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An Apache girl's Sunrise Dance

On the second day of her Sunrise Dance, a first menstruation rite, an Apache girl and her two cousins wait for the evening dance to start, the San Carlos Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. The girls are dressed in buckskin dresses. The Sunrise Dance is held during the summer, within one year after the girl has had her first menstruation, and lasts for four days. The ceremony is an enactment of the Apache creation myth and during the rites the girl ’becomes‘ Changing Woman, a mythical female figure, and comes into possession of her healing powers. The rites are supposed to prepare the girl for adulthood and to give her a long and healthy life without material wants.

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Copyright © 2004 Anders Ryman. All rights reserved.
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America American Indian American Indians American Southwest Apache Arizona Changing Woman Girls Horizontal Native Americans Native North Americans North America Religion Rite of Passage San Carlos Indian Reservation Sitting Sunrise Dance USA United States of America abalone shell adulthood animal hide bell bells bond buck-skin buckskin cane ceremony cultural and ethnic dress eagle feathers ethnic ethnic group ethnic minority first menstruation fringed fringes indigenous people life cycle ceremony maturity minority moccasins native-americans ornament puberty rite religious teenage girls three three persons
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On the second day of her Sunrise Dance, a first menstruation rite, an Apache girl and her two cousins wait for the evening dance to start, the San Carlos Indian Reservation, Arizona, USA. The girls are dressed in buckskin dresses. The Sunrise Dance is held during the summer, within one year after the girl has had her first menstruation, and lasts for four days. The ceremony is an enactment of the Apache creation myth and during the rites the girl ’becomes‘ Changing Woman, a mythical female figure, and comes into possession of her healing powers. The rites are supposed to prepare the girl for adulthood and to give her a long and healthy life without material wants.
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Anders Ryman

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