Eagle
began to name each member of Kelley’s family. He began with David. Red Eagle
explained that he didn’t just choose a name. Instead he selected a name that
was handed down through generations, a name that belonged to other people in
history.
“The name, black bird, is connected to the spirit world,”
Kelley said.
Red Eagle explained, “Where other people can’t function
in the night or in the darkness, you can see in the darkness. You’re very
spiritual. You have no fear of the night.
“Your name is Wah-shin Sah.”
Read more at: https://www.natchezdemocrat.com/2023/07/02/natchezs-david-kelley-takes-seat-with-osage-nation/
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