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When Dogs Could Talk
“Myth is such an integral part of the conception of the
West. People think about it in terms of myth. Always have, I believe.
The Kiowa story has it that eight children
were playing in the woods, and there were seven sisters and their
brother. The boy is pretending to be a bear and he's chasing his
sisters, who are pretending to be afraid, and they're running. And a
terrible thing happens in the course of the game. The boy actually
turns into a bear. And when the sisters see this, they are truly
terrified and they run for their lives, the bear after them. They pass
the stump of a tree, and the tree speaks to them and says, "If you will
climb up on me I will save you."
So the little girls
scamper on top of the tree stump. And as they do so, it begins to rise
into the air. The bear comes to kill them but they're beyond its reach.
And it rears up and scores the bark all around with its claws. The
story ends, the girls are borne into the sky and they become the stars
of the Big Dipper. It's a wonderful story because it accounts for the
rock, Devils
Tower, this monolith that rises nearly a thousand feet into the
air, and it also relates man to the stars."
N. Scott Momaday
For a thousand generations, the West belonged only to Indians
-- perhaps more than three million of them. There were people who lived
in houses made from the tallest trees on earth and people who lived in
shelters fashioned from brush; people who lived in tipis and in
towering cliff-top cities. Some started fires to make pastures, or
diverted streams to irrigate their crops. Others did not dare alter the
earth they believed to be their mother, and prayed to the spirits of
the animals they hunted.
"The Indian feels that he is related to the animal world.
That all living things are related. In the Kiowa oral tradition, one of
the ways to indicate time long past, is to say, Well this happened when
dogs could talk."
N. Scott Momaday
Some tribes considered war the highest calling. In others,
women owned the property, and a man joined his wife's family. In still
other tribes, the punishment for an unfaithful wife was to cut off part
of her nose.
"The West of the American continent was as diverse as
almost any place in the history of the world. You had people speaking
seven different language families, each as different from the other as
each one is different from Indo-European. You have people who don't use
in their ordinary conversation "I," "my," "me," everything is "we"... You
had cultures on the Plains where each person discovered, through a
vision quest, his or her own inner voice, and then came back after a
week of isolation, and told the rest of the tribe, "who I am." And
nobody could argue with that because it came from within." Michael Dorris
"You know there is this marvelous stereotype
out there, that before white people came the world here was perfect,
that people lived in a paradise in which they were the most elegant,
the most moral, the most elevated of all humanity. That's not true, we
were human beings... and we did things that all human beings do, and
some of it was elevated and marvelous, and admirable, and some of it
was pretty horrible."
Jo Allyn Archambault
Despite their profound differences, Indian peoples were
linked together. Webs of ancient trading trails stretched in every
direction, and covered every corner of the West, bringing buffalo robes
to people who had never seen a buffalo, corn meal to people who had
never planted corn, and ocean shells to decorate the clothing of people
who lived a thousand miles from the sea.
In the
high country where the present states of New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and
Arizona come together, there once lived a great people, remembered now
as the Anasazi. For centuries, their civilization thrived.
They traded widely with other cultures, dammed streams to
water their crops, laid out broad, straight roads across the desert,
and built lofty towns where thousands lived. The Anasazi flourished and
their numbers grew. Then -- though no one knows for certain why -- they
were forced to abandon it all. Newcomers -- the ancestors of the Ute
and the Navajo -- eventually took over the region.
"This is a world of movement, this is a world of change;
this is a world in which there's drought, and people abandon areas and
settle new areas, cultures flower and cultures decline. This is just as
much a historical world as anything that's happening in Europe."
Richard White
The Anasazi were not the first people to be pushed aside by
others in the West. And they would not be the last.
"People called themselves 'human beings' or 'the people,'
or, basically, 'us,' and everybody else, known and unknown, was "them",
and it made dealing with the constant surprise of encountering people
who spoke different languages, had a different ethnic look, had
different religions, different political systems, a lot easier to deal
with, because "they" were always bizarre. And so when Europeans arrived
on the scene, they were just another category of 'they.'"
Michael Dorris
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