River Florence Webb

Van Nhi Ho, a graduate coordinator for the Women鈥檚 Gender & Sexuality Center, hosted a 鈥2-Spirit Social鈥 on Feb. 7.

The Social provided the opportunity for students to learn and celebrate the 2-Spirit community within the Indigenous culture. Students also got to visit tables that included , a support group for LGBTQ+ young adults, and the .

The keynote speaker and presenter, River Florence Webb is a Nez Perce and Meskwaki Two-Spirit, recognized by members of their (Nez Perce) tribe as a traditional scientist and knowledge keeper due to their efforts in preserving 罢颈迟辞辞辩补迟铆尘迟, the Nez Percelanguage.

In acknowledgment of the Lenni Lenape Tribe of Galloway, River wore their Meskwaki camp dress since the Meskwaki are an Algonquian people, like the Lenni Lenape. Below are some of the topics they discussed.

 

River speaking with the audience at the social

"I say that 2-Spiritness is a spiritual role, gender identity, cultural role, sexual orientation and so much more... You cannot quantify being 2-Spirit."

Explaining the term 鈥2-Spirit鈥

It can be incredibly hard to explain because there are so many binaries that white society puts on a 2-Spirit, or even transgender, person to try to define their 鈥渢rans-ness鈥 or 鈥淣ative-American-ness.鈥 There are so many rules and scales and adjusters that people want to use to define it but it is really undefinable.

When I do try to teach people unfamiliar with my culture, I say that 2-Spiritness is a spiritual role, gender identity, cultural role, sexual orientation and so much more. Those four things are the big, key pieces of what a person鈥檚 2-Spirit identity can be. You cannot quantify being 2-Spirit. 

Maybe someday, this will be more of a spiritual role for me, and these things will change. But right now, it鈥檚 about my gender identity and how it intersects with my culture, and that鈥檚 what makes me 2-Spirit. There are many ways to be a 2-Spirit person.

 

2-Spirit in relation to being LGBTQ+

A big thing to point out is that being 2-Spirit does not equate to being LGBTQ+. That may confuse some people because it seems like 2-Spirit people are just LGBTQ Native Americans. But that isn鈥檛 really the case and a lot of our (2-Spirit) elders get offended at being called trans. If they identify as 2-Spirit, that鈥檚 who they are. Just in the same way that we respect anybody鈥檚 identity, you need to respect these elders who identify as 2-Spirit.

In essence, some 2-Spirit people would not 鈥渜ualify鈥 as LGBTQ+ to a Western onlooker, so that requires you to respect that and to open that space. As people coming from a Western society, you cannot impose Western labels on somebody in any way, shape or form.

 

What being 2-Spirit means to them

Art: 2-Spirit people are artisans 鈥 art is a really big part of how I construct my identity. I also do contemporary art, but stuff like beadwork and ribbon work has hundreds of years of history. It鈥檚 important to me to keep that up and that tradition alive as we slowly lose them over time. 

Dance: I鈥檓 a competitive powwow dancer and I dance in women鈥檚 categories. In the Meskwaki scrub dance, I鈥檓 holding a washboard. This dance developed around the 1800s as a way for women to show their strength; you鈥檙e wearing all these heavy necklaces and doing really fast movements. It鈥檚 kind of funny because, in white culture, the strength of a woman doesn鈥檛 really feel valued, but these dances are a way for women to say, 鈥淟ook at how strong I am!鈥

Students holding the corn-husk dolls that River taught them how to make

River teaching students how to make corn-husk dolls

The next one, the fancy dance, started in the 1950s by a couple of brave women. Before this point, women danced around the edge of the powwow circle and weren鈥檛 allowed to dance in the middle like men. A couple of brave women jumped in there and, yeah, they were told off and had a really rough time. But, because of them, women are now a huge part of the center of the circle, and they do the fancy dance. It鈥檚 a piece of Native feminism that I really like to highlight because those women were brave and made a difference for us in the powwows: we now have the same prize money as men and categories are losing their gender. So, for people like me, instead of dancing 鈥渨omen鈥檚 fancy,鈥 it will just be 鈥渇ancy shawl.鈥

Community: Ultimately, being 2-Spirit is about community. They鈥檙e (their community and especially their grandmothers) the people who give me guidance. I鈥檓 very lucky that they鈥檙e both 2-Spirit as well and it鈥檚 super powerful. As I鈥檓 going through life, I鈥檓 surrounded by three queer (two grandmothers identify as lesbians) women of color who are here to guide me on my journey; I feel so blessed for that, especially since they guide me traditionally and keep me true to myself.

 

The challenges of being a 2-Spirit individual

Besides the fun stuff, beautiful clothing and a lovely culture, being a part of a marginalized community has really profound effects on indigenous people. As an Indigenous person or woman, murder is . Femicide is a really big problem in our communities, as is human trafficking. These statistics aren鈥檛 well reported on or covered because we鈥檙e such a small community.

In my lifetime, I鈥檝e seen so many of my peers die from suicide or femicide and people in my community go missing frequently. As 2-Spirit people, they don鈥檛 want us to be alive and it鈥檚 a reality that I don鈥檛 think people understand.

On an interpersonal and systemic level, people like me aren鈥檛 supposed to exist. We鈥檙e not gone, we鈥檙e still here. It鈥檚 not a political statement for me to say that there is a system that wants me to die, but it is a political statement for me to simply exist.

 

How non-Indigenous/Natives can support the community

  • Listen to 2-Spirit individuals and take the time to understand what they are sharing with the world 鈥 our voices matter!
  • Support the 2-Spirit individuals, follow their initiatives and campaigns and donate to MMIWG2S+ (missing or murdered Indigenous women, girls and 2-Spirit) organizations.
    • (Passamaquoddy, Indian Township, Maine)
    • (Narraganset, Rhode Island)
    • (Chickasaw, Oklahoma)
  • Support our art and engagements.
    • (Seminole/Choctaw), singer, songwriter, actor and producer
    • (Maliseet, New Brunswick, Canada), singer and songwriter

River at their table with arts and crafts