Eric Draper via AP Images for Scholastic, Inc.
Mateo’s sisters, Lauren (far left) and Therese (right) are also hoop dancers.
Dancing takes a lot of skill and practice, especially the kind of moves that Mateo does. Mateo is a hoop dancer. He uses his hands and feet to spin as many as six hoops at a time, weaving them together to form shapes like a butterfly, a basket, and his favorite, an eagle.
“When you do that formation, you make it look like you’re flying,” Mateo explains.
Hoop dancing has been performed by Native peoples for centuries, as a form of prayer and storytelling. Sometimes, a hoop dance is performed by people who use traditional health and healing practices.
Modern hoop dancing is believed to have originated in the Native villages of New Mexico, not far from where Mateo lives. He is from the Pueblo of Pojoaque (poh-WAH-kay). He shows off his skills in competitions. But for Mateo, hoop dancing is about much more than winning contests.
“It’s important to keep passing on this tradition,” Mateo says. “If it’s not passed on, it’s forgotten, and you lose part of your culture.”
Dancing takes a lot of skill and practice, especially the kind of moves that Mateo does. Mateo is a hoop dancer. He uses his hands and feet to spin as many as six hoops. He forms shapes like a butterfly, a basket, and his favorite, an eagle.
“When you do that formation, you make it look like you are flying,” Mateo explains.
Native peoples have used hoop dancing for hundreds of years to pray and to tell stories. Sometimes, people who use traditional healing practices also perform a hoop dance.
It is believed that modern hoop dancing started in the Native villages of New Mexico, not far from where Mateo lives. He is from the Pueblo of Pojoaque (poh-WAH-kay). He shows off his skills in competitions. But for Mateo, hoop dancing is about more than winning contests.
“It’s important to keep passing on this tradition,” Mateo says. “If it is not passed on, it is forgotten, and you lose part of your culture.”