My Grandfather’s Altar
March 30, 2023
Reviews
“In straightforward and unpretentious prose, the Oglala Lakota healer, historian, and spiritual leader Richard Moves Camp generously shares his essential memoirs and family history. My Grandfather’s Altar is an authentic and indelible biography filled with life lessons and loving tributes to those who taught and defined him, notably his medicine men ancestors. As the author tells us, ‘We’re carrying our ancestors with us.’ My Grandfather’s Altar is an engaging and remarkable gift for the next generations.”
—Devon Mihesuah
Oklahoma Choctaw and Author of Ned Christie; ‘First to Fight’; and Choctaw Crime and Punishment, 1884-1907
“My Grandfather’s Altar provides a return back to the spirituality of Lakota people. In order for healing to occur for the current and future generations of Lakota people, this book is needed for the present time. Older ‘as-told-to’ genres on Lakota cultural and spiritual life are dated. This book provides a contemporary perspective and contributes greatly to the spiritual or religious life of contemporary Lakota and non-Lakota people … Many times, as I read it, I felt it was a very personal conversation and I was being asked to listen … listen … listen; and learn.”
—Delphine Red Shirt
Author of Bead on an Anthill: A Lakota Childhood; George Sword’s Warrior Narratives
“Not since Luther Standing Bear has Lakota spirituality been portrayed with such sincerity. Unlike Black Elk Speaks, which was tarnished by Neihardt’s omissions of the real Nicholas Black Elk, Richard Moves Camp’s My Grandfather’s Altar evokes the everyday relevance of Lakota beliefs and values with true to life detail … Moves Camp shows the reader a Lakota way of doing things, a wouncage, that is as meaningful today as it was during the time of Crazy Horse.”
—David Martínez
Author of Life of the Indigenous Mind: Vine Deloria Jr. and the Birth of the Red Power Movement
“My Grandfather’s Altar: Five Generations of Lakota Holy Men, by Richard Moves Camp, documents the ceremonial life of one of the most traditional thiyospayes in one of the most traditional communities at Pine Ridge Reservation. A direct descendant of the legendary holy man, Horn Chips, Moves Camp’s story is unique, significant, and moving. It is an important contribution to both the living oral tradition of the Lakota people and the scholarly canon. My Grandfather’s Altar is an engrossing read … Editor Simon J. Joseph does an excellent job with the material and continues breaking new and exciting ground in Lakota studies. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in Lakota culture, history, and ceremonial traditions.”
—David C. Posthumus
Author of All My Relatives: Exploring Lakota Ontology, Belief, and Ritual and Lakota: An Indigenous History
“Richard Moves Camp provides a rich, powerful narrative based on his family’s experiences. This book gives us an intimate window into Lakȟóta spirituality and way of life. This is a Lakȟóta story told in a uniquely Lakȟóta way by those who experienced it first-hand. This book is a must read to anyone interested in Lakȟóta past and present.”
—Rani-Henrik Andersson
Author of The Lakota Ghost Dance of 1890
“This is a remarkable, honest, and heart-centered book. In everyday language, Richard Moves Camp narrates the oral traditions of the distinguished Chips family, a history of suffering, spiritual accomplishments, miraculous events, and successful healings … It is an honor to read such a book, a rare treasure, revealing the deep truths of Lakota spirituality.”
—Lee Irwin
Author of The Dream Seekers: Native American Visionary Traditions of the Great Plains
“My Grandfather’s Altar is a moving and richly informative account of Lakota spirituality, as told through the medicine tradition in a single family. This eye-opening memoir is essential reading not just for anyone interested in Native American spiritual traditions, but also for understanding forms of religious consciousness more broadly defined. In more senses than one, the book is a revelation.”
—Philip Jenkins
Author of Dream Catchers: How Mainstream America Discovered Native Spirituality
“A powerful, touching, and fascinating memoir that takes us into a magical, mysterious world known to but a few.”
—Dale C. Allison, Jr.
Princeton Theological Seminary

Wóptuȟ’a’s gravesite marker, Hisle cemetery, South Dakota.