Perennial Ceremony

Perennial Ceremony

Lessons and Gifts from a Dakota Garden

Teresa Peterson

Travel through a garden’s seasons toward healing, reclamation, and wholeness—for us, and for our beloved relative, the Earth

224 Pages, 5 x 9 in

  • Hardcover
  • 9781517917029
  • Published: June 18, 2024
BUY
  • eBook
  • 9781452971049
  • Published: June 18, 2024
BUY

Details

Perennial Ceremony

Lessons and Gifts from a Dakota Garden

Teresa Peterson

ISBN: 9781517917029

Publication date: June 18th, 2024

224 Pages

34 black and white illustrations

8 x 5

"Perennial Ceremony is a powerful, necessary gift for our times. Teresa Peterson writes with passionate grace of Dakota practices and teachings that nourish our world and transformed her life. With compassion, humor, wisdom, and courage, she offers a path through the disastrous fires of our own making. A book I'll return to again and again for solace, guidance, delectable recipes, and most of all: inspiration." —Mona Susan Power, author of A Council of Dolls

 

"Equally inspiring for gardeners and cooks and readers who love a good story, Teresa Peterson’s generous-hearted sharing of her spiritual journey through gardening is both nourishing and uplifting. Her tender gleaning of practical, seasonal wisdom invites us to remember a relationship with the land that is ceremony, a life-sustaining, daily communion with creation." —Diane Wilson, author of The Seed Keeper

 

"Full of Indigenous knowledge, family stories, and tasty recipes, Perennial Ceremony is a love letter to Dakota homeland. In poetic passages and precise prose, Teresa Peterson teaches us what it means to acknowledge plants, creatures, water, and the earth as our relatives. Here is a circle of respect enacted through a life story of eating and exploring, grieving and healing, and the momentum of continual, seasonal return. This book will be cherished for all the delights it offers and all the wisdom it bestows." —Heid E. Erdrich, author of Original Local: Indigenous Foods, Stories, and Recipes from the Upper Midwest

 

"Sharing relatable recipes containing easily procured ingredients, Teresa Peterson tells intergenerational stories of life, loss, ceremony, change, hurt, and healing. Through her narrative, she brings readers into her garden, where they meet her family, work the soil, harvest a cornucopia of nourishing ingredients, and contemplate the lives and various doings of our winged, rooted, and four-legged relatives." —Wendy Makoons Geniusz, editor of Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have to Do Is Ask: Anishinaabe Botanical Teachings


 

"From a decolonial viewpoint, Peterson honors life and all relations in her daily gardening practice. Her writing is intimate, warm, and thought-provoking, as she integrates social commentary into her reflections about family and community and our shared responsibility for each other."—Colors of Influence

 

"With generosity and warmth, Peterson, a citizen of the Upper Sioux Community, invites readers to her land, garden, and kitchen. Peterson has a loving, ethical, encyclopedic knowledge of the land and the living things she calls ‘relatives.’"—Booklist

 

"Through stories, memories, recipes, essays and poems, Peterson lovingly honors healing and wholeness through the seasonal ceremonies of the everyday."—Ms. Magazine

 

"Perennial Ceremony is a casual conversation about environmental ecology, occasionally spiritual, always practical. It is a beautiful, slim volume well produced by the University of Minnesota Press."—Chronicle Journal

 

"Delicately weaving together poetry, prose, and recipes for dishes like Wild Rice, Roast, and Hominy for a Crowd and Zucchini Brownies, Peterson offers an easily devoured glimpse into mitakuye owasin—the Dakota way of living and being in deep relationship with our natural relatives: land, plants, and water."—Civil Eats

 

"In tender, deliberate prose, Peterson shares her experience of blending her Christian faith with her Dakota background. Her stories, recipes, and advice provide inspiration for gardeners, cooks, writers, and anyone seeking a closer connection to nature."—Electric Literature

 


Travel through a garden’s seasons toward healing, reclamation, and wholeness—for us, and for our beloved relative, the Earth

 

In this rich collection of prose, poetry, and recipes, Teresa Peterson shares how she found refuge from the struggle to reconcile her Christianity and Dakota spirituality, discovering solace and ceremony in communing with the earth. Observing and embracing the cycles of her garden, she awakens to the constant affirmation that healing and wellness can be attained through a deep relationship with land, plants, and waters. Dakota people call this way of seeing and being in the world mitakuye owasin: all my relations. Perennial Ceremony brings us into this relationship, as Peterson guides us through the Dakota seasons to impart lessons from her life as a gardener, gatherer, and lover of the land.

 

We see the awakening of Wetu (spring), a transitional time when nature comes alive and sweet sap flows from maples, and the imperfect splendor of Bdoketu (summer), when rain becomes a needed and nourishing gift. We share in the harvesting wisdom of Ptaŋyetu (fall), a time to savor daylight and reap the garden’s abundance, and the restorative solitude of Waniyetu (winter), when snow blankets the landscape and sharpens every sound. Through it all, Peterson walks with us along the path that both divides and joins Christian doctrine, everyday spiritual experience, and the healing powers of Indigenous wisdom and spirituality.

 

In this intimate seasonal cycle, we learn how the garden becomes a healing balm. Peterson teaches us how ceremony may be found there: how in the vegetables and flowers, the woods, the hillsides, the river valley—even in the feeding of friends and family—we can reclaim and honor our relationship with Mother Earth. She encourages us to bring perennial ceremony into our own lives, inviting us on a journey that brings us full circle to makoce kiŋ mitakuye: the land is my relative.

Teresa Peterson, Utuhu Cistiŋna Wiŋ, is Sisseton Wahpeton Dakota and citizen of the Upper Sioux Community. She is author, with her uncle Walter LaBatte Jr., of Voices from Pejuhutazizi: Dakota Stories and Storytellers. She also wrote the children’s book Grasshopper Girl and is a contributor to Voices Rising: Native Women Writers.

Contents

Introduction: Gardening Is Ceremony

Wetu Spring: The Time of Blood

Bdoketu Summer: The Time of the Potato

Ptaŋyetu Fall: The Time of the Otter

Waniyetu Winter: The Time When the Snow Lives

Lessons and Gifts to Consider and Cultivate

Further Reading and Resources

Acknowledgments