| |
But the question was, how to get
out_' So he sent the Mótsni to find a place where they could get out. He
flew up and found an opening, and came back and reported the same to the
chief. So the Village Chief (Kík-mongwi) and the Crier Chief (Chaák-mongwi)
planted a pine (calávi), which grew up very fast, but did not quite reach
the opening. They then planted a reed (bákavi) which also grew up fast and
reached through the opening. On this reed they climbed till, first the
Horn people (Áaltu), who then stood outside and held the protruding part
of the reed or ladder. Many people then followed.
The Mocking-bird (Yáhpa) was sitting outside and distributed the languages
to the People. As they were climbing up one of them dropped one of his
moccasins. Below the Hopi had pretty moccasins, but as this moccasin was
dropped and the man had to make another one, and could not make it as
nicely as the other one had been, the Hopi now have not very nice
moccasins. The people had not yet all come out when the chief stopped them
and closed up the opening, but one of the sorcerers (Pópwaktu) had also
come out.
From here the people now started on different routes, the White Man taking
the most southern route. All the other people took different routes
further north. The 'Hopi brought with them Mû'yingwu, whose body consisted
entirely of corn, his feet being ears of corn, so that he could not move
very fast. The Hopi were to have the horse, but as they tried to ride him
they could not do so, as they did not put any bridle on him; so the
Navaho, wearing a band around their head, tried it and they could ride
him. The two matched together better for that reason because they also
bridled the pony, probably with yucca leaves.
They had not gone very far when the chief's son took sick and died. They
thought that the sorcerer who was with them had killed him, but the latter
said: "Nobody has died, he is not dead; just go and look down into the
opening through which we came. He is down there." So the chief went and
looked down there, and beheld his child walking about in the other world.
So they took the Powáku with them. He said that hereafter no one would be
really dead, but the people who would die would simply go back to the
lower world. After they had traveled for some time, just how long
tradition does not say, the Coyote who had carried the stars in his hand,
and was traveling with the Hopi people, threw the stars into the sky so
that from that time it was somewhat light during the night.
The White People had taken with them the Spider which was very skillful,
so that when they had traveled some distance the Spider rubbed some scales
from her skin, and from these created burros. These the White Men
afterwards used for carrying their burdens. So they got along faster and
reached the place where the sun rises first. When they arrived there a
star arose in the south, which told the other migrating people that some
one had arrived at the sunrise. This was a signal that they had agreed
upon before starting. This star is said to have influence over the
animals, and the old people say that whoever wants to own a horse, cattle,
sheep, etc., should pray to this star, which the Hopi are doing to this
day.
So the people traveled on. All at once one party came upon a bear that had
died there. They were called the Bear (Hónawu) clan. Right after them came
another party, who cut straps from the skin of the bear and were called
Piqósha clan, the name given by the Hopi to this peculiar strap. Another
party followed and found the cadaver covered with spider web, from which
they were called Spider (Kóhk'ang) clan. A fourth party found blue-birds
sitting on the cadaver and they were called the Blue-bird (Chóro) clan. A
fifth party found that maggots had eaten out the eyes, leaving the
cavities bare with a little fat still attached to the bone. From this they
were called Fat Cavity clan (Wíkorzh-ñamu). A sixth migrating party came
upon the scene and found that a mole had dug his way up under the place
where the cadaver had been lying, and hence they were called Mole (Mû'yi)
clan. Here the parties who had thus received their clan names soon
separated, and the Spider clan after this wandered about and stopped at
various places for a long time. The other clans did the same, living
shorter or longer periods at one place, which accounts for the many
smaller and larger ruins with which the country is covered.
Finally the Spider clan arrived at a spring (about four miles north of the
present village sites of Mishóngnovi and Shupaúlavi) called Homìqöpu. Here
they remained for some time, there still being ruins at that place. From
here this clan moved to a place about a mile northeast of Shupaúlavi,
called Chûkúvi. At the foot of the mesa on which this village was situated
was a very large spring. The Squash (Batánga) clan then ruled in this
village, the chief belonging to that clan. The Sand (Tûwá) clan was also
one of the clans being numerous in the village at that time. The
inhabitants of the different villages were often harassed by enemies,
among them the Utes and Apache. It seems that even the inhabitants of the
different villages often made raids on each other. For this reason the
inhabitants of Chûkúvi and those of old Mishóngnovi, which was situated,
however, west of its present location, way down the mesa, moved on the
mesa and built the present village of Mishóngnovi.
In Mishóngnovi the Blue-bird clan was then in charge of the village, the
chief belonging to that clan, but it seems that this clan, shared the
chieftainship with the following clans, which furnished the Kík-mongwi,
the Village Chief, in the order named, for four year, a new chief being
elected every four years: After the Blue-bird clan followed the Bear clan,
then the Bátki clan, and lastly, the Squash clan, The Sand clan, having
lived in the village of Chukúvi, is said to have moved to Oraíbi, east of
which village they had had fields while they were still living at Chukúvi.
At the time when the people lived at Chukúvi, Shúpaúlavi was also
inhabited, but it seems that the people then, too, lived farther down,
probably at the so-called First Ledge, but when Mishóngnovi was built the
people of Shupaúlavi also moved on to the top of the mesa.
Click here to Return to the Native
American Myth and Folklore contents page
|