Origin of the Lakota Peace Pipe

Long, long ago, two young and handsome Lakota were chosen by their band to
find out where the buffalo were. While the men were riding in the buffalo
country, they saw someone in the distance walking toward them.
As always they were on the watch for any enemy. So they hid in some bushes and
waited. At last the figure came up the slope. To their surprise, the figure
walking toward them was a woman.
When she came closer, she stopped and looked at them. They knew that she could
see them, even in their hiding place. On her left arm she carried what looked
like a stick in a bundle of sagebrush. Her face was beautiful.
One of the men said, "She is more beautiful than anyone I have ever seen.
I want her for my wife."
But the other man replied, "How dare you have such a thought? She is
wondrously beautiful and holy--far above ordinary people."
Though still at a distance, the woman heard them talking. She laid down her
bundle and spoke to them. "Come. What is it you wish?"
The man who had spoken first went up to her and laid his hands on her as if to
claim her. At once, from somewhere above, there came a whirlwind. Then there
came a mist, which hid the man and the woman. When the mist cleared, the other
man saw the woman with the bundle again on her arm. But his friend was a pile
of bones at her feet.
The man stood silent in wonder and awe. Then the beautiful woman spoke to him.
"I am on a journey to your people. Among them is a good man whose name is
Bull Walking Upright. I am coming to see him especially.
"Go on ahead of me and tell your people that I am on my way. Ask them to
move camp and to pitch their tents in a circle. Ask them to leave an opening
in the circle, facing the north. In the center of the circle, make a large
tepee, also facing the north. There I will meet Bull Walking Upright and his
people."
The man saw to it that all her directions were followed. When she reached the
camp, she removed the sagebrush from the gift she was carrying. The gift was a
small pipe made of red stone. On it was carved the tiny outline of a buffalo
calf.
The pipe she gave to Bull Walking Upright, and then she taught him the prayers
he should pray to the Strong One Above. "When you pray to the Strong One
Above, you must use this pipe in the ceremony. When you are hungry, unwrap the
pipe and lay it bare in the air. Then the buffalo will come where the men can
easily hunt and kill them. So the children, the men, and the women will have
food and be happy."
The beautiful woman also told him how the people should behave in order to
live peacefully together. She taught them the prayers they should say when
praying to their Mother Earth. She told him how they should decorate
themselves for ceremonies.
"The earth," she said, "is your mother. So, for special
ceremonies, you will decorate yourselves as your mother does--in black and
red, in brown and white. These are the colours of the buffalo also.
"Above all else, remember that this is a peace pipe that I have given
you. You will smoke it before all ceremonies. You will smoke it before making
treaties. It will bring peaceful thoughts into your minds. If you will use it
when you pray to the Strong One above and to Mother Earth you will be sure to
receive the blessings that you ask."
When the woman had completed her message, she turned and slowly walked away.
All the people watched her in awe. Outside the opening of the circle, she
stopped for an instant and then lay down on the ground. She rose again in the
form of a black buffalo cow. Again she lay down and then arose in the form of
a red buffalo cow. A third time she lay down, and arose as a brown buffalo
cow. The fourth and last time she had the form of a spotlessly white buffalo
cow. Then she walked toward the north into the distance and finally
disappeared over a far-off hill.
Bull Walking Upright kept the peace pipe carefully wrapped most of the time.
Every little while he called all his people together, untied the bundle, and
repeated the lessons he had been taught by the beautiful woman. And he used it
in prayers and other ceremonies until he was more than one hundred years old.
When he became feeble, he held a great feast. There he gave the pipe and the
lessons to Sunrise, a worthy man. In a similar way the pipe was passed down
from generation to generation. "As long as the pipe is used," the
beautiful woman had said, "Your people will live and will be happy. As
soon as it is forgotten, the people will perish."

