Native American Religions.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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In the worldview of most of the indigenous peoples of North America, there were also spiritual beings to be avoided.
Native Americans of the Southwest in particular,such as the Navajo and Apache, dreaded contact with ghosts, who were believed to resent the living.
These peoples disposed of the bodies of deceased relativesimmediately and attempted to distance themselves from the spirits of the dead, avoiding their burial sites, never mentioning their names, and even abandoning thedwellings in which they had died.
If a person were responsible for a death—for example, among the Papago of the Southwest, the death of an enemy warrior—it wasnecessary to adopt the dead person, keep his scalp, and appease his spirit continually with gifts and kind words.
A4 Medicine
In a world filled with both helpful and harmful forces, Native Americans tried to locate repositories of spiritual power.
Uncanny phenomena such as geysers, trees struckby lightning, and deposits of rare minerals, as well as dangerous locales such as waterfalls and whirlpools, became sites of pilgrimage where indigenous peoples hopedto collect spiritual power.
They gathered herbs and pollen, oddly shaped stones, and horns, bones, teeth, feathers, and other body parts of animals and placed them inmedicine bundles, collections of objects believed to heal disease and to ward off ghosts, witches, foes, and destructive spirits.
Most Native Americans kept these medicine bundles for personal, household, and community protection.
A5 Ritual
Native Americans engaged in a great variety of rituals.
As a person passed through the stages of the life cycle—obtaining a name after birth, seeking a guardian spiritat puberty, setting off at death for the journey to the afterlife—rituals marked the passages.
One of the basic elements of Native American ritual life was the sweatlodge—a purification ritual that originated in the polar regions—in which water was poured over heated stones to create a hot vapor bath.
The rites, or ceremonial acts,of the sweat lodge were believed to wash away both moral and physical impurities.
Sweat lodges were used for teaching, praying, and singing, often in preparation forother ceremonies.
A6 Prayer
Native Americans used gestures and words to communicate in prayer with the spiritual sources of life.
Prayers were offered for a wide range of needs, including health,agricultural bounty, and success in the hunt.
Prayers could take a variety of forms: songs and dances, as well as such acts as the sprinkling of corn meal, could functionas prayers.
Verbal prayers included expressions of thanksgiving, requests or pleas, and coercive formulas.
There were cultural variations as well.
For example, whereasIroquois prayers emphasized an attitude of thanksgiving toward all things, Navajo prayers were calculated to exorcise evil and to erect a barrier of blessings againstharm.
A7 Offerings
In order to make their prayers effective, Native Americans made offerings to the spirits.
The most common offering was of native tobacco, either smoked in pipes,burned in fires, or deposited ceremonially.
An Ojibwa, for example, having killed a bear, placed tobacco in the animal's nose to appease its spirit.
An Ojibwa might alsotoss tobacco on the rapids as a prayer to ensure safe passage by canoe.
When gathering herbs, indigenous peoples placed tobacco in the earth as an offering ofappreciation.
Such gifts were thought to seal and renew relations with the sources of life.
A8 Ceremonies
The cycle of the year was punctuated with ceremonial observances of prayer and thanksgiving.
Such observances took place at critical points in the agricultural orhunting season—for example, upon the return of the first salmon from the ocean to the rivers; at the times of planting, ripening, and harvest; upon the appearance ofsap in the maple trees; or at the summer and winter solstices.
In some cases, as in the cultures of the Pacific Northwest, a whole season was devoted to ritual.
Spiritswere welcomed into the villages with song and dance, and the people shared their food and wealth with one another in elaborate feasts.
B Mythology
Rituals were meant not only to communicate with spiritual beings but also to pass down tribal traditions.
One of the most common rituals among Native Americans wasthe recounting of myths, which contained a wealth of religious knowledge.
Myths provided communities with a cosmogony, a story of how the world came to have its present form; a worldview, a picture of how the various aspects of the world are related to one another; and an ethos, a code of behavior for human beings.
B1 Creation Myths
Through their oral traditions, Native Americans told how the processes of creation occurred, often through the transforming activities of creative deities, cultural heroes,and tricksters.
These stories were not meant to be authoritative assertions about the origin of the world: A single people often recounted several different stories toexplain the origin of the same phenomenon.
Rather, these stories were means by which Native Americans examined the spiritual and physical conditions of theirexistence—the origins of humanity, the place of human beings in the cosmos, the sources of sustenance, the reasons for death, and social institutions such as marriage.
There were several recurring types of creation myths.
In the widespread story of the earth diver, floods covered the primordial landscape, requiring animals to dive intothe depths to retrieve a piece of earth from which to form the present earth.
Many failed before one finally succeeded.
In emergence stories, common throughout theSouthwest, humans climbed up from the underworld, beset with problems of their own making, in order to find a place on the surface of the earth.
There they receivedtheir languages, foods, and clan identities and ultimately migrated to their traditional homelands.
Various cultural regions had their own characteristic creation myths.
In the Northeast, the Iroquois told of a woman who fell from the sky world.
With the help of birdsand other animals, the present land was formed on the back of a great turtle.
The woman's grandsons—one good, one evil—created the various opposing forces, suchas medicines and poisons, that affect human life.
In the Northwest, the cultural heroes Star Child and Diaper Boy were said to have come into existence when twoyoung women married stars and returned to earth.
The heroes helped establish the rules of tribal life, including marriage customs.
In the Arctic, the Inuit recountedhow a young woman married a seabird.
When her father tried to bring her back home in his kayak, the bird agitated the ocean.
To save himself, the father threw hisdaughter overboard and cut off the joints of her fingers as she attempted to grasp the boat.
From the joints came all the food sources necessary for human life,including seals, walruses, and whales.
B2 Trickster Myths
It was common for creation myths to be intertwined with other mythic themes.
For example, emergence stories often included an earth-diver sequence, and young.
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