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Powwow Dance Styles

Jingle Dress Dance

Jingle Dress DanceThe story of the Jingle Dress dance begins with Maggie White, a member of the Whitefish Bay First Nation located on the shores of Lake of the Woods in Northwestern Ontario.

There are various accounts of the story but all agree that the dress and the dance originated from a dream.  As the story goes, a young girl was sick and gave no signs of recovering.  Her distraught father, offered his tobacco and prayed for the Creator’s assistance.

Assistance came by way of a dream, in which the father was shown how to create this dress and instructed about a dance that would accompany the dress.  Upon waking, he set about making the dress and put it on his daughter so that she would dance as he had been instructed to show her.  In spite of her illness, she was somehow able to dance and as the dance progressed, she became stronger and was relieved of her illness.  The young girl was Maggie White who went on to live a long and fulfilling life sharing the teachings and customs associated with the Jingle dress.

Thus the Jingle Dress dance is considered a healing dance. A sacred obligation is carried by women who wear this dress as Jingle dress dancers are often called upon to dance for a sick or injured community member or to help families who are grieving. The metal cones that adorn the dress were originally made from snuff tin lids and create a beautiful sound when the dancer is moving. The spiritual power of the dress is said to originate as an energy which emanates from the sound of the cones that sing out to the spirits as the dancer moves in time with the drum.

The dance was a gift from the Creator to the Ojibwe people for the purpose of healing and has now spread widely to many tribes across North America.

CLICK BELOW TO VIEW JINGLE DRESS DANCERS IN ACTION.

JINGLE DRESS DANCERS - 2007 RED EARTH 1

JINGLE DRESS DANCERS - 2007 RED EARTH 2

JINGLE DRESS DANCERS - 2007 GATHERING OF NATIONS

Videos courtesy of

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