Santa Fe New Mexican

Miss Navajo Nation drops fry bread contest

- By Felicia Fonseca

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz.— The Miss Navajo Nation pageant is parting ways with fry bread, the fluffy, golden brown delicacy that’s become a symbol of Native American culture but is rooted in oppression.

Women vying for the crown this week in Window Rock will prepare traditiona­l Navajo foods instead, like blue corn mush or a cake made at puberty ceremonies. Outgoing Miss Navajo Ronda Joe said the tribe’s new ambassador must know the history of those foods and speak about them in Navajo.

“We need to educate our people to utilize plants as food that are tied to our land, culture and beliefs,” she wrote in an email.

The change aligns with a movement in Indian Country to refocus on traditiona­l foods and reinforce native languages.

Fry bread was born out of government rations given to Navajos on a forced relocation to Eastern New Mexico in the 1860s. Traditiona­l Navajo breads or cakes would be made of corn and cooked on hot stones or in the ground, not in a cast-iron pan filled with oil.

Fry bread can be found across the Southwest in Indian tacos, slathered in honey or powdered sugar, or broken off in pieces and used as a spoon for stews. The ingredient­s vary and everyone claims “mom” makes it best.

Despite being removed from the tribal pageant, fry bread offers lessons in survival, being a contributo­r and creating something out of nothing, said Jocelyn Billy-Upshaw, Miss Navajo 2006-07. She remembers her mom saying she’d never get married unless she knew how to make bread.

“For a married household, where there’s a man and a wife and the man is traditiona­l, yeah, you have hot bread for breakfast, lunch and dinner,” she said. “In my time of growing up, you were honored for that.”

Fry bread was judged for its color, texture and taste, but Miss Navajo contestant­s also were critiqued on their ability to build a fire and keep the grease warm. Navajo grandmothe­rs would comment on the technique, down to the strike of the match, said Jennifer Wheeler, Miss Navajo 1990-91.

“If your bread comes out sticky and doughy, or it comes out the opposite and you burnt it, then you’re probably not a good fit for their grandson,” she said.

 ?? ADRON GARDNER/GALLUP INDEPENDEN­T VIA AP ?? Miss Navajo Pageant hopeful Lailauni Moore prepares fry bread after the sheep butchering competitio­n at the Navajo Nation Fairground­s in Window Rock, Ariz.
ADRON GARDNER/GALLUP INDEPENDEN­T VIA AP Miss Navajo Pageant hopeful Lailauni Moore prepares fry bread after the sheep butchering competitio­n at the Navajo Nation Fairground­s in Window Rock, Ariz.

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