Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Alma Snell: Native Ethnobotanist - Jess


“My grandmother once told me, ‘Don’t forget what I have taught you. Words are powerful’”. Alma Snell said this about her childhood growing up on the Crow Reservation. Snell’s mother had a difficult childbirth and died one year later from Tuberculosis, leaving the young girl to be taken care of by her grandmother Pretty Shield. Her grandmother was a famous Crow medicine woman who was born into a time where buffalo were disappearing by the hundreds of thousands and tribes were being forced onto reservations. Young Alma and Pretty Shield formed a tight bond and explored eastern Montana together, learning about different plants, roots, and berries. Pretty Shield taught Alma the traditional ways of the Crow people, more specifically ethnobotany. Ethnobotany is defined as the scientific study of the traditional knowledge and customs of a people concerning plants and their medical, religious, and other uses. Alma learned things like how to crush both the fruit of the wild chokecherry and the pit in order to get the nutrients inside the almond-like nut. After the fruit was crushed, it was sun dried to eliminate the cyanide content. Today, Alma makes a modern adaptation with chocolate covered chokecherries. Outside of culinary uses for native plants, Pretty Shield taught young Alma about herbal remedies for various ailments. For example, in Snell’s book she talks about making an echinacea tincture for snakebite. First, a cloth is soaked in the tincture and applied to the bite and a few drops of the echinacea should be swallowed as well. Then if kidney problems arise, Alma suggests making a strong yarrow tea to keep the patient hydrated.
When Alma became a teenager, she was sent to Flandreau Indian Boarding School in South Dakota (Alma). She had a difficult time trying to combine her Native culture and the new American culture she was being forced to assimilate to. She understood her old traditional values and respect for nature, but had to learn that Christianity, discipline, and order were the new governing factors during her time at Flandreau. At the boarding school she met her future husband Bill Snell, but he was an Assiniboine, an enemy tribe of the Crow. The Assiniboine were an independent warrior tribe that looked down upon intermarriage, making the relationship between Alma and Bill difficult. Finally, after World War II, they got married and according to the Billings Gazette they celebrated their 60th anniversary in 2008.
Today, Alma is known as a wonderful teacher, wife, author, and a success story for the Crow tribe. She teaches Indian sign language and is fluent in both Crow and English. But, she is most well-known for preserving and sharing the knowledge of ethnobotany she has learned from her own studies and her grandmother teaching. Alma Snell has written two books during her lifetime. The first is A Taste of Heritage, where she combines “wild plant knowledge, historical and modern recipes, natural medicine, and advice for life”. In the book she thanks her husband for trying all of her strange recipes, especially boiled buffalo hooves. The second book she has written is Grandmother’s Grandchild, a story about her youth growing up with Pretty Shield on the Crow Reservation. She has also given presentations to school children and tribal college students across the country and has been a medicinal healer to hundreds of people. The National Park Service, PBS, the Montana Herb Gathering, and the Smithsonian, just to name a few, have all asked for Mrs. Snell’s help on various projects.

In conclusion, Alma has been a leader and a teacher for both native and non-native people. She has preserved a hundred years of Crow tradition in print, when it would otherwise be lost. Mrs. Snell passed away in 2008, but her memory lives on through her books, friends and family. From her influential childhood with Pretty Shield to her current teaching, writing, and healing, Alma Snell has been a remarkable person.

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