Grandpa Bear~Heart
Spiritual Elder
of the Bear Tribe Medicine Society
Marcellus "Bear Heart" Williams

Grandpa Bearheart passed away on August 4, 2008
He will be sorely missed

Marcellus Williams, 87, is a multi-tribal spiritual leader of the
Muskogee Nation-Creek Tribe. He is the author of  The Wind Is
My Mother, Random House, which is now published in 14
languages.  One of the last traditionally trained "medicine
persons", Bear Heart, who speaks in 13 native languages, is
also an American Baptist Minister and holds an honorary PhD  
in humanities. He served for 7 years as a member of  the
advisory board for the Institute of Public Health- Native
American and Alaskan Natives at Johns Hopkin's School of
Medicine.

Other Honors:
Past Director of Cultural Retention Program for Oklahoma
Indian Affairs Commission for 20 years.

Keynote speaker for Indian Public Health Service and US
Forest Service-Employee Development.

Prayed in the White House with President Harry S.  Truman.

Ancestors: Trail of Tears.. Georgia, Alabama- marched to
Oklahoma. His Great-Grandmother died on that trail.

Bear Heart was born in Okemah, Oklahoma, 1918.

He is a graduate of Oklahoma City College and Bacone College,
an all Indian College.

He was called to be one of the spiritual counselors for the
firemen and their families after the Oklahoma City tragedy.  

He put down prayers with the Fire Departments at Ground Zero
in Nov. 2001.  

Bear Heart served on President Bush's Faith Based Initiative
panel for the US Dept of Health 's WHEN TERROR STRIKES
conference in NYC- 2001.  

He represented Native American medicine people at the World
Shamanistic Conference in Austria 1985.

He was the keynote speaker at the World Shamanism
Conference in Garmish. Germany 2000.


Turning The Page – Bear Heart Williams


Marcellus Bear Heart Williams is not a large man, but his
presence fills a room. His voice does, too— it is deep and
sonorous, especially when he chants or sings. And he sings
often, sometimes in his native Creek, as one would expect of a
medicine man, but sometimes at a wedding he —sings old love
songs in English.

Bear Heart was born in 1918 into the Muskogee Nation Creek
Tribe in Okemah, Oklahoma, and reared on two spiritual paths.
His uncles taught him the traditional medicine ways of his tribe,
and his mother steeped him in the Christian faith. He came to
Rio Rancho 28 years ago when the late Dr. Harold Cohen asked
him to serve as an adjunct consultant to the Memorial
Psychiatric Hospital, and he still lives there with his medicine
helper, Regina Water Spirit.




If he were so inclined, Bear Heart could string a bunch of titles
and credits after his name. He is a Road Man in the Native
American Church and an ordained American Baptist minister.
He has received an honorary doctorate. He is the author of The
Wind is My Mother, which has been published in 14 languages,
and another book, The Bear is My Father, is in the works.

More significant to Bear Heart are the lives he has touched. He
prayed with the firefighters at Ground Zero in New York City in
November 2001, provided spiritual counseling to rescue
workers and their families after the Oklahoma City tragedy and
once met with President Truman.

“I went into the Oval Office and we talked,” Bear Heart says of
his visit with Truman. “I was a Baptist minister and he was a
Baptist. As we talked on many things, I noticed all the papers
on his desk. I realized that when he signs those papers it is not
only for himself but for all the people. I prayed to help him guide
the country and work out solu­tions for the country as a whole.
If we can stand together spiritually, we can do many wonderful
things to solidify that old American spirit in which this nation
was born.”

Since Bear Heart moved to New Mexico, he has worked with
every type of group imaginable. He has led vision quests all
over the state, most recently for an organization called the
Gathering of Circles in Cloudcroft. For several years, the U.S.
Forest Service brought manag­ers from around the country to
New Mexico for 30 days of intensive manage­ment training, and
each yearly session ended with a sweat lodge with Bear Heart.
People from Germany, France, Denmark, Italy, Russia and
Colombia have traveled to New Mexico to sit with him in council.

Here’s his take on leadership: “Tra­ditionally the chief was the
poorest man in the tribe. If he went on a hunt and brought back
a lot of game, he gave it to widows who could not hunt for
themselves. He was there to serve the people and he did it
without resentment, with a sense of duty. When people lined up
to eat, the chief stayed in the back and let others eat first. You
don’t see that today— the leadership is always the first to eat. I’
m not saying we must return to the old way, but it was a way of
life that supported the beliefs and respect of the people.”

Perhaps the quality that makes Bear Heart especially appealing
in this mod­ern world is that he is so inclusive. He doesn’t
judge but tries to understand. He calls people from all ethnic
backgrounds and walks of life his uncles and aunts and
children and grandchildren. They are folks to whom he has no
traditional relation, but they have become family. To Bear Heart
we are all one family, and it’s not just what he says but how he
lives.

“In the old days, during a battle, Indian warriors would stick a
lance into the ground and remain beside it, fighting to the
death,” Bear Heart says. “They were fighting for the dignity of
their peo­ple and they would voice a traditional Indian war cry,
‘It is a good day to die.’

“We look back now at how they fought so that people might
recognize the dignity of the people, how they lived and died.
They have left it in our hands now, not only the Indian people
but all the people together, so we can shake hands and make
our own battle cry, ‘It is a good day to live.’”

L. T. Amsden is a free-lance writer from Ramah. -- Photography
by Steve Larese