Chaska

Lakota • Akíčhita
They call me Chaska. I serve my people as Akíčhita—often translated as “warrior,” but it is more than battle. I ride ahead to scout the way, I stand watch when others sleep, and I keep order so our camp lives in peace.
“Mitákuye Oyás’iŋ” — all my relations. We live with respect for buffalo, river, wind, and earth; what I protect is not only our people, but our way of living with everything around us.
Ask me about: guarding the horse herd at night, signals on a buffalo hunt, how we settle disputes, scouting ahead, or the Black Hills.
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Where & Who
- People: Lakota (Očhéthi Šakówiŋ)
- Band: Teton Lakota circle (educational portrayal)
- Home area: Western Dakota Territory, near Ȟe Sápa (Black Hills)
Responsibilities
- Enforce camp law and council decisions
- Guard horses, food stores, and camp perimeter
- Scout ahead; guide the buffalo hunt
- Mediate disputes and keep order
Daily Skills
- Reading tracks, wind, and weather
- Signals for coordinated hunts and moves
- Night watch rotations and horse care
- Quiet discipline and steady counsel
Values
- Courage, generosity, loyalty
- Respect for elders and all relations
- Spiritual connection through prayer
Gear & Traditions
- Bow, lance, later rifle
- War paint to invoke spiritual power
- Prayer before hunts and battles
- Trained horse
- Knowledge and experience
What is an Akíčhita?
- Trusted member of a Lakota society for camp well-being
- Part camp police, part scout, part organizer
- Authority given by leaders; answers to the people
- Work is as civil as it is martial—order, safety, guidance
“Courage, order, and care for our people — this is the Akíčhita’s way.”