The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

THE AMERICAS 261


Tehuelche youths dance, wearing
feather "horns," to celebrate a girl's
reaching puberty. Depicted by English
explorer George Chaworth Musters in
At Home with the Patagonians (1871).

See also: Cherokee creation 236–37 ■ The legend of the five suns 248–55 ■ Viracocha the creator 256–57 ■
The first canoe 258–59

birds and insects that flew through
the air, and filled the ocean with
fish. The sun sent light and heat,
and the clouds brought rain.

Sun and moon
Seeing how dark the island was
after the sun had gone to sleep,
Kóoch put the moon into the sky.
At first, the sun and moon were
unaware of each other, but the
clouds soon spread the word
and carried messages between
them. They longed to meet, but
when they did, they wrestled for
three days, arguing over who
should travel the sky by day.
As they fought, they became
lovers, and the sun scratched
the moon’s face.
Night was displeased by the
light and incensed by their
lovemaking, so he brought forth
monstrous giants. One was
Nóshtex, who raped a cloud-
woman and fathered Elal, whom
Kóoch declared would be greater
than his father. Nóshtex then killed
the cloud-woman, whose blood can
still be seen at sunrise, believing

that she had brought a curse
on him. Nóshtex wanted to eat
the baby he had ripped from her
womb, but Elal was saved by his
grandmother, the field mouse,
who arranged for him to be taken
away from the island to safety
on the mainland.

Creating the Tehuelche
Elal inherited the supernatural
powers of Kóoch, and made a new
home in Patagonia, where he took
all the animal-people from the
island where he had been living.
They were pursued by the giants,
but Elal defeated them all,
including his father Nóshtex, just
as Kóoch had foretold. Elal created
the Tehuelche people from sea
lions, gave them the gift of fire,
and taught them how to survive.
Then he left them, to live in the
sky forever. ■

It was when the
moon wrestled the sun,
and when this world
was made.
Folk Literature of the
Tehuelche Indians

Elal and Karro


The evening star, Karro,
was the daughter of the sun
and moon. She was also
sometimes portrayed as a
siren. The mythical hero Elal
fell in love with her and flew
up to the stars on the back of
a swan to ask Karro to marry
him. After Elal passed many
tests, Karro's parents agreed
to the union and the two were
married. Elal later turned
Karro into a mermaid; she
lived in the sea and created
the tides for her mother, the
moon. Her songs played an
important part in religious
rites. After that, Elal lived in
the stars, waiting for the souls
of the Tehuelche when they
died. They were guided to him
by the good spirit, Wendeuk,
who kept account of people's
deeds, and told Elal all the
things they had done in life.
The dead were transformed
into stars, and they looked
down from the sky on those
they had left behind.

US_260-261_Creation-Kooch.indd 261 01/12/17 4:23 pm

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