We Ride Sport and Trail Magazine June 2019 | Page 8

8 / Sport and Trail Magazine

Beverly Bear King Moran with Midnight Dream, Hunkpapa Lakota Beadwork Artist

Photo credit Nancy Smith, Lightning Horse Photography

of all the horses that have been abused and slaughtered inhumanely.

Following are a few highlights of our conversation:

Ozana: Thank you again for taking time to talk with me. Can you tell me about your Native background?

Beverly: I am Hunkpapa Lakota and an enrolled member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. My Tribe’s reservation is in North and South Dakota. The people of Standing Rock often called Sioux, are members of the Lakota and Dakota Nations. “Lakota” and “Dakota” means “allies” or “friends”. The Hunkpapa Lakota are “Those Living at Entrance of Camp Circle” and one of the seven council fires of the Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota circle called the “Oceti Sakowin”. Historically, our culture revolved around the horse and buffalo, and our people were nomadic and lived in lodges. Today the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe has approximately 16,000 enrolled members. My Tribe recently received international attention and support for being “Water Protectors” in our battle to stop the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline.

I grew up about 100 miles off the reservation in Aberdeen, SD. As a child, I spent my summers on the reservation in Fort Yates, ND with my Grandmother Clara Bear King. It was during that time spent with my Grandmother that I began to understand and learn our values and traditions of our people which I have cared my whole life. After the birth of my daughter Andrea, I became inspired and energized to learn the ways of making our traditional northern buckskin dresses. It was Andrea’s desire to dance traditional that motivated me to learn how to bead. Inspired by the geometric beadwork of the Northern Plains Tribe I now create dramatic northern traditional buckskin dresses with matching horse regalia by combining the traditions of the past with modern materials.

child, I spent my summers on the

reservation in Fort Yates, ND with my

Grandmother Clara Bear King. It was

during that time spent with my

Grandmother that I began to

understand and learn our values and

traditions of our people of which I

have cared my whole life. After the

birth of my daughter Andrea, I

became inspired and energized to

learn the ways of making our

traditional northern buckskin

dresses. It was Andrea’s desire to

dance traditional that motivated me

to learn how to bead. Inspired by the

geometric beadwork of the Northern

Plains Tribe, I now create dramatic

northern traditional buckskin dresses

with matching horse regalia by

combining the traditions of the past

with modern materials.

Ozana: What does it mean to you to

be part of the Gathering of Nations

together with your horses?

Beverly: The GON Horse Regalia

Parade provides my family the unique

opportunity to share our love of our

horses and our traditional horse

regalia with our brothers and sisters

all around the world. It’s a time to

honor the horse nation, the ancestors,

and the continued regeneration of

this spectacular and time-honored

tradition. It’s also a time to create new

relationships with other riders and

their horses. This was a very special time for us this year as my sister Valerie Moran and our horse Star were riding in the parade in honor of our cousin Tammy LaFromboise, another daughter of the Standing Rock Sioux Nation, and ALL Missing and Murdered Indigenous Woman, whose lives were taken too soon. And, our horse Midnight Dream was honored this year to carry the Thunder Hooves “Saddle of Hope” as a Spirit Rider in honor of all the horses that have been needlessly abused and slaughtered. My daughter Andrea Bear King also dressed in her traditional dress and walked with us in the parade.