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Tribes Honor Birth of Rare White Buffalo in Yellowstone, Announce His Name – WHIO TV 7 and WHIO Radio

WEST YELLOWSTONE, Mont. — A Native American tribal leader announced the name of a rare white bison born earlier this month Wednesday as hundreds of people gathered outside Yellowstone National Park.

Chief Arvol Looking Horse announced the calf’s name: Wakan Gli, meaning “sacred return” in Lakota, the Associated Press reported. The calf’s name was revealed on a painted hide, the culmination of a Native American religious ceremony.

The ceremony included dancing, drumming, singing and the telling of a legend that has persisted for more than 2,000 years, according to the new organization.

“It’s up to each of you to make this happen for the future of our children. We need to come together and bring back that good energy,” Looking Horse said Wednesday.

He is the spiritual leader of the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota Oyate tribes and the 19th keeper of the White Buffalo Calf Woman Pipe and Bundle, according to the AP.

Representatives from the Lakota and Sioux tribes in Dakota, the Colville tribes in Washington state, the Northern Arapaho in Wyoming and the Shoshone-Bannock in Idaho attended the ceremonies at campaign headquarters Buffalo Field, reported the press agency.

Devin Old Man, a preservationist and advocate for the tribes, said the white calf comes at a time of great peril for people, especially for tribes that have become isolated from each other, NBC News reported.

“It’s hard to be indigenous these days,” he told the outlet. “We have to look at the bigger picture. »

The calf’s birth in Yellowstone National Park would fulfill a prophecy that foreshadows better times when a white calf is sighted, according to Native American tribe members.

According to legend, about 2,000 years ago, the White Bison Woman appeared to the tribe during bad times and gave a bowl pipe and a bundle to a tribesman.

She taught them how to pray and told them that the pipe could be used to attract bison to the area to feed them. As she left, she transformed into a white bison, the legend goes.

“And one day, when times are hard again,” the woman said before leaving, “I will come back and stand on the earth like a white buffalo calf, with black nose, black eyes, black hooves. “

Bison were declared the nation’s first mammal in 2016 when then-President Barack Obama signed the National Bison Legacy Act, NBC News reported.

“It’s a very important moment in our history where this little white buffalo with a black nose, black eyes and black hooves is born,” Looking Horse said.