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The Wampanoags in the seventeenth century

Chapter 46: ECCLESIASTICAL ORGANIZATION
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About This Book

This work provides an ethnographic overview of the Wampanoag people during the seventeenth century, focusing on their culture, social structure, and interactions with European settlers. It serves as a comprehensive guide for understanding the Wampanoags, particularly in the context of their historical significance in New England. The content is based on various scholarly sources and aims to fill a gap in the literature regarding the indigenous population of Plymouth. The paper was initially created for educational purposes and has since gained interest from both the public and academic communities.

ECCLESIASTICAL ORGANIZATION

The Wampanoags only religious practitioner was the powow. His role was that of intermediary between the humans and the supernatural.[558] When illness was thought to be of supernatural origin he was called in to determine the kind of force at work and to carry out the proper ceremonies to restore health.[559] For this work he received payment in advance. Should the patient not recover, his relatives were apt to be angry with the powow; they would demand the return of the fee and perhaps his life if they felt that deception had been involved.[560]

Certain of the powow’s activities were deliberately misleading. He often used tricks to help demonstrate his command of supernatural powers. A powow was said to be able to accomplish such feats as making water burn, turning ashes into green leaves in the winter, making ice appear upon water in the summer, or turning himself into a “flaming man”. His skill at sleight of hand aided in the working of some of these wonders.[561]

A man became a powow by having a dream in which he was promised the type of supernatural power that would make him a powerful religious practitioner.[562] The man announced this dream to others on the following day, and in the course of a two-day celebration it was proclaimed that he was a powow.[563] The success and competence of the new powow would be judged by his future performance.