The History of Peyotism in Nevada
Omer C. Stewart
from Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, Vol
25 No 3, 1982
USING ONLY THE TRADITIONAL methods of history, which heavily
depend on published or unpublished written records, or ethnography, which rely
on data collected by interviews with native informants and knowledge obtained by
participant observation, would leave a very incomplete and distorted picture of
Peyotism in Nevada Notwithstanding the fact that Peyotists have always been a
small minority in the total Nevada Indian population, they have become known
world-wide and provide examples of a number of the peculiar circumstances
connected with the whole history of the Peyote religion in the New World.
Involved in that history is the nature of the unusual, small, spineless cactus
called by the Aztecs Peyotl, Peyote by the Spanish, Mexicans and Indians
in the area of its abundant growth along the Rio Grande in south Texas and
northern Mexico, and by botanists named Lophophora williamsii (Lemaire)
Coulter. Also important is the strong American tradition whereby some
citizens try to legislate against behavior of which they disapprove, exemplified
by the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution which prohibited use of
alcohol. The history of Peyotism in Nevada is incomprehensible if not placed in
the national context.
In October of 1937 I learned of the
presence of the Peyote religion in Nevada during a conversation with Washoes Ben
Lancaster and Sam Dick, following our participation in a Peyote meeting in
Randlett, Utah, on the Uintah and Ouray Ute reservation. It was known by
officials of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) that Lancaster had started to
hold Peyote ceremonies among the Washo in October 1936, only a few months after
my first ethnographic research in the area I did my field research for a Ph.D.
thesis in the fall of 1938.
My ethnohistorical studies in
recent years allow me to reconstruct an outline of the history of Peyote in
Nevada before the return of Lancaster as a Peyote proselytizer. Christian
missionaries and BIA officials announced their opposition to Peyotism when it
was first discovered in Oklahoma in 1886, and they continued that opposition
actively until John Collier became Indian commissioner in 1933. Until Collier,
the BIA and missionary societies both collected data on Peyotism and
disseminated reports throughout Indian country to combat it. The process of data
collection itself spread knowledge. For example, the earliest documents on
Peyote in Nevada were copies of three letters sent to BIA agents in Stewart,
Fallon and Owyhee in 1916. These I found in the National Archives in Washington,
D.C. The tone of the inquiry suggests danger and opposition. For example,
"Please let me have a report from you immediately, giving the number of Indians
addicted to its use, and the extent and frequency of its use. Who are the
leaders? Where do they get their supply from, and how? What is the effect on the
users as shown by your own observations and from reports of employees,
missionaries, and others... What is physical condition of users..." The letter
was signed Chief Special Officer, i.e. detective, of the BIA.
The next reference to Peyote in Nevada is the state statute regulating the Sale
and Use of Poison, Section 5082, paragraph 8, which added "anhalonium (peyote or
mescal button)" in February 1917 as a substance prohibited except on
prescription. I have found only one hint of local Nevada influence to bring
about that anti-Peyote amendment. In a 1922 letter from the agent of a Crow
reservation to the BIA during his campaign to have an anti-Peyote law passed in
Montana, Agent C. H. Asbury wrote to the Commissioner: "I had something to do
with getting special legislation against the use of certain drugs in Nevada and
I found no particular difficulty in having the proper words inserted in the
law." Asbury had been the Indian Agent at the Duck Valley reservation for a
number of years until transferred in the fall of 1916. National forces against
Peyote may have been important in Nevada at that time, as they were in Utah and
Colorado where Peyote was outlawed also in February 1917.
The
next mention of Peyote in Nevada is in a report of Special Agent Dorrington
dated May 12-13, 1917. Surprisingly, it refers to Jack Wilson, the Messiah and
originator of the Ghost Dance of the 1890s. Wrote Dorrington:
Use of peyote and mescal. There is
absolutely no evidence indicating that either peyote or mescal is used on the
reservations or that the Indians know anything about it. .. Jack Wilson
resides in Mason Valley... He is the 'Messiah' and the originator of the
'Ghost Dance'. He appears to attract but little attention from Indians in this
locality but apparently has considerable influence among distant tribes and he
seemingly keeps in close touch with them; that he is corresponding with
certain individuals in Montana, South Dakota, Wyoming and Oklahoma... It is
further learned that even delegations have paid him a visit... He is also
known as a 'medicine man' and practices some among his people, but most of his
time is believed to be spent visiting the distant and more prosperous tribes
and individuals from whom he procures large sums of money... Jack Wilson is a
very dignified and striking Indian... From all accounts he has always been
friendly with whites.. . A recent picture of Jack, taken by myself, is
attached. It cost me the sum of one dollar, that is Jack made a 'touch' for
that amount after the picture had been taken... After careful inquiry I am
satisfied that Jack Wilson does not use peyote or mescal, nor has he
encouraged its use by others.. . he is very temperate in his habits... he is
constantly advising the Indians to abstain from the use of all drugs and
intoxicants.
The next important BIA document
prepared and widely disseminated nationwide was shown to me by missionaries and
officials when I was studying Washo-Northern Paiute Peyotism in 1938. It was a
thirty-eight page pamphlet prepared by Dr. Robert E. L. Newberne, Peyote, An
Abridged Compilation from the Files of the Bureau of Indian Affairs,
published in 1922. Newberne summarized historical information on Peyote starting
with Spanish padres, and presented anti-Peyote reports of American missionaries
to the Indians. He included samples of data collected in 1919 by means of a
twenty-one item questionnaire sent to Indian service employees such as agents,
physicians, farmers, field matrons, directors of Indian schools and sectarian
missionaries. Three hundred and two answers were received in Washington, D.C.
from 116 Indian agencies, for which 87, including 6 located in Nevada, reported
no use of Peyote. The Nevada Indian population was listed at 10,854 and included
no known Peyotists.
From interviews with Indians in 1938 I
learned of a Sioux Indian Peyote missionary, named Sam Lone Bear. Lone Bear had
been proselytizing since 1914 in Utah, Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. He conducted
Peyote rituals at Fallon and Pyramid Lake during several months in the summer of
1929. His success at "doctoring" attracted participants to his Peyote meeting at
Nixon, Nevada, from as far away as McDermitt, Nevada, and Bishop, California.
Lone Bear made his headquarters with Joe Green, a well-known and respected
Paiute medicineman residing on the Pyramid Lake Reservation. In 1938 Joe told me
of his conversion to Peyotism notwithstanding his being an active and convinced
Episcopalian, and also a practicing shaman. He had no difficulties being
simultaneously a leader in three religions, a situation I have found repeatedly
among Indian Peyotists.
In 1929 Sam Lone Bear used the name
Leo Old Coyote (which I heard as Leo O'Kio) in Nevada because he was trying to
avoid being arrested under a federal warrant for violation of the Mann Act. He
was arrested in 1932, tried, and sentenced to three years in the federal prison
at McNeil Island, Washington, but was paroled in two years. On his way home he
stopped at Fallon, Nevada, and courted Mamie Charley, the sister of a Shoshone
he had converted in 1929. Sam and Mamie were married in South Dakota and lived
on Sam's allotment on Lone Bear Creek, Pine Ridge Reservation, until he died on
February 5, 1937.
No Nevada Indians learned how to obtain
Peyote or acquired the equipment and knowledge to conduct Peyote ceremonies from
Sam Lone Bear. Consequently no Peyote meetings were held in western Nevada until
about 1932 when a Ute Peyotist named Ralph Kochampanaskin, usually called
Raymond Lone Bear, married a Washo and settled in Minden. One of his followers
was Sam Dick, an active old-fashioned Washo medicine man. After an initial
success, Ralph lost his following because he failed to live up to the
non-drinking rule of the Peyote religion.
During my
interviewing in the fall of 1938 at the Indian School near Carson City a woman
from Owyhee, Nevada, told me that Peyotism was introduced to the Duck Valley
Reservation from Fort Hall, Idaho, years before, but she could give me no
details. Later I found a 1939 letter from Owyhee in which the Indian Agent
reported that members of the tribal council agreed Peyote was first used during
a curing ceremony at Duck Valley in 1915. During my first field work in Fallon
in 1936, my Northern Paiute interpreter praised the Peyote religion; I learned
in 1938 that he had been converted during a visit to Fort Hall in 1920. Since
then he had traveled regularly to other states to attend Peyote meetings but had
not introduced the ceremonies to his people in Nevada.
Jim
Street, a Shoshone living in Fallon, told me in 1938 that he had been converted
to Peyotism on the Gosllute reservation at Ibapah, Utah, in 1932, hut had not
attended any more Peyote rituals until shortly before I interviewed him.
It is evident that the Indians of Nevada had gained
considerable experience and heard many rumors about Peyote before Ben Lancaster
firmly established the religion among the Washo and Paiute of western Nevada. It
is Lancaster's ceremony which attracted the support of about 300 of the 2257
Indians in the area. It is now appropriate to describe the Peyote ritual of
Lancaster and to summarize some of his teachings. It should be said at the
outset that the Washo-Northern Paiute rituals I observed in 1938 were nearly
identical to the rituals I had seen among the Ute a year earlier; these Ute
rituals closely paralleled ones observed by anthropologists in Oklahoma and
elsewhere who supplied me information for a 265 item comparative table published
as part of my thesis.
A canvas tipi is the most desirable
place to conduct the Peyote ritual, but I attended services with the Washo and
Paiute in a canvas walled "corral" and at regular residences. Before the
participants assemble, a sand crescent altar about four inches high and four
feet long is constructed on the west side of the meeting place. A fire is laid
on a protective mound or on the ground east of the altar. At dusk the
congregation meets at the entrance on the east side of the structure where the
leader, called the roadman, prays to Jesus, God, Mary and Peyote for guidance
during the ritual and for health and wisdom throughout life. When the devotees
enter, they always move clockwise to find seats. They follow the same pattern
whenever leaving or entering. Four officials direct the ceremony the roadman,
chief drummer, and cedarman, who are seated on blankets on the ground west of
the altar, and the fireman or doorman just inside the entrance. The normal
equipment consists of a water drum, bird-tail feather fans, gourd rattles, a
staff, dried Peyote, or Peyote tea, Bull Durham tobacco, and a large-size Peyote
button to place on the altar. The equipment is incensed in cedar smoke at the
beginning. After all pray through Bull Durham cigarette smoke, the roadman
passes clockwise the sack of Peyote buttons. Each adult participant takes four
buttons, the ceremonial number, to prayerfully eat. Then the roadman kneels and
holds the three-foot staff and a fan in his left hand. He shakes the rattle and
sings four hymns, in which he is accompanied by the chief drummer. Each male
participant in turn receives the paraphernalia, and sings while accompanied on
the drum by his neighbor to the right. The singing, drumming and praying
continue until dawn except for a midnight recess and water drinking. At dawn. a
ceremonial meal of water, fruit, meat, and maize is blessed and passed
clockwise; all present take four spoonfuls of the food and four sips of the
water. The water from the dismantled drum is poured on the sand altar and the
ceremony ends. Women of the congregation prepare a ball(banquet which is usually
eaten about noon, and then members return to their homes.
With
the Peyote plant, dried with the appearance of home dried peaches, Nevada
Indians acquired beliefs and attitudes about the bitter-tasting cactus which
have been associated with it since they were recorded by early Spanish explorers
in Mexico in the 1500s. Peyote itself is sacred, they emphasize, and has many
powers to help mankind. It is also a messenger to supernatural powers, now
usually named God and Jesus. When eaten and prayed to in the proper ritual
context, Peyote helps cure all diseases and reveals many things: the location of
lost objects or persons, future events, and proper behavior, among others.
Peyote protects from the evil intentions of witches. It brings knowledge for
proper living, which includes avoiding alcoholic beverages and always acting
according to strict Christian ethicsto love your wife and children and kin, be
patriotic and law abiding, and to respect authority, God and elders.
When asked why they supported the Peyote religion, devotees cited the
success of Peyotists in curing. In tracing the history of Peyotism in Nevada
from the mid 1930s to the mid 1970s, one discovers the interplay of a number of
individuals, first the Indians and BIA officials, then state and local
authorities and the general public. From the public emerged a few citizens who
actively opposed Peyotism and some who defended it. Christian missionaries and
their supporters disputed with Peyote religion sympathizers, such as
anthropologists and members of the American Civil Liberties Union.
Lancaster and his rituals soon came under opposition by both civil and
religious authorities, but of course an awareness of Peyotism and opposition to
it was present in Nevada when it was prohibited by law in 1917. Alida C. Bowler,
Superintendent of the Carson Indian Agency, reported to the BIA that she was
suspicious that Lancaster was a dope peddler. About three months later, the
Reverend S. R. Dunlop, a Baptist missionary to the Washo, reported that
Lancaster, in order to defend himself and Peyotism, was saying that Commissioner
John Collier's son Donald had participated in Peyote rituals. (Donald Collier
had attended a Peyote meeting with the Kiowa in 1935.) Bowler maintained her
suspicions until she left the Nevada Indian Service at the end of 1939. For
three years, BIA detectives kept an intermittent watch on Lancaster, and his car
was searched several times as he passed the Nevada California state line.
Samples of materials in his car were chemically analysed for Bowler and instead
of the morphine she suspected, Lancaster was transporting ground Peyote and
sagebrush.
A number of Indians reacted to the Peyote religion
as Joe Green did, that is by adding it to their lives but still maintaining the
Christian denomination they followed, and continuing to call on Indian medicine
men from time to time. The majority of the Indians rejected Peyotism, however.
In April a delegation of Washo presented a petition to Bowler requesting that
Peyote meetings be stopped. The Indian opponents used the same arguments as the
whites"Peyote kills" while converts said Peyote saves.
While
organizing the data I accumulated at the Carson Indian Agency and trying to
acquire a firmer basis to judge Miss Bowler's opinion that Ben Lancaster was not
a proper Peyotist, I wrote to Mack Haag, President of the Native American Church
(NAC), a Cheyenne residing in Calumet, Oklahoma. He replied that he knew
Lancaster well and that "he is well qualified" to start Peyote meetings in
Nevada.
Inasmuch as the BIA in Washington in 1937 successfully
opposed an attempt to enact a national Peyote prohibition, and replaced the
antiPeyote pamphlet by Newberne (published in 1922) with a mimeographed report
favorable to Peyote entitled "Documents on Peyote," a new and widely publicized
campaign against the NAC which developed in Nevada in 1940 is surprising.
Accounts of these efforts, which resembled some of those used in 1937 and 1938
which I evaluated in my Ph.D. thesis, were recovered from the National Archives.
Newspaper reports from Nevada dated May 1940 contained opinions that several
deaths had occurred because Indians took Peyote in Lancaster's rituals. The
coroners' verdicts were that the deceased suffered from advanced stages of
tuberculosis before they attended the NAC ceremonies.
Opponents were not convinced and had reinserted into Nevada's narcotics law a
prohibition against Peyote in February 1941. Under provisions of the amended
law, Lancaster was arrested in Reno in October 1941. A full account of his
arrest and the people who brought it about appeared in a half-page article in,
surprisingly, the New York Sunday News of November 30, 1941. The item,
special to the News", included a photograph of Ben Lancaster and one of Dr.
Charles Lee Tranter, a neurologist, with the caption "Tranter....and Malcolm
Easterlin, attorney, who are leading movement to outlaw use of peyote, 'Sacred
mushroom of the Aztecs', among Indians of the West, asserting addiction is
spreading." The article outlined a campaign against Peyote very reminiscent of
those which took place from 1914 to 1937 to support bills introduced in Congress
to prohibit Peyote. The News article reported:
Lancaster's arrest came at the end of a long
investigation. The official finger was put on him by the Rev. Samuel R.
Dunlop....Baptist missionary...The Rev. Dunlop has been in Nevada since 1935,
having come from Wisconsin where he administered to the Winnebago, who also
used peyote....
While he [Lancaster] was gathering a
congregation around him, the whites were observing with more and more alarm
the growing use of peyote. Chief among these were Dr. Charles Lee
Tranter...who heads the Association for Prevention of Peyotism, and Malcolm
Easterlin, New York and Washington attorney. Also active is Representative
Frances Bolton (R- Ohio), who is a member of the Indian Affairs Committee....
The article stated that Commissioner Collier had
said that Peyote as used in Indian ceremonies is not habit forming and not
harmful.
Also in 1941 an article appeared in Scribner's
Commentator (Vol. 11, pp. 77-82) with the title ''PeyoteIndian Problem No.
1," I)y Malcolm Easterlin. It started with a disparaging evaluation of
Commissioner Collier and then presented a short history of Peyote; it faulted
him for opposing the anti-Peyote legislation Easterlin conveyed the impression
that only Collier had opposed laws to prohibit Peyote, whereas while he was in
office he worked against only one bill to outlaw Peyote. Eight earlier similar
hills had been sponsored by the BIA from 1916 to 1926 hut were rejected by
Congress. Easterlin praised Dr. Tranter and accused Ben Lancaster of doping
Indians in order to get all of their money.
On March 17, 1942,
Judge William McKnight dismissed the charges against Lancaster on a legal
technicalitythe 1941 legislature had voted to amend a "repealed and
non-existing former act." But that did not stop Tranter, who was joined by Dr.
Walter Bromberg, a psychiatrist who had worked for the New York Criminal Courts
until he moved to Reno in December 1941. In June 1942 Bromberg and Tranter
presented a paper to the Western Regional Conference of the Home Mission Council
of North America during its meeting at the Indian School in Stewart, Nevada.
Data presented came from earlier publications, yet the paper was published in
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (Vol. 97, pp. 518-527), under
the title "Peyote intoxication: Some psychological aspects of the Peyote rite."
The article was condensed and distributed at five cents a copy by the National
Fellowship of Indian Workers and was published in a letter of August 6, 1943. An
article less blatantly critical of Peyotism by Bromberg appeared in Nature
Magazine, October 1942, entitled "Storm Over Peyote."
A
really scurrilous article, containing many inaccuracies, written by Charles L.
Tranter, M.D., under the title "Peyote New Dope Menace," appeared in the
national scandal- mongering magazine PIC, on December 8, 1942. Included
were pictures of old Indian women said to be under the influence of Peyote, hut
who actually were known to never use Peyote. Representative Frances Bolton
inserted the article in a hearing of the Committee on Indian Affairs and it was
printed by the government without the photographs in December 1944. Nothing more
by or about the leaders of the 1941-1942 campaign against Peyote in Nevada has
come to my attention. Except for a few news items over the years reporting that
NAC members had successfully opposed new bills submitted to the Nevada
legislature to outlaw Peyote, since 1944 nearly all information on the subject
coming from Nevada has originated in anthropological research.
Publications by anthropologists began in 1940 with the notice by Jack Harris
about the Shoshone at Duck Valley which is mentioned above, and the appearance
in the Proceedings of the Sixth Pacific Science Congress, in which I
published a short paper. This was the first report on Ben Lancaster in a
publication distributed internationally. My Ph.D. thesis was issued in print in
January 1944, and a review appeared in the American Anthropologist in
1946.
In 1954 Warren d'Azevedo began research among the Washo
and was soon invited to participate in a Peyote meeting held by Ramsey Walker at
Woodfords, California He produced several unpublished reports before he and
musicologist Alan P. Merriam published an article in the American
Anthropologist (1957, Vol. 59, pp. 615-641) entitled "Washo Peyote Songs."
(In 1976, I discovered a listing in a Schwann Guide to Tapes and Records
an album by the same title issued as No. 4384, by Folkway Records. I have not
been able to ascertain if the two are related. A Northern Paiute originally from
McDermitt, Wilbur Jack, recorded Peyote songs on Canyon Records, ARP 6054.)
Other anthropologists who have written on Washo Peyotism are James Downs and
John A. Price; d'Azevedo attempted to promote a general public understanding of
Peyotism with a long article in the Native Nevadan, September 3, 1968,
entitled "Peyote: Fact and Fancy."
Until his death in 1953,
Ben Lancaster made annual pilgrimages to Oilton, Texas, to collect and dry a
year's supply of Peyote. By not furnishing Peyote to others he strengthened his
own role as leader. As early as 1939, I assisted some other Indians in receiving
Peyote by mail, but because the State of Nevada had passed a law against the
transportation of Peyote, commercial suppliers could not send it by U.S. Mail
into the state. Others began traveling to Texas and making arrangements with
Indians in Oklahoma to transship packages of the sacred cactus.
Lancaster had been active with officials of the NAC before becoming a
Peyote proselytizer in Nevada in 1936; and although the NAC organization has
never attempted to control or direct Peyotist missionaries, it did attempt to
intercede in his behalf with the BIA when he was being harassed by Dr. Tranter
in 1941.
Copies of large quantities of official NAC
correspondence came into my possession from the estate of Sidney Slotkin after
his death in 1958. From letters in that file a clear record emerges that others
began communicating with the NAC by 1954. That year Harry Sam of Smith, Nevada,
and Burton John of Gardnerville sent word to the president of the NAC that they
would attend a regional meeting at Fort Hall.
By 1955 and
1956, as shown in the Bulletin of the NAC edited by anthropologist Slotkin in
Chicago, and by other documents from the Slotkin file, Washo and Northern Paiute
Peyotists numbered about sixty in and near Gardnerville. Louise Lancaster, the
widow of Ben, was one of the leaders and in 1955 contributed $115 to the
international organization of the NAC. Her financial support probably stimulated
the international officials to appoint her the "Regional Representative of NAC
for Nevada and California" at the 1955 annual convention.
Reubin Hardin of McDermitt wrote to Slotkin in 1956 to subscribe to the NAC
Bulletin, and in 1958 Hardin was put forward as a leading Peyotist in Nevada by
Peyotists in Idaho. Reubin Hardin was named a "Delegate-at-Large" by NAC
officials when he was present at the annual convention of the Peyote Church
during its 1978 meeting in Laredo, Texas.
The participation of
Nevada Indians in the international affairs of the NAC brought Vice-President
Frank Takes Gun to the state in 1958 so that local people would incorporate the
NAC of Nevada under the laws of the state. This was completed on May 20, 1958
with Washo, Paiute and Shoshone signing as incorporators with Crow Indian Takes
Gun.
In 1972, I had an opportunity to again talk with
Peyotists on the Goshute Reservation, and in Duck Valley, Pyramid Lake, Fallon,
Gardnerville, Elko and McDermitt. At McDermitt I was allowed to be a
participant-observer in a Peyote meeting conducted by Grover Tom.
It was remarkable that a number of circumstances I had discovered present
among Peyotists in other states were duplicated in Nevada. Several were
exemplified by Grover Tom, roadman at McDermitt. First was the surprise I felt
that he was a leader of Peyotism for the Paiute at McDermitt, yet he was a
Shoshone who learned to speak Paiute after he married a McDermitt Paiute woman
in 1950. He was thus an alien Peyote preacher to those Paiute. Grover Tom
insisted that his Peyote ritual was different from others in Nevada because he
had studied with Comanche in Oklahoma for extended periods from 1939 to 1942 to
learn the original ritual. But he also said he remembered attending a meeting
conducted by Sam Lone Bear for the Shoshone on the Goshute reservation when he
happened to be visiting relatives there in 1929. He had attended meetings with
Washo and with a Sioux conducting a meeting at Fort Hall. Foreign Indians, that
is, Indians from other tribes, conducted meetings for the Paiute at McDermitt.
Grover named Ramsey Walker, a Washo, and Ralph Turtle, an Arapaho.
Stanley Smart, a McDermitt Paiute who had been fireman at the meeting I
attended there named additional visiting roadmen from Fort Hall, Idaho, Wind
River, Wyoming, and Oklahoma. Stanley had attended meetings with Northern
Cheyenne in Montana, with Ute in Utah, with Navajo at Aneth, Utah, and others.
He has been invited to be roadman at Healdsburg, California, Fort Hall, Idaho
and Gardnerville, Nevada.
My most unusual discoveries in 1972
involved Sam Lone Bear, such as the instance related by Grover Tom above.
Several families in Fallon remembered Sam Lone Bear, and knew that Mamie
Charley, a Shoshone of' that town, had married him. An old Peyotist at Pyramid
Lake recalled that Willie Hardin of McDermitt had been nearly dead and had been
cured by Sam at Pyramid Lake.
Most remarkable was finding a
Shoshone Indian, Sam Long, on the Te-Moak Reservation south of Elko who had as a
sacred object a carved staff that his father had received from Sam Lone Bear in
1929. I visited him a second time in 1978 and learned more about the new rules
for conducting a Peyote ceremony he said he had learned directly from God
through Peyote. God had told him to reverse the ceremonial direction from
clockwise to counter- clockwise. He had no fire in the ritual and used a cloth
altar. His following is so small it is unlikely that his special ritual will
survive him.
The Native American Church of Nevada has
converted a very small percentage of' the total Indian population in Nevada.
However, cultural and social patterns connected with Peyote are found similar to
those elsewhere in the United States. Opposition to Peyotism arrived from
outside the state even before Peyote ceremonies were practiced. The Nevada NAC
has had regular encouragement from outside Indians, and Nevada Peyotists since
1936 have been regularly bolstered by visits with Peyotists in other states. In
1978 the vitality of Peyotism in Nevada suggested it would continue
indefinitely.
In Nevada, I discovered what appeared at first
to be a unique behavior pattern. Joe Green, an active Paiute medicineman, was at
the same time a devout Episcopalian and a devotee of Peyotism. He believed in
and practiced three religions at a time. Since I became aware of that religious
phenomenon in 1938, I have found it many times among Peyotists throughout the
United States and Mexico. In time I came to realize (and then I confirmed this
from published examples) that human beings universally appear able and willing
to add religions together and practice them alternately, yet maintaining them
discrete. Except for peoples reared in or fully converted to Christianity, Islam
or Judaism the ability to easily carry on three or more religions simultaneously
appears to be the rule.