From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Pastor tells Christmas story through totem pole


From NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG
Date 13 Nov 2000 12:55:20

Nov. 13, 2000 News media contact: Mike DuBose·(615)742-5470·Nashville, Tenn.
10-34-71BP{511}

NOTE:  Photographs are available with this report.

By Mike DuBose*

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UMNS) -- Stories from the Bible have been translated into
dozens of languages from around the world and printed on everything from
quilt squares to microfilm, but a retired United Methodist pastor in Alaska
has brought the Christmas story to life in a 12-foot cedar totem pole.

The Rev. David Fison said the inspiration for the Tsimshian Indian-style
totem came during Advent in 1961, while he was serving as a pastor in
Ketchikan, Alaska, and later as an interim pastor for the Tsimshian in
Metlakatla.

"The thought came to me during Advent that a totem pole must tell the
Christmas story," Fison said.

"When I came to do the pole, I did the research in (the Tsimshian) culture
for it," Fison said. "The images we have of the Christmas story wouldn't fit
into their culture, so I found the nearest equivalents of the things in the
story."

During the next 26 years, Fison's vision evolved as he researched native
culture at the University of Alaska and began translating the Christmas
story into an oil painting of a totem pole using native symbols. A 28-inch,
scale-model wood carving followed.

Carving the final 12-foot pole of yellow cedar took about two years of spare
time, Fison said.

The completed pole stands anchored to the spiral staircase in the center of
the geodesic dome house he and his wife, Aleen, built for themselves in
Anchorage. 
 
Early Christian missionaries to the Pacific Northwest viewed totem poles as
pagan idols and encouraged new converts to abandon their symbolism, Fison
said. "The old way was, 'you have to give up your traditional ways and be
like us.'"

But "totem poles were never idols," Fison said. Indians of the Pacific
Northwest have a rich tradition of oral histories, he said. "In the absence
of a written language, the Indians of the Northwest had preserved their
stories and events carved from cedar logs. They were the nearest thing
people had to books.

"The characters on a totem pole provide an outline so that, after hearing
the story, listeners can read the pole for themselves," Fison said.

The angel Gabriel is portrayed as Raven, emissary of the Great Chief of the
Heavens, the Tsimshian term for God, Fison explained. Raven, sitting atop
the pole, carries the Star of Bethlehem in its beak.

Bear symbolizes the place of Jesus' birth. "They had no domestic animals,"
Fison said. "Jesus is born where the forest animals feed."

Fison said he received the blessing of the late Tsimshian Chief Walter
Wesley after sharing the work with him.

Fison is currently at work on an Easter pole. The resurrection story is
slowly emerging from a 17-foot cedar log in his garage.

"I worked for two months every day, drawing and redrawing," he said. Fison
finished the model for the Easter pole in 1999 and expects the large pole to
take about another year.

"I announced it. So now, I've either got to finish it or leave town," he
said. 

Fison credits "the spiritual side of life" for his inspiration. 

"I've found there are spiritual resources to help you do any worthy thing,"
he said. "I think God's that way. If we have something worthy we want to do,
the resources will be provided.

"I tell young people, 'There's a book only you can write. Nobody else knows
the story.'

"For everything worthwhile, somebody somewhere had a dream and somebody did
it."

# # #

*DuBose is a photojournalist with United Methodist News Service.

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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