The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

240


C


entral to the culture of the
Yurok and other Native
Americans are traditional
ceremonies that feature sacred
dances. Among the most important
is the Deerskin Dance (deer were a
crucial food source), which is still
performed during World Renewal
rituals to safeguard the earth. In
Yurok mythology, the dance is also
specifically associated with the
building of a salmon dam. The
account of the dance’s origins was

told to the American anthropologist
Alfred L. Kroeber in the early 1900s
by Jim, a Yurok from Pekwan in
present-day Humboldt County.
In the time of the Woge—the
ancient spirit beings that the Yurok
considered to be the First People—

BEGIN A DEERSKIN


DANCE FOR IT BECAUSE


EVERYTHING WILL COME


OUT WELL FROM THAT


THE WOGE SETTLE A DISPUTE


IN BRIEF


THEME
Bringing balance to
the world

SOURCES
Oral tradition transcribed in
World Renewal: A Cult System
of Native Northwest California,
A. L. Kroeber and E. W. Gifford,
1949.

SETTING
Northwestern California in the
time of the Woge.

KEY FIGURES
Woge The first people of
the Yurok tribe; ancient
beings who lived along
the Klamath River.

Kepel Ancestors of the
Yurok tribe, living upstream
from the Turip villagers.

Turip A tribe living
downstream from the Kepel.

A Hupa man stands spear in hand
ready to fish in a photo from 1923 by
Edward S. Curtis. At this time, salmon
were important for survival in the areas
where tribes had rights to fish.

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THE AMERICAS 241
See also: Cherokee creation 236–37 ■ Spider Woman 238–39 ■ Raven and the whale 242–43 ■ The first canoe 258–59

large salmon no longer swam up
the Klamath River to where the
Kepel lived. They could only catch
small fish, and became upset since
the salmon were their staple food.
The cause was a dam erected near
the mouth of the river by the Turip;
the mature fish coming from the
ocean to spawn upriver could not
swim beyond that point.
One Kepel man decided they
should remove the dam and take it
to their village. With help from his
people, he pulled it from the river
and carried it off. The people of
Turip were angered by the loss of
their dam. They wanted it back
and set off toward Kepel to try
to regain it.

A peaceful settlement
As the Turip people approached,
their chief saw the many Kepel
villagers at work installing their
new dam. Fearing that his people
might be killed if they attacked,
he decided not to fight the Kepel
people. As they stood on the
hillside overlooking the dam, he
told his men, “We had better give

it up and let them keep it. We will
take care of this dam also; we shall
visit now and then to see it.”
The Kepel man who had taken
the Turip dam then announced that
it would stay at his village and
declared that a Deerskin Dance
should begin “because everything
will come out well from that.” He
called on the people to dance and
to rebuild the dam every year,
warning that “much sickness”
would result if they failed to do so.

Watchful spirits
Then the Woge, who approved of
the dam, began to leave the Kepel
villagers to find places from which
they could watch over all of the
people. At each place they vowed to
create a Deerskin Dance to bring
good fortune, and the people at
each of these new sites were
happy; upriver at Olar, for instance,
they said: “When it is bad in the
world, it will become well again
when they dance here.”
Some Woge stayed close to
Kepel, going up into 10 small hills
overlooking the village to watch out

Very well, keep it well.
Hold to it as long as they
make the Deerskin Dance,
because it will be good
for the people.
World Renewal

for the smoke from villagers’ fires
indicating that, as promised, they
had come together at Klamath
River to remake the salmon dam.
Every year, the Yurok reenacted
the dam-building in fall, at the peak
of the salmon season. This ritual
culminated in the Deerskin Dance,
performed by men bearing poles
hung with deerskins, followed by a
Jump Dance. The event, which
Kroeber saw and described,
continued into the 20th century. ■

Spiritual leaders


Men and women who take on
the role of spiritual leader in
Native American communities
still command great respect.
Although many tribes no longer
use the word “shaman,” such
leaders are said to receive power
and knowledge, primarily
through dreams, from ancestral
prehuman spirits who departed
or transformed themselves into
animals, trees, rocks, and plants
when humans arrived. Many of
today’s leaders are healers,
using their spiritual powers and

natural medicine to treat sickness.
In the past, they were often called
upon to predict the future, or to
bring good fishing or hunting.
Traditionally, spiritual leaders
of northwestern California play
a key role in the annual World
Renewal ceremonies. To prepare,
the leaders go to nearby hills to
fast and pray, and call upon the
healing powers of their ancestral
spirits. During the ritual, wearing
masks and regalia, they perform
healing rites and take part in the
sacred dances.

Traditionally, Yurok and Hupa
shamans were women who received
their calling in dreams. This Hupa
shaman was photographed in 1923.

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