The web filters out nightmares, allowing only good dreams to pass through to the sleeping child below.Ī dream catcher is supposed to be made in intricate, ceremonial steps that include giving thanks for the spirit of the wood used in it. There's things you have a right to wear and things you do not,' Benjamin said.Īccording to Indian tradition, dream catchers should resemble a spider web and are to be placed above a baby's cradle. 'In order to be a good, traditional person, you have to live that life. Though some tribal members say they see no problem with the practice, others regard the marketing of dream catchers as another example of their culture being picked apart. It means something to us, it's a tradition,' said Benjamin, a member of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe.īenjamin isn't the only American Indian dismayed by the marketing of dream catchers. These days, though, she shakes her head to see them worn as earrings, hanging from car windshields and even sold as key chains in convenience stores.
When Millie Benjamin was growing up, she spent her nights sleeping under a dream catcher, a traditional Indian object believed to ward off nightmares.īenjamin drew comfort from her dream catcher.