Jingle Earrings
Jingle Earrings
Sold as a pair. Silver tone jingles with bear charm and pearl bead.
These earring are a nod to Jingle Dresses and The Bear. Both are tied to good medicine and caring for your community.
Jingle
In the heart of First Nations and Native American communities, a captivating and rhythmic tradition known as the Jingle Dress Dance has endured through generations.
Steeped in rich history and cultural significance, the Jingle Dress Dance has evolved from a healing ritual into a source of immense pride. Its origins trace back to the early 1900s with the Mille Lacs Band of the Ojibwe Tribe, blossoming in the 1920s across regions like Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Ontario, Canada. The story behind its inception is a testament to its healing power—an indigenous medicine man's granddaughter fell ill, prompting him to craft a Jingle Dress at the behest of spirit guides. They prophesied that the dress would heal the child when she danced in it. The tribe came together to witness this magical transformation, a symbol of resilience in the face of adversity, particularly during the 1918 flu pandemic and the subsequent federal ban on ritual dancing at Indian reservations in the 1920s.
Jingle Dresses, also known as Prayer Dresses, are believed to bring healing to those who are sick. As mentioned above, the dance gets its name from the rows of ziibaaska’iganan (metal cones) sewed to the dress. These cones are traditionally made from rolled snuff can lids and hung from the dress with ribbon close to one another, so they make a melodic sound as the girls and women dance. Traditionally, the dress is adorned with 365 visible jingles, or cones. Nowadays, these cones are often machine-made.
Bears
The Bear Clan is attuned to spiritual well-being and medicinal healing, and the health of each village has rested in the hands of Bear Clan medicine women since the beginning of time, read why.
In a far distant time, an old man came upon a Haudenosaunee village. The old man was poorly dressed and looked tired and hungry. As he walked through the village, he looked over the doors of the long houses. Over each door was the insignia of the clan that lived within.
The Turtle Clan emblem was above the door at the first lodge the old man stopped before. Poking his head inside the blanketed door, he asked for food and shelter against the night. But his request for help fell upon deaf ears, and the woman of the house told him to move on. The next long house he encountered had a snipe over its door. Again, when he asked for help, his pleas were denied.
From clan to clan he went, looking for sustenance and shelter. The wolf, beaver, deer, eel, heron, and eagle clans all turned him away. Nearing the end of the village, the old man despaired as his hunger and weariness grew. He decided to try the last little home in the village with a carved bear’s head above the door.
An old bear clanswoman came out of the house. She took pity on the stranger. She saw how tired the old man obviously was and invited him in to share whatever she had, meager though it may be. The old woman was a gracious host, giving the man food to eat and a deer skin upon which to rest.
When the old man awoke the next day, he was ill with a fever. He told the old woman to go into the forest and find a particular plant. After she found the plant, she returned to her home. The old man instructed the woman on how to prepare the plant, making it into a medicine. After he took the medicine, the old man was cured.
Because the old woman was so good to him, he asked to stay with her for a few days.
Several times during his stay, he became ill again. Each time it was a different type of malady, and each time he sent the old woman into the forest for a different herb to use as a remedy. The old man instructed the woman on the proper preparation of the herbs to cure each particular ailment. When he drank the medicine, his condition improved.
When the woman returned home one day, she saw a bright light coming from within her home. When she approached the door, she came face to face with a handsome young man whose face shone like the sun. The old woman was frightened, believing a spirit stood in her way.
But the young man calmed the woman, saying, “Do not be afraid. I am the Creator. I came to the lodges of the Haudenosaunee as an old man.
At each clan’s lodge, I asked for food and shelter and was turned away. You, good woman of the Bear Clan, were the only one to offer me assistance. Because you showed me compassion, I have taught you cures for all the illnesses which afflict the real people. Each time I became ill, I instructed you on the proper herbs to prepare to make me well.
“You have shown me kindness when others did not. For this reason, I have given you the gift of knowledge to cure illnesses. From this day forward, medicine men and women will be of the Bear Clan. The Bear Clan shall always be the Keepers of the Medicine.”