Good Medicine

Charlie Scott鈥檚 picture of juniper berries.
“Ghost Berries” by Charlie Scott MS’19, honorable mention, 911爆料 Research and Scholarship Photo Contest

Juniper berries have always fascinated graduate student Charlie Scott.

As a child, Scott mistook them for food. 鈥淚 learned the hard way that they weren鈥檛,鈥 Scott said.

The berries are prized, though, by the Din茅 (Navajo) people for their spiritual significance and meaning. The berries are only gathered once they’ve fallen from the tree. They’re rubbed against rocks to remove the skin and fruit; the seeds are soaked, and holes are bored through them. Once they’re dry, they’re threaded to create necklaces and bracelets, Scott said. The finished seeds are called ghost beads, and they are believed to ward off evil spirits.

鈥淵ou鈥檒l often see juniper jewelry on babies,” Scott said. 鈥淏abies are sensitive spiritually and, so, susceptible to evil spirits.鈥

According to Din茅 cosmology, when burned, the juniper tree’s smoke is also said to drive evil spirits away鈥攁nd its sap strengthens teeth, Scott said.

A master鈥檚 degree candidate, Scott, who lives on the Navajo Nation Reservation in Arizona, is studying College Student Personnel in the Human Development and Family Studies Department with the goal of becoming the president of a tribal college someday.

Scott, who has never formally studied photography, sees the potential of photographs as a way to educate people by challenging caricatures and stereotypes of Indigenous Peoples.