It was an ancient blessing for a modern warrior when Lawrence Jackson Jr. came home to Clarkdale.
Wrapped in a colorful blanket draped around his shoulders, Jackson stood still as Tribal Elder Vincent Randall anointed him with the yellow pollen from a cattail Saturday, June 19.
It was a ritual Randall said was passed down throughout the tribe for generations. Pollen is a symbol of life, Randall said, and the ritual was a way to cleanse Jackson and other Native Americans who have gone to war.
Randall also spoke of the Bible, and said that while the Scriptures teach to anoint people with oil, pollen is the traditional medium for those who have called the Verde Valley home for centuries.
A prayer and a pair of songs in the language of the Apache completed the ritual, songs that spoke to the blessings brought with each new day. Jackson’s father, Lawrence Jackson Sr., finished the ceremony by offering a prayer in English, thanking God for returning his son.
Jackson, who grew up in Clarkdale as a member of the Yavapai-Apache Nation, got to come home for a brief while after a year serving as a military policeman with the U.S. Army in Iraq, a member of the 545th Military Police Company stationed in Fort Richardson, Alaska.
For Jackson, it was a journey from one desert to another, but this one proved far more welcoming.
But the father’s patience and prayers were rewarded Saturday, with a celebratory reunion in the presence of well-wishers and loved ones.
While Jackson was joined by his family and friends from the tribe at the community center on the reservation in Clarkdale, he was escorted there by his other brotherhood, the veterans of the armed forces who also have made their decision to serve our country a defining factor in their lives and a driving force to welcome their fellow veterans home with as much pomp and circumstance as they can muster.
“We know there are people coming back all the time,” McDowell said. “We just need to know when and we can fire things up again. It’s a privilege for us.”
It’s especially poignant for some of the older members of the Legion who mount up for the welcome, said Bill “Popcorn” Carter, director of the group.
“We have a lot of Vietnam vets,” Popcorn said, himself included. “We didn’t get this kind of welcome when we came back, so we want to make sure that these guys do. It’s what we do.”
As for Jackson, he was impressed by the turnout.
“It’s bigger than I expected,” Jackson said.
After the celebration, Jackson will report back to Alaska to continue to serve.