'A Pageant Where You Butcher Sheep'
By Felicia Fonseca
Feb. 19, 2008
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — When young women head off to compete in the weeklong Miss Navajo Nation pageant, they bring along their evening gowns,
jewelry, high heels, public speaking skills — and their butcher knives.
This is no ordinary pageant.
On the nation's largest Indian reservation where tradition reigns, contestants are required to speak their native language, make fry bread and butcher an animal that
represents life to the Navajos — sheep.
"The pageant really gets people's interest because they say, 'Oh my gosh, a pageant where you butcher sheep.' That's really the grabber," said Billy Luther, a documentary
filmmaker. "But I think people walk away learning the Navajo way of life and how much the Navajo people respect women."
Luther, whose mother was crowned Miss Navajo in 1966, offers a
different take on what it means to be beautiful in his first feature-length documentary, "Miss Navajo," which aired Tuesday on PBS's Independent Lens. The film premiered at
the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. Beauty is very much internal, Luther says. What Navajos perceive as beautiful might not be beautiful to others, he said. "It's having
the knowledge of your culture, it's having respect for your mothers and grandmothers, it's the language, fluency. As we say, that's harmony, that's what we strive for," said Luther,
32, who is Navajo, Laguna and Hopi.
Luther's documentary follows Crystal Frazier, a now-23-year-old Table Mesa resident, on her quest to become Miss Navajo during the 2005 pageant.
The pageant, held each year during the Navajo Nation Fair in Window Rock, Ariz., takes contestants of all shapes and sizes through skill and talent tests, and quizzes them on
tribal government and Navajo beliefs.
For Frazier, a self-described introvert who raised chickens as a hobby, her insecurities centered on her ability to speak the Navajo language, which long had been passed down
orally.
A panel made up of former Miss Navajos greets the contestants in one part of the film with the intent of finding out whether the girls truly know their Native language. Frazier blanks
on her turn. She wants the question repeated in English. "I was just a deer in headlights," said Frazier, who was Miss Northern Navajo in 2004-05. "I remember being in the room
and being in awe of seeing formal title holders. You feel the pressure, and you see all the lights from the cameras, and you just freak. I remember I didn't even hear a word."
The queen's panel was added in 2005 at the insistence of Sunni Dooley — the 1982-83 Miss Navajo.
"They know they are supposed to talk Navajo, but as you saw in the pageant, a lot of them entered without knowing their language," said Dooley, a storyteller from Vanderwagon.
"They probably had memorized their clan, where they came from, who their parents are and who their grandparents are." What the judges wanted was simple: Give the directions
to your house, she said.
The pageant began in 1952 as somewhat of a popularity contest. The winner was crowned based on how much applause she got from the audience.
Until the early 1960s, two Miss Navajos were crowned, a traditional one and "one who looked like Jackie Kennedy," Dooley says.
Now only one queen is named and the contest is open to any Navajo woman age 18 to 25 who is single and meets other contest requirements, such as having a high school
diploma or GED and no children.
Faced with a dwindling number of contestants, Dooley and other former Miss Navajos created a nonprofit group in Arizona this year to address how to make the pageant last.
"I think what's scaring a lot of these contestants is the sheep butchering part of it, also the Navajo," she said.
Ultimately, Dooley said she would like to see one girl representing each of the Navajo Nation's 110 chapter houses in the pageant. "I think whoever wins that pageant, they can say,
'Yeah, not only did I compete against 110 girls but I can butcher a sheep with one hand,' Dooley jokes.
Although his original intent wasn't to make a film about Navajo women, Luther sees the final product as an inspiration for young girls, some of who consider Miss Navajo the ideal
woman. Some people who have watched the film consider it an important one about women, an unexpected story of a contemporary Navajo family or a language-in-crisis film, he
said.
Luther says simply: "This is a film about a beauty pageant contestant,
and there's a winner and a loser. "But sometimes, as in life, the winners aren't always the winners and the losers aren't always the losers."
Some Native Americans to participate in health study
Feb. 19, 2008
Lawton Oklahoma
Some Native Americans in Southwest Oklahoma are volunteering for A study that is the first of it's kind. The "Balance Study", specifically designed for Native Americans.
After a thorough health screening, participants between the ages of 30 and 75 will become a part of a program that could improve their health.
Susan Whitehorse says she wants to be a part it because her lifestyle isn't as healthy as it once was. She is a grandmother who wants to make some positive changes.
Greg Ketcher is assisting with the study and says Native Americans will find the study appealing because it brings them back to a point in their history when the group's diet was
much healthier.
Whitehorse says using her spirituality to become a healthier is her goal.
Native Americans participating in the study will be taught how to grow plus prepare fruits and vegetables for the table. They'll learn about emotional wellness, nutrition, and
physical fitness. But, they won't have to do it alone. All participants will have coaches who will help keep them motivated and on track. Each participant will have health
check-ups every six months for the next two years.
There's stillroom for volunteers, too. If you are Native American, between the ages of 30 and 75, and are interested in participating, call 405-247-2300.