DL: Did you learn of Dakota spirituality as a child, or as an adult?
DP: That is a very good question, because my dad was a medicine man and my mother was a Christian. So when I was brought up, I was brought both ways. My dad always wanted to take me to see people who would do the traditional healing things, and my mother on the other side, wanted to take me to church. As a matter of fact, she said, “One day I would like you to be a preacher, a minister of the bible.”
DL: Which church was it?
DP: At that time she was going to the Jehovah Witness, but we had the Presbyterian Church here on the reserve, and I remember that minister used to spend a lot of time with me. I was even sent to Montreal for summer holidays between ’75, ’76 and ’77, and I spent my two months in Montreal in the Montreal Presbyterian College. And so I used to spend my summers there and then I used to come home and I used to spend the rest of the time with my dad. And my grandmother was a great one for teaching me spirituality, and her name was Carrie Bell. And she used to go out into the bush and I used to go with her out into the bush and collect leaves and bark and roots.
DL: Is it possible to be both Christian and Dakota?
DP: Yes, I found over the years, because I married a Christian lady from Sioux Valley, another Native girl, and I found she was a big emphasis on my becoming a Christian. So I spent a lot of time- as a matter of fact, I ran the church in Sioux Valley for many years and I just moved back here in 2007, which was just 4 years ago.