Thousands gather in New Mexico for the largest powwow in North America
[April 25, 2025]
By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Thousands of people are gathering in New Mexico
for a celebration showcasing Native American and Indigenous dancers,
musicians and artisans from around the world.
Billed by organizers as the largest powwow in North America, the annual
Gathering of Nations festival kicks off Friday with a colorful
procession of dancers spiraling into the center of an arena at the New
Mexico state fairgrounds. Participants wear elaborate regalia adorned
with jingling bells and dance to the tempo of rhythmic drumming.
The event also features the crowning of Miss Indian World, as well as
horse parades in which riders are judged on the craftsmanship of their
intricately beaded adornments or feathered headdresses and how well they
work with their horses.
Powwow roots
Powwows are a relatively modern phenomenon that emerged in the 1800s as
the U.S. government seized land from tribes throughout the Northern and
Southern Plains. Forced migrations and upheaval during this period
resulted in intertribal solidarity among Plains people and those from
the southern prairies of Canada.
Alliances were formed, giving way to the exchange of songs and dances
during gatherings between different tribes. In the decades that
followed, powwows were advertised to pioneers heading westward as
“authentic” Native American dance shows. For some, it was an
exploitation of their cultures.
The word powwow was derived from pau wau, an Algonquian Narrtick word
for “medicine man,” according to the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and
Cultural Heritage. Scholars say English settlers misused the word to
refer to the meetings of medicine men and later to any kind of Native
American gathering.
Today, some of the large powwows like the Gathering of Nations have
become more commercialized events that use dancing and drumming
competitions with big prize money to provide a glimpse into Indigenous
cultures.

Reconnecting with culture
At ceremonial dances, participants wear traditional regalia specific to
their tribe, whereas powwow attire often is more contemporary and flashy
with sequins and sparkles. It's about dressing to impress the judges,
said Warren Queton, a Kiowa Tribe legislator and adjunct instructor at
the University of Oklahoma who has participated in community dancing and
cultural events since he was a boy.
Queton, who served as the head gourd dancer at the university's recent
spring powwow, said ceremonial dances are deeply rooted in community,
identity and cultural values.
It's a struggle to keep traditional cultural practices and commercial
powwows from being lumped into the same category, he said. They have
very different meanings in Native American and Indigenous cultures.

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This image provided by the U.S. Postal Service shows one of the
postage stamps in a new series commemorating Native American
powwows. (U.S. Postal Service via AP)
 There has been a focus on promoting
smaller powwows held in tribal communities. Queton said these
gatherings serve as a way for people who live elsewhere to return
home and reconnect with their families and the land, and to share
traditions with younger generations.
“Knowing where you come from, your land, your oral traditions, your
language, but also values and traits — that can only be learned from
a community,” he said. “That’s why those smaller dances are so
important because people learn those community values. They’re all a
part of our identity.”
Capturing good energy
There still are elements of tradition woven in to modern powwows.
Competitors wear feathered bustles, buckskin dresses, fringed shawls
and beaded head and hair pieces. Some of the elaborate outfits are
hand-stitched designs that can take months to complete.
The sounds, movements and emotions that radiate from the dancing are
challenging to capture on canvas. But Cochiti Pueblo painter Mateo
Romero did just that when he partnered with the U.S. Postal Service
to create a series of powwow stamps to be unveiled Friday during
Gathering of Nations.
Powerfully hypnotic, atavistic and somatic is how the artist
describes the dancing. One of his pieces depicts what is known as a
fancy shawl dance with its dips, pivots, hops and twirls. Each
tassel on the shawl flows and flips, accentuating the dancer's
movements.
Romero said he used color, thick and thin paint and soft and hard
edges along with photographic elements to create something that
feels alive, embedded with feeling and bright pops of color.
Romero called it a huge honor to transform powwow culture into a
postage stamp filled with “good energy.”
“I look at it as a sort of vehicle to express this sentiment, the
energy, the celebration, the vibration, the beauty of it,” he said.
“It’s the power of it.”
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