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Bdóte

Bdóte (English: /bˈdɔːtɛ/[1] "ba-DOTE-tay"; lit.'place where two rivers meet' or 'confluence'; deprecated spelling Mdote[2]) is a significant[1] Dakota sacred landscape where the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers meet, encompassing Pike Island, Fort Snelling, Coldwater Spring, Indian Mounds Park, and surrounding areas in present-day Minneapolis and Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. In Dakota geographic memory, it is a single contiguous area not delineated by any contemporary areas' borders.[3] According to Dakota oral tradition, it is the site of creation; the interconnectedness between the rivers, earth, and sky are important to the Dakota worldview and the site maintains its significance to the Dakota people.

Confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers at Bdote (Pike Island, Minnesota)

It is also an important[4] location in the history of European colonization of the region, including the 1805 Treaty of St. Peters with the Dakota people and the 1837 Treaty of St. Peters with the Ojibwe. After the Dakota War of 1862, it was the location of the concentration camp of the Dakota people before they were forcibly exiled from Minnesota. The cities of Mendota and Mendota Heights, Minnesota, which are part of Bdote, take their names from the Dakota name for the region.[3]

In recent years, a movement to recognize and protect Bdote as a sacred place has been growing.

Etymology edit

In the Dakota language, bdote can refer to any place where two bodies of water converge and can be translated as the "mouth" of a body of water.[5] A deprecated spelling is mdote.[2]

Sacred significance to the Dakota people edit

Cosmology edit

Numerous creation stories within the Dakota communities define their relationships with the land and the stars above, including the sacred sites in Bdote.[1] Many Dakota people identify as part of the Wicahpi Oyate (Star Nation), having spiritually originated from the stars and come into being on the land.[1] In one version, the Big Dipper represents the seven bands of the Dakota and Lakota, collectively known as the Oceti Sakowin (Seven Council Fires).[6] According to another, told by Gwen Westerman, the Dakota came from Orion's Belt and through the Creator, they walked Caŋku Wanagi, the “spirit road" (Milky Way), and arrived at Bdote, later spreading out to establish the sacred sites in the surrounding areas.[7]

At Bdote, two bluffs called Caṡḳe Taŋka and Caṡḳe Cistiŋna opened up the earth. The Creator used mud between the bluffs to form the first Dakota man and woman. The earth is called Ina for "mother" because it is where Dakota people came from.[7] Ṡuŋġi (Dakota elder Reverend Gary Cavender) further explains, "In our Creation myth we the Dakota, the Seven Fires of the Dakota, came from the belt of Orion—the seven planets of the belt of Orion, the seven stars—and arrived at the convolution of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers, and so in some respects it is our Eden, and the land around there is sacred as well".[8]

According to Dakota astronomer Jim Rock, Bdote refers to the "Dakota Makoce Cokaya Kin" (Dakota center of the universe).[9] An ancient and important relationship between the land and stars is known by the Dakota term Kapemni, which means "as it is above, it is below".[10] The Mississippi River is reflected above as the Milky Way, the Spirit Road, that life travels to this world and returns to.[11] Burial mounds, including Oheyawahi-Pilot Knob and Indian Mounds Park within Bdote, are built along the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River so that the ancestors are in a place of honor.[11]

A newborn baby's first cry is referred to as bdote, which compares the importance of a person's first breath of air with the necessity of water for life.[12]

Sacred sites edit

There are numerous sites sacred to the Dakota people within Bdote. The specific sites within Bdote are part of what gives the region its significance in Dakota tradition. Lakota Chief Arvol Looking Horse noted during a pipe ceremony on Pilot Knob Preservation (Oheyawahi) that these sacred sites are how Dakota people connect spiritually to the wider landscape. Prairie Island Dakota spiritual leader Chris Leith has said that Bdote's many sacred sites make it a "vortex" in the landscape.[cite 1]

  • Mnísota Wakpá (Minnesota River)
  • Oȟéyawahe (Pilot Knob Preservation)
  • Wíta Tháŋka (Pike Island)
  • Mniówe Sní (Coldwater Spring)
  • Owámniyomni (St. Anthony Falls)

Ȟaȟáwakpa (Mississippi River) edit

 
View of Indian Mounds Park (Saint Paul, Minnesota) along the bluffs of the Mississippi River, c. 1898

Ȟaȟáwakpa ("river of waterfalls", also known as the Mississippi River) was named after the many waterfalls that once cascaded over the bluffs, and the only natural waterfall on the Mississippi River, known in Dakota as Owámniyomni (St. Anthony Falls).[13] Urban development of Minneapolis and Saint Paul led to the destruction of many of the falls or the removal of their water source.[13] The river is reflected above in Dakota thought as the Milky Way, known in Dakota star knowledge as the Spirit Road on which people's spirits travel to and from earth during their birth and death.[14][11] According to Dakota oral tradition, burial mounds were built along the bluffs to be close to the river of waterfalls and the spirit road.[11] The river is also called Wakpá Tháŋka, the Great River, or less commonly Thaŋčháŋ Wakpa ("the body or principal part anything river").[15]

Owámniyomni (St. Anthony Falls) edit

Owámniyomni ("whirlpool") is the Dakota name of St. Anthony Falls. As the only natural portage on the Mississippi River in the area, it was considered neutral territory and a practical meeting place for numerous tribes (including the Dakota, Hochunk and, later, the Ojibwe).[16] Above the sacred falls is Wita Waste ("Beautiful Island" or Nicollet Island), an annual maple-sugar camp for the Dakota.[17] Below the falls was an island known as Wita Wanagi ("Spirit Island"), which the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers destroyed in 1960 to dredge the site for boat passage.[16] Wita Wanagi was a birthing place for Dakota women and also home to the spirit of Anpetu Sapa Win ("Clouded Day Woman"), whose death song could still be heard on the island.[16][18]

Wakháŋ Thípi edit

 
Stereoscopic view of Wakháŋ Thípi, c.1862?-1903

Wakháŋ Thípi ("dwelling place of the sacred", also known as Carver's Cave) is a spring-fed cave, sealed with an iron gate, within the Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary.[19] Dakota people believe it is home to an Uŋktehi (underwater serpent) that protects the water.[20] Dakota midwife Autumn Cavendar-Wilson describes the cave as a historical safe location for generations of Dakota women to give birth that represents a womb on earth.[9] The cave corresponds with Orion's belt as a reflection on earth. There were petroglyphs of snakes that depicted the Dakota people's cosmic origin beliefs at Bdote and Wakháŋ Thípi.[9] A railroad expansion project in the late 1800s destroyed the atrium of the cave that contained the petroglyphs.[19]

Burial sites edit

Indian Mounds Regional Park, Pilot Knob Preservation (Oheyawahi), Mound Springs Park,[21] and Grey Cloud Island[22] are considered burial sites by Dakota people and parks by governing municipalities.[23]

Geography edit

Bdote refers to both a wider geographical area and the northeastern[3] tip of Pike Island specifically, which is considered the exact area where the Mississippi River (Wakpá Táŋka) and Minnesota Rivers meet.

The exact area of wider Bdote varies by tradition, but generally encompasses Pike Island, Fort Snelling, Saint Anthony Falls, Coldwater Spring, and a stretch of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers.[cite 2][cite 3] It has no English name and is popularly known by its Dakota name, Bdóte. In English it is sometimes called "The Center", referring to its role in Dakota tradition as the start of all life.[cite 4][cite 5]

The rivers and island are between the southern edge of Minneapolis and St. Paul, and the Northwestern tip of Mendota, Minnesota. Minneapolis holds jurisdiction over Pike Island and most of wider Bdote. State authorities manage the parks on Pike Island (Wíta Táŋka), Crosby Farm Park, Hidden Falls, Coldwater Spring (Mniówe Sní), Fort Snelling Park, Saint Anthony Falls (Owámniyomni, lit. "whirlpool"), and the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area. Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, which borders the western side of the Mississippi River, is under federal jurisdiction.

History edit

Dakota villages and settlements edit

 
Kaposia, Dakota village, painting by Seth Eastman c. 1846

Because the Dakota observed a seasonal migration pattern, a number of villages and settlements were noted in the Bdote area. In the location-based Dakota history book Mni Sota Makoce, Westerman and White posit that burial mounds correlate with village locations, because some mound research has revealed relationships between Dakota seasonal settlement and mound activity. This relationship is already noted in Dakota oral traditions.[24]

Villages settled in a similar area each year, though the exact location varied. For example, in 1805 Kaposia (Kap’oża) was noted at the site of present-day Mounds Park in St. Paul,[25] and around the time of the Treaty of 1837, Kaposia moved from the east bank of the Mississippi River to the west bank (a place now called Kaposia Landing Park and Kaposia Indian Site), and in 1853 Kaposia moved again due to provisions in the Treaty of Mendota.[26][25] Sites in Bdote were more likely summer villages, where spring flooding made travel by canoe more convenient.

Treaty of St. Peters edit

At Bdote, Zebulon Pike met with the Dakota and signed the 1805 Treaty of St. Peters, also known as Pike's Purchase.[31] Two of the seven Dakota leaders agreed to sell the land, eventually receiving only $2,000 when it was valued by Pike at $200,000, along with the agreement to build a fort at the location.[31] In 1820, the Dakota granted ownership of where the two rivers meet on Bdote (Pike Island) to Pelagie Ainse, the daughter of a French fur trader and a Dakota woman. She was married to Jean-Baptiste Faribault and was the mother of Alexander Faribault.[32][31]

Fort Snelling concentration camp edit

 
Concentration camp at Bdote, c. 1862

While Bdote is the origin story of the Dakota people, it is also the site of their forced exile from Minnesota.[33][34] The Fort Snelling Dakota concentration camp at Bdote was a temporary holding facility for Dakota women, children, and elders who surrendered to the U.S. military after the Dakota War of 1862.[35] The camp was on the banks of the Minnesota River, near the fort. It was established in November 1862 and held about 1,700 Dakota people. The conditions in the camp were miserable, and between 130 and 300 Dakota people died died from disease and malnutrition.[36] Dakota leader Gabriel Renville wrote: "We were so crowded and confined that an epidemic broke out among us and children were dying day and night. Amid all this sickness and these great tribulations, it seemed doubtful at night whether a person would be alive in the morning".[37]

In December 1862, the U.S. military built a wooden stockade around the camp. The stockade was about 12 feet high and enclosed an area of two or three acres.[35] The Dakota people were forced to live inside the stockade and not allowed to leave. The camp was guarded by soldiers from the Sixth, Seventh, and Tenth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiments.[35] The soldiers were responsible for controlling movement in and out of the camp.[35]

Episcopalian Bishop Henry Benjamin Whipple advocated for the imprisoned Dakota people, and Reverend John Poage Williamson, who lived among the Dakota his whole life, joined them in the ordeal and remained with them as they were exiled into South Dakota.[37] The concentration camp at Fort Snelling closed in May 1863 and the Dakota people who survived the camp were then exiled from Minnesota to the Crow Creek Reservation in South Dakota.[36]

Restoration attempts edit

There has recently been a growing movement to recognize and protect Bdote and the sites it encompasses as a sacred place. The Minnesota Humanities Center launched the Bdote Memory Map, an interactive online map that tells the story of Bdote from a Dakota perspective.

In 2019, 44 Minnesota House Democrats sent the Minnesota Historical Society a letter in support of adding Bdote to signage at Historic Fort Snelling.[38] In 2021, Henry Sibley High School in Mendota Heights was renamed Two Rivers High School due to its proximity to Bdote.[39] The school's former namesake, Henry Hastings Sibley, played a major role in the Dakota War of 1862 and the mass hanging of 38 Dakota men.[40]

In 2021, Oglala Lakota chef Sean Sherman opened the restaurant Owamni at the site of Owámniyomni (Saint Anthony Falls); it serves dishes made only with ingredients indigenous to the Americas.[41] Partnering with Sherman, the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board and Parks Foundation raised money to open the restaurant in order to honor the Dakota heritage of the falls.[42] It won Best New Restaurant at the 2022 James Beard Awards.[43]

Fort Snelling redesign edit

An attempt to add "at Bdote" to the signage at Fort Snelling failed in 2019 after Republican lawmakers attempted to revoke $4 million in funding for the Minnesota Historical Society (MHS), which manages the Fort Snelling territory.[44] The MHS board unanimously voted to continue with the current site name, citing no conclusive evidence to support renaming it from their research in the community.[45] Native leaders and communities condemned the decision to withdraw engagement in the restoration of the Dakota name for the area.[45]

In the 2016 legislative session, the MHS sought $34 million in bonding to redesign and restore the fort and territory. This included remodeling a barracks into a visitor's center, tearing down the existing center, and building an amphitheater.[45] Included in the project plan and budget was funding for renewed marketing, historical research, exhibit redesign, and community outreach and engagement, particularly with local Native communities and leaders. The MHS formed the Dakota Community Council in 2017 as part of its engagement effort.[46]

Wakaŋ Tipi site reclamation edit

The Wakan Tipi Awanyankapi ("those who care for Wakan Tipi", formerly known as the Lower Phalen Creek project) is a Dakota-led organization that advocates for the restoration of native habitat and Indigenous histories to the Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary and surrounding areas.[47] They are building the Wakan Tipi Center at the sanctuary, which will be an immersive way to learn Dakota history, lifeways, language, and values.[47] Other goals include restoring Phalen Creek above ground and renaming Carver's Cave to the original Dakota name of Wakan Tipi.[47]

Owámniyomni site reclamation edit

The Owámniyomni Okhódayapi ("Friends of the Falls") is a Dakota-led organization that is working to restore the falls to a natural state and return Dakota leadership to the management of the site.[48] It is working with the city of Minneapolis for transfer of land surrounding the Upper Lock and Dam from the federal government (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers).[48] The Army Corps of Engineers is expected to make a decision on the land transfer in 2024.[49]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Bdote Minnesota Historical Society". November 4, 2008. from the original on August 25, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Bdote/ Mdote Minisota: A Public EIS continues". MinnesotaHistory.net. February 26, 2009. from the original on August 2, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Bdote Memory Map 2023-09-05 at the Wayback Machine: "Bdote is also used to refer to the wider area (now Minneapolis-St. Paul). Dakota people sometimes use the term Bdote area for the area surrounding the bdote of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers. To Dakota people, the areas contained within the larger Bdote area are one. Pike Island, Ft. Snelling State Park, Historic Fort Snelling, and ultimately the whole river gorge area is not divided in the same way as it is in maps and laws and the conversation of non-Dakota. There is, in this website, overlap of information about these places for that reason.
  4. ^ "The Expansionist Era (1805-1858)". Minnesota Historical Society. March 14, 2010. from the original on October 21, 2020. Retrieved September 15, 2023.
  5. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 20.
  6. ^ Lee, A. S.; Rock, J. (2014). "Native Skywatchers and the Makoc̣e Wic̣aŋḣpi Wowapi—D(L)akota Star Map—Building Community Around Native Star Knowledge". Ensuring Stem Literacy: A National Conference on Stem Education and Public Outreach. 483: 133. Bibcode:2014ASPC..483..133L. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  7. ^ a b Westerman & White 2012, pp. 18–22.
  8. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 22.
  9. ^ a b c Gould, Roxanne; Rock, Jim (2016). "Wakan Tipi and Indian Mounds Park: Reclaiming an Indigenous feminine sacred site". AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples. 12 (3). SAGE Publications: 224–235. doi:10.20507/alternative.2016.12.3.2. ISSN 1177-1801. S2CID 148427432.
  10. ^ Lee, Annette (2016). "Ojibwe Giizhiig Anung Masinaaigan and D(L)akota Makoċe Wiċaŋḣpi Wowapi: Revitalization of Native American Star Knowledge, A Community Effort". Journal of Astronomy in Culture. 1 (1): 49. ISSN 2473-4888. from the original on July 25, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c d "Caves, Rivers, And Burial Grounds Around St. Paul, Minnesota--Jim Rock". Museum on Main Street. August 10, 2021. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  12. ^ Hutton, Rachel (August 17, 2018). "4 Dakota landmarks hide in plain sight along the Mississippi River". Star Tribune. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  13. ^ a b "The Lost and Forgotten Waterfalls of the Twin Cities". Racket. September 12, 2022. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  14. ^ "Lakota Star Knowledge-Milky Way Spirit Path". SDPB. October 3, 2018. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  15. ^ Durand, Paul C. (1994). Where the Waters Gather and the Rivers Meet. P.C. Durand. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-9641469-0-7.
  16. ^ a b c "A History of Owamni Yomni: Lock Closures Signal Healing for Mississippi River". The Circle News. July 19, 2015. from the original on September 25, 2022. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  17. ^ Goff, Matt (November 3, 2023). "November Friday History: Nicollet Island Home Restorations". Kraus-Anderson. from the original on November 16, 2023. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  18. ^ Marsh, Steve (October 27, 2022). "Timeline: Wonder Women". Mpls.St.Paul Magazine. from the original on November 9, 2022. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  19. ^ a b Melo, Frederick (October 4, 2020). "Carver's Cave historical marker removed by city". Twin Cities. from the original on May 27, 2022. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  20. ^ Branam, Kelly (August 1, 2010). "Survey to Identify and Evaluate Indian Sacred Sites and Traditional Cultural Properties in the Twin Cities Metropolitan Area" (PDF). Statewide Survey of Historical and Archaeological Sites. (PDF) from the original on June 5, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  21. ^ "Historic Sites". Bloomington Historical Society. from the original on September 21, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
  22. ^ "Grey Cloud Island Township – Washington County Historical Society". wchsmn.org. from the original on December 2, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
  23. ^ "Burial Grounds / Minnesota Office of the State Archaeologist". Minnesota Office of the State Archaeologist. April 5, 2016. from the original on September 25, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
  24. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 33.
  25. ^ a b Westerman & White 2012, p. 82.
  26. ^ "Kaposia Indian Site, National Park Service". from the original on 2020-12-05. Retrieved 2023-09-06.
  27. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 127.
  28. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 126.
  29. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 104.
  30. ^ "Cloudman/Mahpíya Wičhášta – Bde Maka Ska". Bde Maka Ska. from the original on March 13, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  31. ^ a b c "1805: Dakota". treatiesmatter.org. from the original on July 12, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  32. ^ "Pike Island, MN". Newspapers.com. May 3, 1930. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  33. ^ Nelson, Cody (May 3, 2019). "Dakota aim to reclaim Fort Snelling, its history". MPR News. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  34. ^ "US-Dakota War of 1862". College of Liberal Arts. August 17, 2012. from the original on October 5, 2023. Retrieved January 14, 2024.
  35. ^ a b c d "The US-Dakota War of 1862 Minnesota Historical Society". November 23, 2015. from the original on September 20, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  36. ^ a b "Forced Marches & Imprisonment". The U.S.-Dakota War of 1862. August 23, 2012. from the original on May 8, 2021. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  37. ^ a b Woltman, Nick (June 24, 2016). "U.S.-Dakota War's aftermath a 'dark moment' in Fort Snelling history". Twin Cities. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  38. ^ Salisbury, Bill (October 22, 2019). "MN House DFLers support adding Dakota word 'Bdote" to Historic Fort Snelling". Twin Cities. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  39. ^ "High School Name Change". School District 197. June 21, 2021. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  40. ^ Klecker, Mara (November 4, 2020). "School board explores renaming Henry Sibley High in Mendota Heights". Star Tribune. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  41. ^ Kormann, Carolyn (September 12, 2022). "How Owamni Became the Best New Restaurant in the United States". The New Yorker. from the original on March 18, 2023. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  42. ^ "MPRB and Minneapolis Parks Foundation to partner with The Sioux Chef on Water Works restaurant and event venue". Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board. September 15, 2017. from the original on March 27, 2023. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  43. ^ Roth, Ellie (June 14, 2022). "Owamni Wins Best New Restaurant at the James Beard Awards". Mpls.St.Paul Magazine. from the original on October 1, 2023. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  44. ^ Salisbury, Bill (April 25, 2019). "'Fort Snelling at Bdote'? Senate passes GOP measure cutting Historical Society funds over 'revisionist history'". Twin Cities. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  45. ^ a b c Smith, Kelly (25 June 2022). "Minnesota Historical Society nixes renaming Historic Fort Snelling". Inforum. from the original on 2 August 2023. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  46. ^ "Fort Snelling Revitalization". Minnesota Historical Society. from the original on 15 August 2023. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  47. ^ a b c Katona, Robyn (May 22, 2023). "With new name in Dakota, St. Paul nonprofit pushes Indigenous renaming forward". MPR News. from the original on September 6, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  48. ^ a b Callaghan, Peter (December 18, 2023). "Dakota-led Owámniyomni Okhódayapi seeks to restore St. Anthony Falls area". MinnPost. from the original on December 24, 2023. Retrieved January 10, 2024.
  49. ^ Marohn, Kirsti (February 3, 2023). "Land next to St. Anthony Falls could return to Dakota tribes". MPR News. from the original on March 29, 2023. Retrieved January 10, 2024.

Bibliography edit

  • Nichols, John D.; Livesay, Nora (2012). "Ojibwe People's Dictionary". University of Minnesota. from the original on 2023-08-02. Retrieved 2023-08-04.
  • Westerman, Gwen; White, Bruce (2012). Mni Sota Makoce: The Land of the Dakota. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Minnesota Historical Society Press. ISBN 978-0-87351-869-7.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 214In October 2009 Lakota Chief Arvol Looking Horse participated in a pipe ceremony on Pilot Knob to celebrate the protection of the land on the hill from development, noting that sacred sites are for Dakota, Lakota, and Nakota peoples “power points, the grid” through which people interact with the landscape. From this point of view development, while damaging to the environmental characteristics of sacred places, sometimes reflects the energy and power found there. Chris Leith, the late spiritual leader of the Prairie Island Dakota, also present at the 2009 event, stated in a 2003 interview that Bdote, a site of creation for the Dakota that contains many sacred sites, was a “vortex” in the landscape. The very presence of Fort Snelling, the airport, and the complex freeway system there reflected the site’s powerful energy.
  2. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 20The area of Bdote (or Mdote) Mni Sota is located at the mouth of the Minnesota River where it flows into the Mississippi midway between the downtowns of Minneapolis and St. Paul. It is, according to Dakota oral traditions, a place of creation. The mouth of the Minnesota’s broad valley is located in a break in the high banks of the Mississippi corridor, a gorge deeply carved by the Falls of St. Anthony in its million-year journey up the river. This place was Bdote Mni Sota: bdote meaning "mouth"; mni sota referring to the clarity of the water and its reflection of the sky. The exact boundaries of Bdote Mni Sota are hard to determine. Sites generally considered to be within this sacred district include Mni Sni (Coldwater Spring) and Oheyawahi (Pilot Knob). Some Dakota include Ṭaḳu Wakaŋ Ṭip̣i (Carver’s Cave) and Mounds Park within this region as well.
  3. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 19This region where the rivers come together plays a significant role in the history of the Dakota people in Mni Sota Makoce, as it contains Ṭaḳu Wakaŋ Tip̣i, Mni Sni or Coldwater Spring, and Oheyawahi or Pilot Knob.
  4. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 15We have recognized Bdote as the center of the earth and of all things, and historical accounts tell of it as a meeting place where massive gatherings of lodges took place annually.
  5. ^ Westerman & White 2012, p. 19"More than one hundred years later, missionary Stephen R. Riggs wrote, 'The Mdewakanton think that the mouth of the Minnesota River is precisely over the center of the earth, and that they occupy the gate that opens into the western world.'"

External links edit

  • Bdote Memory Map, Minnesota Humanities Center

44°53′49″N 93°9′1″W / 44.89694°N 93.15028°W / 44.89694; -93.15028

bdóte, english, ɔː, dote, place, where, rivers, meet, confluence, deprecated, spelling, mdote, significant, dakota, sacred, landscape, where, minnesota, mississippi, rivers, meet, encompassing, pike, island, fort, snelling, coldwater, spring, indian, mounds, p. Bdote English b ˈ d ɔː t ɛ 1 ba DOTE tay lit place where two rivers meet or confluence deprecated spelling Mdote 2 is a significant 1 Dakota sacred landscape where the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers meet encompassing Pike Island Fort Snelling Coldwater Spring Indian Mounds Park and surrounding areas in present day Minneapolis and Saint Paul Minnesota United States In Dakota geographic memory it is a single contiguous area not delineated by any contemporary areas borders 3 According to Dakota oral tradition it is the site of creation the interconnectedness between the rivers earth and sky are important to the Dakota worldview and the site maintains its significance to the Dakota people Confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers at Bdote Pike Island Minnesota It is also an important 4 location in the history of European colonization of the region including the 1805 Treaty of St Peters with the Dakota people and the 1837 Treaty of St Peters with the Ojibwe After the Dakota War of 1862 it was the location of the concentration camp of the Dakota people before they were forcibly exiled from Minnesota The cities of Mendota and Mendota Heights Minnesota which are part of Bdote take their names from the Dakota name for the region 3 In recent years a movement to recognize and protect Bdote as a sacred place has been growing Contents 1 Etymology 2 Sacred significance to the Dakota people 2 1 Cosmology 2 2 Sacred sites 2 2 1 Ȟaȟawakpa Mississippi River 2 2 2 Owamniyomni St Anthony Falls 2 2 3 Wakhaŋ Thipi 2 3 Burial sites 3 Geography 4 History 4 1 Dakota villages and settlements 4 2 Treaty of St Peters 4 3 Fort Snelling concentration camp 5 Restoration attempts 5 1 Fort Snelling redesign 5 2 Wakaŋ Tipi site reclamation 5 3 Owamniyomni site reclamation 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 7 2 Citations 8 External linksEtymology editIn the Dakota language bdote can refer to any place where two bodies of water converge and can be translated as the mouth of a body of water 5 A deprecated spelling is mdote 2 Sacred significance to the Dakota people editCosmology edit Numerous creation stories within the Dakota communities define their relationships with the land and the stars above including the sacred sites in Bdote 1 Many Dakota people identify as part of the Wicahpi Oyate Star Nation having spiritually originated from the stars and come into being on the land 1 In one version the Big Dipper represents the seven bands of the Dakota and Lakota collectively known as the Oceti Sakowin Seven Council Fires 6 According to another told by Gwen Westerman the Dakota came from Orion s Belt and through the Creator they walked Caŋku Wanagi the spirit road Milky Way and arrived at Bdote later spreading out to establish the sacred sites in the surrounding areas 7 At Bdote two bluffs called Caṡḳe Taŋka and Caṡḳe Cistiŋna opened up the earth The Creator used mud between the bluffs to form the first Dakota man and woman The earth is called Ina for mother because it is where Dakota people came from 7 Ṡuŋġi Dakota elder Reverend Gary Cavender further explains In our Creation myth we the Dakota the Seven Fires of the Dakota came from the belt of Orion the seven planets of the belt of Orion the seven stars and arrived at the convolution of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers and so in some respects it is our Eden and the land around there is sacred as well 8 According to Dakota astronomer Jim Rock Bdote refers to the Dakota Makoce Cokaya Kin Dakota center of the universe 9 An ancient and important relationship between the land and stars is known by the Dakota term Kapemni which means as it is above it is below 10 The Mississippi River is reflected above as the Milky Way the Spirit Road that life travels to this world and returns to 11 Burial mounds including Oheyawahi Pilot Knob and Indian Mounds Park within Bdote are built along the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River so that the ancestors are in a place of honor 11 A newborn baby s first cry is referred to as bdote which compares the importance of a person s first breath of air with the necessity of water for life 12 Sacred sites edit There are numerous sites sacred to the Dakota people within Bdote The specific sites within Bdote are part of what gives the region its significance in Dakota tradition Lakota Chief Arvol Looking Horse noted during a pipe ceremony on Pilot Knob Preservation Oheyawahi that these sacred sites are how Dakota people connect spiritually to the wider landscape Prairie Island Dakota spiritual leader Chris Leith has said that Bdote s many sacred sites make it a vortex in the landscape cite 1 Mnisota Wakpa Minnesota River Oȟeyawahe Pilot Knob Preservation Wita Thaŋka Pike Island Mniowe Sni Coldwater Spring Owamniyomni St Anthony Falls Ȟaȟawakpa Mississippi River edit nbsp View of Indian Mounds Park Saint Paul Minnesota along the bluffs of the Mississippi River c 1898 Ȟaȟawakpa river of waterfalls also known as the Mississippi River was named after the many waterfalls that once cascaded over the bluffs and the only natural waterfall on the Mississippi River known in Dakota as Owamniyomni St Anthony Falls 13 Urban development of Minneapolis and Saint Paul led to the destruction of many of the falls or the removal of their water source 13 The river is reflected above in Dakota thought as the Milky Way known in Dakota star knowledge as the Spirit Road on which people s spirits travel to and from earth during their birth and death 14 11 According to Dakota oral tradition burial mounds were built along the bluffs to be close to the river of waterfalls and the spirit road 11 The river is also called Wakpa Thaŋka the Great River or less commonly Thaŋchaŋ Wakpa the body or principal part anything river 15 Owamniyomni St Anthony Falls edit Owamniyomni whirlpool is the Dakota name of St Anthony Falls As the only natural portage on the Mississippi River in the area it was considered neutral territory and a practical meeting place for numerous tribes including the Dakota Hochunk and later the Ojibwe 16 Above the sacred falls is Wita Waste Beautiful Island or Nicollet Island an annual maple sugar camp for the Dakota 17 Below the falls was an island known as Wita Wanagi Spirit Island which the U S Army Corps of Engineers destroyed in 1960 to dredge the site for boat passage 16 Wita Wanagi was a birthing place for Dakota women and also home to the spirit of Anpetu Sapa Win Clouded Day Woman whose death song could still be heard on the island 16 18 Wakhaŋ Thipi edit nbsp Stereoscopic view of Wakhaŋ Thipi c 1862 1903Wakhaŋ Thipi dwelling place of the sacred also known as Carver s Cave is a spring fed cave sealed with an iron gate within the Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary 19 Dakota people believe it is home to an Uŋktehi underwater serpent that protects the water 20 Dakota midwife Autumn Cavendar Wilson describes the cave as a historical safe location for generations of Dakota women to give birth that represents a womb on earth 9 The cave corresponds with Orion s belt as a reflection on earth There were petroglyphs of snakes that depicted the Dakota people s cosmic origin beliefs at Bdote and Wakhaŋ Thipi 9 A railroad expansion project in the late 1800s destroyed the atrium of the cave that contained the petroglyphs 19 Burial sites edit Indian Mounds Regional Park Pilot Knob Preservation Oheyawahi Mound Springs Park 21 and Grey Cloud Island 22 are considered burial sites by Dakota people and parks by governing municipalities 23 Geography editSee also Fort Snelling State Park Bdote refers to both a wider geographical area and the northeastern 3 tip of Pike Island specifically which is considered the exact area where the Mississippi River Wakpa Taŋka and Minnesota Rivers meet The exact area of wider Bdote varies by tradition but generally encompasses Pike Island Fort Snelling Saint Anthony Falls Coldwater Spring and a stretch of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers cite 2 cite 3 It has no English name and is popularly known by its Dakota name Bdote In English it is sometimes called The Center referring to its role in Dakota tradition as the start of all life cite 4 cite 5 The rivers and island are between the southern edge of Minneapolis and St Paul and the Northwestern tip of Mendota Minnesota Minneapolis holds jurisdiction over Pike Island and most of wider Bdote State authorities manage the parks on Pike Island Wita Taŋka Crosby Farm Park Hidden Falls Coldwater Spring Mniowe Sni Fort Snelling Park Saint Anthony Falls Owamniyomni lit whirlpool and the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area Minneapolis Saint Paul International Airport which borders the western side of the Mississippi River is under federal jurisdiction History editDakota villages and settlements edit nbsp Kaposia Dakota village painting by Seth Eastman c 1846 Because the Dakota observed a seasonal migration pattern a number of villages and settlements were noted in the Bdote area In the location based Dakota history book Mni Sota Makoce Westerman and White posit that burial mounds correlate with village locations because some mound research has revealed relationships between Dakota seasonal settlement and mound activity This relationship is already noted in Dakota oral traditions 24 Villages settled in a similar area each year though the exact location varied For example in 1805 Kaposia Kap oza was noted at the site of present day Mounds Park in St Paul 25 and around the time of the Treaty of 1837 Kaposia moved from the east bank of the Mississippi River to the west bank a place now called Kaposia Landing Park and Kaposia Indian Site and in 1853 Kaposia moved again due to provisions in the Treaty of Mendota 26 25 Sites in Bdote were more likely summer villages where spring flooding made travel by canoe more convenient Kaposia Kap oza Near Mounds Park and Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary 27 Black Dog village Ohaŋska Near the present day site of Fort Snelling 28 Ḣeyate Otunwe Maḣpiya Wic aṡṭa Cloud Man s village on Bde Maka Ska where Dakota experimented with Western style sedentary agricultural practices 29 Cloud Man died in the Fort Snelling concentration camp at Wita Thaŋka Pike Island in the winter of 1862 1863 30 Treaty of St Peters edit At Bdote Zebulon Pike met with the Dakota and signed the 1805 Treaty of St Peters also known as Pike s Purchase 31 Two of the seven Dakota leaders agreed to sell the land eventually receiving only 2 000 when it was valued by Pike at 200 000 along with the agreement to build a fort at the location 31 In 1820 the Dakota granted ownership of where the two rivers meet on Bdote Pike Island to Pelagie Ainse the daughter of a French fur trader and a Dakota woman She was married to Jean Baptiste Faribault and was the mother of Alexander Faribault 32 31 Fort Snelling concentration camp edit Further information Fort Snelling Dakota War nbsp Concentration camp at Bdote c 1862 While Bdote is the origin story of the Dakota people it is also the site of their forced exile from Minnesota 33 34 The Fort Snelling Dakota concentration camp at Bdote was a temporary holding facility for Dakota women children and elders who surrendered to the U S military after the Dakota War of 1862 35 The camp was on the banks of the Minnesota River near the fort It was established in November 1862 and held about 1 700 Dakota people The conditions in the camp were miserable and between 130 and 300 Dakota people died died from disease and malnutrition 36 Dakota leader Gabriel Renville wrote We were so crowded and confined that an epidemic broke out among us and children were dying day and night Amid all this sickness and these great tribulations it seemed doubtful at night whether a person would be alive in the morning 37 In December 1862 the U S military built a wooden stockade around the camp The stockade was about 12 feet high and enclosed an area of two or three acres 35 The Dakota people were forced to live inside the stockade and not allowed to leave The camp was guarded by soldiers from the Sixth Seventh and Tenth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiments 35 The soldiers were responsible for controlling movement in and out of the camp 35 Episcopalian Bishop Henry Benjamin Whipple advocated for the imprisoned Dakota people and Reverend John Poage Williamson who lived among the Dakota his whole life joined them in the ordeal and remained with them as they were exiled into South Dakota 37 The concentration camp at Fort Snelling closed in May 1863 and the Dakota people who survived the camp were then exiled from Minnesota to the Crow Creek Reservation in South Dakota 36 Restoration attempts editThere has recently been a growing movement to recognize and protect Bdote and the sites it encompasses as a sacred place The Minnesota Humanities Center launched the Bdote Memory Map an interactive online map that tells the story of Bdote from a Dakota perspective In 2019 44 Minnesota House Democrats sent the Minnesota Historical Society a letter in support of adding Bdote to signage at Historic Fort Snelling 38 In 2021 Henry Sibley High School in Mendota Heights was renamed Two Rivers High School due to its proximity to Bdote 39 The school s former namesake Henry Hastings Sibley played a major role in the Dakota War of 1862 and the mass hanging of 38 Dakota men 40 In 2021 Oglala Lakota chef Sean Sherman opened the restaurant Owamni at the site of Owamniyomni Saint Anthony Falls it serves dishes made only with ingredients indigenous to the Americas 41 Partnering with Sherman the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board and Parks Foundation raised money to open the restaurant in order to honor the Dakota heritage of the falls 42 It won Best New Restaurant at the 2022 James Beard Awards 43 Fort Snelling redesign edit An attempt to add at Bdote to the signage at Fort Snelling failed in 2019 after Republican lawmakers attempted to revoke 4 million in funding for the Minnesota Historical Society MHS which manages the Fort Snelling territory 44 The MHS board unanimously voted to continue with the current site name citing no conclusive evidence to support renaming it from their research in the community 45 Native leaders and communities condemned the decision to withdraw engagement in the restoration of the Dakota name for the area 45 In the 2016 legislative session the MHS sought 34 million in bonding to redesign and restore the fort and territory This included remodeling a barracks into a visitor s center tearing down the existing center and building an amphitheater 45 Included in the project plan and budget was funding for renewed marketing historical research exhibit redesign and community outreach and engagement particularly with local Native communities and leaders The MHS formed the Dakota Community Council in 2017 as part of its engagement effort 46 Wakaŋ Tipi site reclamation edit The Wakan Tipi Awanyankapi those who care for Wakan Tipi formerly known as the Lower Phalen Creek project is a Dakota led organization that advocates for the restoration of native habitat and Indigenous histories to the Bruce Vento Nature Sanctuary and surrounding areas 47 They are building the Wakan Tipi Center at the sanctuary which will be an immersive way to learn Dakota history lifeways language and values 47 Other goals include restoring Phalen Creek above ground and renaming Carver s Cave to the original Dakota name of Wakan Tipi 47 Owamniyomni site reclamation edit The Owamniyomni Okhodayapi Friends of the Falls is a Dakota led organization that is working to restore the falls to a natural state and return Dakota leadership to the management of the site 48 It is working with the city of Minneapolis for transfer of land surrounding the Upper Lock and Dam from the federal government U S Army Corps of Engineers 48 The Army Corps of Engineers is expected to make a decision on the land transfer in 2024 49 See also editHistory of MinnesotaReferences edit a b c d Bdote Minnesota Historical Society November 4 2008 Archived from the original on August 25 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b Bdote Mdote Minisota A Public EIS continues MinnesotaHistory net February 26 2009 Archived from the original on August 2 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b c Bdote Memory Map Archived 2023 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Bdote is also used to refer to the wider area now Minneapolis St Paul Dakota people sometimes use the term Bdote area for the area surrounding the bdote of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers To Dakota people the areas contained within the larger Bdote area are one Pike Island Ft Snelling State Park Historic Fort Snelling and ultimately the whole river gorge area is not divided in the same way as it is in maps and laws and the conversation of non Dakota There is in this website overlap of information about these places for that reason The Expansionist Era 1805 1858 Minnesota Historical Society March 14 2010 Archived from the original on October 21 2020 Retrieved September 15 2023 Westerman amp White 2012 p 20 Lee A S Rock J 2014 Native Skywatchers and the Makoc e Wic aŋḣpi Wowapi D L akota Star Map Building Community Around Native Star Knowledge Ensuring Stem Literacy A National Conference on Stem Education and Public Outreach 483 133 Bibcode 2014ASPC 483 133L Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b Westerman amp White 2012 pp 18 22 Westerman amp White 2012 p 22 a b c Gould Roxanne Rock Jim 2016 Wakan Tipi and Indian Mounds Park Reclaiming an Indigenous feminine sacred site AlterNative An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples 12 3 SAGE Publications 224 235 doi 10 20507 alternative 2016 12 3 2 ISSN 1177 1801 S2CID 148427432 Lee Annette 2016 Ojibwe Giizhiig Anung Masinaaigan and D L akota Makoċe Wiċaŋḣpi Wowapi Revitalization of Native American Star Knowledge A Community Effort Journal of Astronomy in Culture 1 1 49 ISSN 2473 4888 Archived from the original on July 25 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b c d Caves Rivers And Burial Grounds Around St Paul Minnesota Jim Rock Museum on Main Street August 10 2021 Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Hutton Rachel August 17 2018 4 Dakota landmarks hide in plain sight along the Mississippi River Star Tribune Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b The Lost and Forgotten Waterfalls of the Twin Cities Racket September 12 2022 Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Lakota Star Knowledge Milky Way Spirit Path SDPB October 3 2018 Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Durand Paul C 1994 Where the Waters Gather and the Rivers Meet P C Durand p 15 ISBN 978 0 9641469 0 7 a b c A History of Owamni Yomni Lock Closures Signal Healing for Mississippi River The Circle News July 19 2015 Archived from the original on September 25 2022 Retrieved January 10 2024 Goff Matt November 3 2023 November Friday History Nicollet Island Home Restorations Kraus Anderson Archived from the original on November 16 2023 Retrieved January 10 2024 Marsh Steve October 27 2022 Timeline Wonder Women Mpls St Paul Magazine Archived from the original on November 9 2022 Retrieved January 10 2024 a b Melo Frederick October 4 2020 Carver s Cave historical marker removed by city Twin Cities Archived from the original on May 27 2022 Retrieved September 6 2023 Branam Kelly August 1 2010 Survey to Identify and Evaluate Indian Sacred Sites and Traditional Cultural Properties in the Twin Cities Metropolitan Area PDF Statewide Survey of Historical and Archaeological Sites Archived PDF from the original on June 5 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Historic Sites Bloomington Historical Society Archived from the original on September 21 2023 Retrieved January 6 2024 Grey Cloud Island Township Washington County Historical Society wchsmn org Archived from the original on December 2 2023 Retrieved January 6 2024 Burial Grounds Minnesota Office of the State Archaeologist Minnesota Office of the State Archaeologist April 5 2016 Archived from the original on September 25 2023 Retrieved January 6 2024 Westerman amp White 2012 p 33 a b Westerman amp White 2012 p 82 Kaposia Indian Site National Park Service Archived from the original on 2020 12 05 Retrieved 2023 09 06 Westerman amp White 2012 p 127 Westerman amp White 2012 p 126 Westerman amp White 2012 p 104 Cloudman Mahpiya Wichasta Bde Maka Ska Bde Maka Ska Archived from the original on March 13 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b c 1805 Dakota treatiesmatter org Archived from the original on July 12 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Pike Island MN Newspapers com May 3 1930 Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Nelson Cody May 3 2019 Dakota aim to reclaim Fort Snelling its history MPR News Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 US Dakota War of 1862 College of Liberal Arts August 17 2012 Archived from the original on October 5 2023 Retrieved January 14 2024 a b c d The US Dakota War of 1862 Minnesota Historical Society November 23 2015 Archived from the original on September 20 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b Forced Marches amp Imprisonment The U S Dakota War of 1862 August 23 2012 Archived from the original on May 8 2021 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b Woltman Nick June 24 2016 U S Dakota War s aftermath a dark moment in Fort Snelling history Twin Cities Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Salisbury Bill October 22 2019 MN House DFLers support adding Dakota word Bdote to Historic Fort Snelling Twin Cities Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 High School Name Change School District 197 June 21 2021 Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Klecker Mara November 4 2020 School board explores renaming Henry Sibley High in Mendota Heights Star Tribune Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 Kormann Carolyn September 12 2022 How Owamni Became the Best New Restaurant in the United States The New Yorker Archived from the original on March 18 2023 Retrieved January 10 2024 MPRB and Minneapolis Parks Foundation to partner with The Sioux Chef on Water Works restaurant and event venue Minneapolis Park amp Recreation Board September 15 2017 Archived from the original on March 27 2023 Retrieved January 10 2024 Roth Ellie June 14 2022 Owamni Wins Best New Restaurant at the James Beard Awards Mpls St Paul Magazine Archived from the original on October 1 2023 Retrieved January 10 2024 Salisbury Bill April 25 2019 Fort Snelling at Bdote Senate passes GOP measure cutting Historical Society funds over revisionist history Twin Cities Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b c Smith Kelly 25 June 2022 Minnesota Historical Society nixes renaming Historic Fort Snelling Inforum Archived from the original on 2 August 2023 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Fort Snelling Revitalization Minnesota Historical Society Archived from the original on 15 August 2023 Retrieved 5 September 2023 a b c Katona Robyn May 22 2023 With new name in Dakota St Paul nonprofit pushes Indigenous renaming forward MPR News Archived from the original on September 6 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 a b Callaghan Peter December 18 2023 Dakota led Owamniyomni Okhodayapi seeks to restore St Anthony Falls area MinnPost Archived from the original on December 24 2023 Retrieved January 10 2024 Marohn Kirsti February 3 2023 Land next to St Anthony Falls could return to Dakota tribes MPR News Archived from the original on March 29 2023 Retrieved January 10 2024 Bibliography edit Nichols John D Livesay Nora 2012 Ojibwe People s Dictionary University of Minnesota Archived from the original on 2023 08 02 Retrieved 2023 08 04 Westerman Gwen White Bruce 2012 Mni Sota Makoce The Land of the Dakota Minneapolis Minnesota Minnesota Historical Society Press ISBN 978 0 87351 869 7 Citations edit Westerman amp White 2012 p 214In October 2009 Lakota Chief Arvol Looking Horse participated in a pipe ceremony on Pilot Knob to celebrate the protection of the land on the hill from development noting that sacred sites are for Dakota Lakota and Nakota peoples power points the grid through which people interact with the landscape From this point of view development while damaging to the environmental characteristics of sacred places sometimes reflects the energy and power found there Chris Leith the late spiritual leader of the Prairie Island Dakota also present at the 2009 event stated in a 2003 interview that Bdote a site of creation for the Dakota that contains many sacred sites was a vortex in the landscape The very presence of Fort Snelling the airport and the complex freeway system there reflected the site s powerful energy Westerman amp White 2012 p 20The area of Bdote or Mdote Mni Sota is located at the mouth of the Minnesota River where it flows into the Mississippi midway between the downtowns of Minneapolis and St Paul It is according to Dakota oral traditions a place of creation The mouth of the Minnesota s broad valley is located in a break in the high banks of the Mississippi corridor a gorge deeply carved by the Falls of St Anthony in its million year journey up the river This place was Bdote Mni Sota bdote meaning mouth mni sota referring to the clarity of the water and its reflection of the sky The exact boundaries of Bdote Mni Sota are hard to determine Sites generally considered to be within this sacred district include Mni Sni Coldwater Spring and Oheyawahi Pilot Knob Some Dakota include Ṭaḳu Wakaŋ Ṭip i Carver s Cave and Mounds Park within this region as well Westerman amp White 2012 p 19This region where the rivers come together plays a significant role in the history of the Dakota people in Mni Sota Makoce as it contains Ṭaḳu Wakaŋ Tip i Mni Sni or Coldwater Spring and Oheyawahi or Pilot Knob Westerman amp White 2012 p 15We have recognized Bdote as the center of the earth and of all things and historical accounts tell of it as a meeting place where massive gatherings of lodges took place annually Westerman amp White 2012 p 19 More than one hundred years later missionary Stephen R Riggs wrote The Mdewakanton think that the mouth of the Minnesota River is precisely over the center of the earth and that they occupy the gate that opens into the western world External links edit nbsp Look up bdote in Wiktionary the free dictionary Bdote Memory Map Minnesota Humanities Center 44 53 49 N 93 9 1 W 44 89694 N 93 15028 W 44 89694 93 15028 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bdote amp oldid 1215718112, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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