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Hopi mythology

The Hopi maintain a complex religious and mythological tradition stretching back over centuries. However, it is difficult to definitively state what all Hopis as a group believe. Like the oral traditions of many other societies, Hopi mythology is not always told consistently and each Hopi mesa, or even each village, may have its own version of a particular story, but "in essence the variants of the Hopi myth bear marked similarity to one another."[1] It is also not clear that the stories told to non-Hopis, such as anthropologists and ethnographers, represent genuine Hopi beliefs or are merely stories told to the curious while keeping safe the more sacred Hopi teachings. As folklorist Harold Courlander states, "there is a Hopi reticence about discussing matters that could be considered ritual secrets or religion-oriented traditions."[2]

Sikyatki bowl from the ruins of Sikyátki, c. 1400–1625 CE. Painting of a feather, perhaps a clan symbol?

In addition, the Hopis have always been willing to assimilate foreign ideas into their cosmology if they are proven effective for such practical necessities as bringing rain.[3] The Hopi had at least some contact with Europeans as early as the 16th century, and some believe that European Christian traditions may have entered Hopi cosmology at some point. Indeed, Spanish missions were built in several Hopi villages starting in 1629 and were in operation until the Pueblo Revolt of 1680. However, after the revolt, it was the Hopi alone of all the Pueblo peoples who kept the Spanish out of their villages permanently, and regular contact with whites did not begin again until nearly two centuries later. The Hopi mesas have therefore been seen as "relatively unacculturated" at least through the early 20th century, and it may be posited that the European influence on the core themes of Hopi mythology was slight.[citation needed]

Major deities edit

 
Tawa, the sun spirit and creator in Hopi mythology.

Most Hopi creation stories center around Tawa, the sun spirit. Tawa is the creator, and it was he who formed the "First World" out of Tokpella, or endless space, as well as its original inhabitants.[4] It is still traditional for Hopi mothers to seek a blessing from the sun for their newborn children.[5] Other accounts have it that Tawa, or Taiowa, first created Sotuknang, whom he called his nephew, and sent him to create the nine universes according to his plan. Sotuknang also created Spider Woman, who served as a messenger for the creator and was an intercessor between the deity and the people. In some versions of the Hopi creation myth, she creates all life, under the direction of Sotuknang.[6] Yet other stories tell that life was created by Hard Being Woman of the West and Hard Being Woman of the East, while the sun merely observed the process.[7][8]

Masauwu (Maasaw, Mausauu), Skeleton Man, was the Spirit of Death, Earth God, door keeper to the Fifth World, and the Keeper of Fire. He was also the Master of the Upper World, or the Fourth World, and was there when the good people escaped the wickedness of the Third World for the promise of the Fourth.[9] Masauwu is described as wearing a hideous mask, but again showing the diversity of myths among the Hopi, Masauwu was alternately described as a handsome, bejewelled man beneath his mask or as a bloody, fearsome creature. He is also assigned certain benevolent attributes.[10] One story has it that it was Masauwu who helped settle the Hopi at Oraibi and gave them stewardship over the land. He also charged them to watch for the coming of the Pahana (see section below), the Lost White Brother.[11] Other important deities include the twin war gods, the kachinas, and the trickster, Coyote.

Maize is vital to Hopi subsistence and religion. "For traditional Hopis, corn is the central bond. Its essence, physically, spiritually, and symbolically, pervades their existence. For the people of the mesas corn is sustenance, ceremonial object, prayer offering, symbol, and sentient being unto itself. Corn is the Mother in the truest sense that people take in the corn and the corn becomes their flesh, as mother milk becomes the flesh of the child."[12]

Four Worlds edit

Barry Pritzker writes: "According to Hopi legend, when time and space began, the sun spirit (Tawa) created the First World, in which insectlike creatures lived unhappily in caves. With the goal of improvement, Tawa sent a spirit called Spider Grandmother to the world below. Spider Grandmother led the first creatures on a long trip to the Second World, in which they took on the appearance of wolves and bears. As these animals were no happier than the previous ones, however, Tawa created a new, Third World, and again sent Spider Grandmother to convey the wolves and bears there. By the time they arrived, they had become people." Spider Grandmother taught them weaving and pottery, and a hummingbird brought them a fire drill.[13]: 16 

Entrance into the Fourth World edit

 
An Ancestral Puebloan petroglyph in Mesa Verde National Park. The boxy spiral shape near the center of the photo likely represents the "sipapu", the place where the Ancestral Puebloans emerged from the earth in their creation story.

Two main versions exist as to the Hopis' emergence into the present Fourth World.

In one version, after evil broke out amongst the people in the Third World, with the help of Spider Grandmother, or bird spirits, a hollow bamboo reed grew at the opening of the Third World into the Fourth World. This opening, sipapu, is traditionally viewed to be the Grand Canyon. According to Barry Pritzker, "the people with good hearts (kindness) made it to the Fourth World."[13]: 16–17 

The other version (mainly told in Oraibi) has it that Tawa destroyed the Third World in a great flood. Before the destruction, Spider Grandmother sealed the more righteous people into hollow reeds which were used as boats. On arrival on a small piece of dry land, the people saw nothing around them but more water, even after planting a large bamboo shoot, climbing to the top, and looking about. Spider Woman then told the people to make boats out of more reeds, and using island "stepping-stones" along the way, the people sailed east until they arrived on the mountainous coasts of the Fourth World.

While it may not be possible to positively ascertain which is the original or "more correct" story, Harold Courlander writes, at least in Oraibi (the oldest of the Hopi villages), little children are often told the story of the sipapu, and the story of an ocean voyage is related to them when they are older.[14] He states that even the name of the Hopi Water Clan (Patkinyamu) literally means "a dwelling-on-water" or "houseboat". However, he notes the sipapu story is centered on Walpi and is more accepted among Hopis generally.[14]

According to Barry Pritzker, "In this Fourth World, the people learned many lessons about the proper way to live. They learned to worship Masauwu, who ensured that the dead return safely to the Underworld and who gave them the four sacred tablets that, in symbolic form, outlined their wanderings and their proper behavior in the Fourth World. Masauwu also told the people to watch for the Pahána, the Lost White Brother."[13]: 17 

Migrations edit

Upon their arrival in the Fourth World, the Hopis divided and went on a series of great migrations throughout the land. Sometimes they would stop and build a town, then abandon it to continue on with the migration. They would leave their symbols behind on the rocks to show that Hopi had been there. Long the divided people wandered in groups of families, eventually forming clans named after an event or sign that a particular group received upon its journey.[15] These clans would travel for some time as a unified community, but almost inevitably a disagreement would occur, the clan would split and each portion would go its separate way. However, as the clans traveled, they would often join together forming large groups, only to have these associations disband, and then be reformed with other clans. These alternate periods of harmonious living followed by wickedness, contention, and separation play an important part of the Hopi mythos. This pattern seemingly began in the First World and continues even into recent history.

In the course of their migration, each Hopi clan was to go to the farthest extremity of the land in every direction. Far in the north was a land of snow and ice which was called the "Back Door", but this was closed to the Hopi. However, the Hopi say that other peoples came through the Back Door into the Fourth World. "Back Door" could refer to the Bering land bridge, which connected Asia with North America. The Hopi were led on their migrations by various signs, or were helped along by Spider Woman. Eventually, the Hopi clans finished their prescribed migrations and were led to their current location in northeastern Arizona.

Most Hopi traditions have it that they were given their land by Masauwu, the Spirit of Death and Master of the Fourth World.[citation needed]

Sacred Hopi tablets edit

Hopi tradition tells of sacred tablets which were imparted to the Hopi by various deities. Like most of Hopi mythology, accounts differ as to when the tablets were given and in precisely what manner.

Perhaps the most important was said to be in the possession of the Fire Clan, and is related to the return of the Pahana. In one version, an elder of the Fire Clan worried that his people would not recognize the Pahana when he returned from the east. He therefore etched various designs including a human figure into a stone, and then broke off the section of the stone which included the figure's head. This section was given to Pahana and he was told to bring it back with him so that the Hopi would not be deceived by a witch or sorcerer.[16] This one is Truth, the stone has an Indian face of black, white and grey with black feathers, and it is not etched but looks more like ink that soaked into the stone.

Kachinas edit

 
Drawings of kachina dolls from an 1894 anthropology book.

One of the Hopi religious societies is the katsina society. According to Barry Pritzker, "Reflecting the close association between the world of the living and that of the dead, spirits play an integral role in the land of the living. They are associated with clouds and with benevolent supernatural entities called katsinam (the plural of katsina), which inhabit the San Francisco Peaks just north of Flagstaff, Arizona." According to Susanne and Jake Page, the katsinam are "the spirits of all things in the universe, of rocks, stars, animals, plants, and ancestors who have lived good lives."[13]

Around 1325 CE Kachina masks and Kachina dancers appear as rock art.[17]

Raymond Friday Locke discusses the Hopi legend of the Pahana writing that "The Hopis...had long anticipated the coming of Pahana and, either by coincidence or because of a common root of the legends, Pahana was due to visit the Hopi in the very same year that Quetzalcoatl was expected to return to the Aztecs. He arrived some twenty-one years later in the person of the Spaniard Pedro de Tovar, one of Coronado's conquistadors, and was the first white man to be seen by the Hopis and very probably the Navajo. Unlike the Aztecs, the Hopis put this Spanish Pahana to a series of tests, and when he failed them they sent him on his way." [18]

The Hopi say that during a great drought, they heard singing and dancing coming from the San Francisco Peaks. Upon investigation, they met the Kachinas who returned with the Hopi to their villages and taught them various forms of agriculture. The Hopi believe that for six months of the year, Kachina spirits live in the Hopi villages. The nine day Niman or Going Home ceremony concludes the Kachina season with an outdoor Kachina Dance[19] where the line of Kachinas bring harvest gifts for the spectators and Kachina dolls for the young girls. Different sets of Kachinas perform year. Most favored is the Hemis group of Kachinas who perform accompanied by a variety of Kachina manas. After the Going Home Dance in late-July or early-August, the Kachinas return to the San Francisco Peaks for six months.[20] The Hopi believe that these dances are vital for the continued harmony and balance of the world. It serves the further and vital purpose of bringing rain to the Hopi's parched homeland.

Pahana edit

The true Pahana (or Bahana) is the Lost White Brother of the Hopi. Most versions have it that the Pahana or Elder Brother left for the east at the time that the Hopi entered the Fourth World and began their migrations. However, the Hopi say that he will return again and at his coming the wicked will be destroyed and a new age of peace, the Fifth World, will be ushered into the world. As mentioned above, it is said he will bring with him a missing section of a sacred Hopi stone in the possession of the Fire Clan, and that he will come wearing red. Traditionally, Hopis are buried facing east in expectation of the Pahana who will come from that direction.[21]

The Hopi realized that the Spanish were not the Pahana based upon the destruction of a Hopi town by the Spanish. Thus when the Spanish arrived at the village of Awatovi, they drew a line of cornmeal as a sign for the Spanish not to enter the village, but this was ignored. While some Hopi wanted to fight the invaders, it was decided to try a peaceful approach in the hope that the Spanish would eventually leave.[22] However, Spanish accounts record a short skirmish at Awatovi before the Hopis capitulated. 

In popular culture edit

The 1982 art film/avant-garde opera Koyaanisqatsi references both the Hopi term Ko.yan.nis.qatsi ("life out of balance"), and three Hopi prophecies[dubious ] —i.e. warnings or eschatology.

  • "If we dig precious things from the land, we will invite disaster."
  • "Near the day of Purification, there will be cobwebs spun back and forth in the sky."
  • "A container of ashes might one day be thrown from the sky, which could burn the land and boil the oceans."

David Lanz and Paul Speer's 1987 new-age album Desert Vision has a track named "Tawtoma."

The novel by Tony Hillerman, The Dark Wind, first published in 1982, discusses Hopi mythology throughout the story, as key characters are Hopi men, and events of the story occur near important shrines or during an important ceremony. The fictional Navajo sergeant Jim Chee works with fictional Hopi Albert "Cowboy" Dashee, who is a deputy for Coconino County, Arizona, and speaks Hopi and English, translating for Chee on occasion, as well as explaining shrines and ceremonies to him.

In the 2001 novel American Gods by Neil Gaiman, Mr. Ibis (an incarnation of the ancient Egyptian god Thoth) discusses the reluctance of scientists to accept evidence of pre-Columbian visitors to the Americas, and refers to the sipapu story as historical fact: "Heaven knows what'll happen if they ever actually find the Hopi emergence tunnels. That'll shake a few things up, you just wait."

In the Jordan Peele film Us, Addy as a little girl in 1986 walks up to and into the Shaman's Vision Quest attraction, the entrance of which is topped by a Native American man with a headdress on and his right hand pointing at potential questers. Underneath him, just above the entrance, light bulbs form the words "FIND YOURSELF" and an arrow slowly flashing on and off. Although difficult to hear, closed captioning makes clear that a recorded narration on the speaker system for the attraction is recounting aspects of the Hopi creation story:

These, the earth and water, he divided into places from which life could spring. The mountains and the valleys and the waters were all where they belonged. Then Sotuknang went to Taiowa and said, "I want you to see what I have done. And I have done well." And Taiowa looked and said, "It is very good. But you are not done with it. Now you must create life of all kinds and set it in motion according to my plan." [A fake owl, hooting, pops out of a fake tree, so a few words are obscured.] ... and went into space and gathered substance to create his helper, the Spider Woman. "Look all about you, Spider Woman," said Sotuknang. "Here now is endless space, but in the world, there is no joyful movement. The world ..." [Then the electricity goes out.]

Decades later, when the adult Addy, with her husband and children, return to the same boardwalk where Shaman's Vision Quest was, it is now called Merlin's Forest.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Christopher Vecsey. The Emergence of the Hopi People, in American Indian Quarterly, vol. 7, no. 3, American Indian Religions, 70 (Summer 1983).
  2. ^ Harold Courlander. The Fourth World of the Hopis: The Epic Story of the Hopi Indians as Preserved in their Legends and Traditions, 201 University of New Mexico Press, 1987
  3. ^ Susan E. James. "Some Aspects of the Aztec Religion in the Hopi Kachina Cult", Journal of the Southwest (2000)
  4. ^ Harold Courlander. The Fourth World of the Hopis: The Epic Story of the Hopi Indians as Preserved in their Legends and Traditions, 17 University of New Mexico Press, 1987
  5. ^ Sekaquaptewa, Helen; Udall, Louise (1969). Me and Mine: The Life Story of Helen Sekaquaptewa. Illustrated by Phillip Sekaquaptewa (1st ed.). Tucson: University of Arizona Press. p. 7. LCCN 68-54714. OL 24767180M. Retrieved 2023-09-06.
  6. ^ Recorded in the 1950s by Oswald White Bear Fredericks and his wife Naomi from the storytelling of older Hopi at the village of Oraibi, reproduced in Creation Stories from around the World 2019-12-20 at the Wayback Machine (2000) 4th ed.
  7. ^ H.R. Voth. The Traditions of the Hopi, 1 (Chicago, 1905)
  8. ^ Harold Courlander explains that this version of the story is an attempt to amalgamate two conflicting Hopi traditions dealing with two female deities, Spider Grandmother and Huruing Wuhti (Hard Being Woman). Spider Grandmother has a central role or myth where the Hopi arrive in the Fourth World via the sipapu, whereas Hard Being Woman is related to Hopi legends that they arrived in the Fourth World by boat. The Fourth World of the Hopi, 205.
  9. ^ Harold Courlander. The Fourth World of the Hopis, 22.
  10. ^ Tyler, Hamilton A. (1964). Pueblo Gods and Myths (1st ed.). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 5–7. ISBN 0806111127. OL 18370109M. Retrieved 2023-09-06.
  11. ^ "The Improvement Era". Salt Lake City, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 1897-1970. February 27, 1936 – via Internet Archive.
  12. ^ Dennis Wall and Virgil Masayesva, "People of the Corn: Teachings in Hopi Traditional Agriculture, Spirituality, and Sustainability", American Indian Quarterly, Summer/Fall 2004, pp. 435–453.
  13. ^ a b c d Pritzker, Barry (2011). The Hopi. New York: Chelsea House. pp. 26–27. ISBN 9781604137989.
  14. ^ a b Harold Courlander. The Fourth World of the Hopis, p.205.
  15. ^ See, e.g. Harold Courlander. The Fourth World of the Hopi, 35.
  16. ^ Harold Courlander, The Fourth World of the Hopi, 31.
  17. ^ Robert Layton (2012). "Rock art, identity and indigeneity". In McDonald, Jo; Veth, Peter (eds.). A Companion to Rock Art. Wiley. p. 448. ISBN 978-1444334241.
  18. ^ Locke, Raymond Friday (1992). The Book of the Navajo (5th ed.). Los Angeles: Mankind Publishing Company. p. 140. ISBN 0876874065. OL 3859748W.
  19. ^ Pecina, Ron and Pecina, Bob. Hopi Kachinas: History, Legends, and Art. pp. 85–98. Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 2013. ISBN 978-0-7643-4429-9
  20. ^ Pecina, Ron and Pecina, Bob. Hopi Kachinas: History, Legends, and Art. Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 2013. ISBN 978-0-7643-4429-9.
  21. ^ Harold Courlander. The Fourth World of the Hopis, 31.
  22. ^ Harold Courlander. The Fourth World of the Hopis, 176.

References edit

  • Courlander, Harold, The Fourth World of the Hopis: The Epic Story of the Hopi Indians as Preserved in Their Legends and Traditions (University of New Mexico Press, 1987).
  • Dozier, Edward, The Pueblo Indians of North America (Case Studies in Anthropology, New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., 1970).
  • Gunn Allen, Paula, The Sacred Hoop (Boston: Beacon Press, 1992).
  • Hultkrantz, Ake, “The Religion of the Goddess in North America,” The Book of the Goddess Past and Present: An Introduction to Her Religion, Carl Olson, editor (New York: Crossroad Publishing Co., 1990).
  • McLeod, Roxie, Dreams and rumors: a history of "Book of the Hopi" Thesis (M.A.) (University of Colorado, 1994). MLA.
  • Pecina, Ron and Pecina, Bob. ‘’Hopi Kachinas: History, Legends, and Art’’. Schiffer Publishing Ltd., 2013. ISBN 978-0-7643-4429-9.
  • Wall, Dennis, and Virgil Masayesva, “People of the Corn: Teachings in Hopi Traditional Agriculture, Spirituality, and Sustainability,” American Indian Quarterly, Summer/Fall 2004, Vol. 28, Issue ¾, pp. 435–453.

hopi, mythology, hopi, maintain, complex, religious, mythological, tradition, stretching, back, over, centuries, however, difficult, definitively, state, what, hopis, group, believe, like, oral, traditions, many, other, societies, always, told, consistently, e. The Hopi maintain a complex religious and mythological tradition stretching back over centuries However it is difficult to definitively state what all Hopis as a group believe Like the oral traditions of many other societies Hopi mythology is not always told consistently and each Hopi mesa or even each village may have its own version of a particular story but in essence the variants of the Hopi myth bear marked similarity to one another 1 It is also not clear that the stories told to non Hopis such as anthropologists and ethnographers represent genuine Hopi beliefs or are merely stories told to the curious while keeping safe the more sacred Hopi teachings As folklorist Harold Courlander states there is a Hopi reticence about discussing matters that could be considered ritual secrets or religion oriented traditions 2 Sikyatki bowl from the ruins of Sikyatki c 1400 1625 CE Painting of a feather perhaps a clan symbol In addition the Hopis have always been willing to assimilate foreign ideas into their cosmology if they are proven effective for such practical necessities as bringing rain 3 The Hopi had at least some contact with Europeans as early as the 16th century and some believe that European Christian traditions may have entered Hopi cosmology at some point Indeed Spanish missions were built in several Hopi villages starting in 1629 and were in operation until the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 However after the revolt it was the Hopi alone of all the Pueblo peoples who kept the Spanish out of their villages permanently and regular contact with whites did not begin again until nearly two centuries later The Hopi mesas have therefore been seen as relatively unacculturated at least through the early 20th century and it may be posited that the European influence on the core themes of Hopi mythology was slight citation needed Contents 1 Major deities 2 Four Worlds 2 1 Entrance into the Fourth World 2 2 Migrations 2 3 Sacred Hopi tablets 3 Kachinas 4 Pahana 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesMajor deities edit nbsp Tawa the sun spirit and creator in Hopi mythology Most Hopi creation stories center around Tawa the sun spirit Tawa is the creator and it was he who formed the First World out of Tokpella or endless space as well as its original inhabitants 4 It is still traditional for Hopi mothers to seek a blessing from the sun for their newborn children 5 Other accounts have it that Tawa or Taiowa first created Sotuknang whom he called his nephew and sent him to create the nine universes according to his plan Sotuknang also created Spider Woman who served as a messenger for the creator and was an intercessor between the deity and the people In some versions of the Hopi creation myth she creates all life under the direction of Sotuknang 6 Yet other stories tell that life was created by Hard Being Woman of the West and Hard Being Woman of the East while the sun merely observed the process 7 8 Masauwu Maasaw Mausauu Skeleton Man was the Spirit of Death Earth God door keeper to the Fifth World and the Keeper of Fire He was also the Master of the Upper World or the Fourth World and was there when the good people escaped the wickedness of the Third World for the promise of the Fourth 9 Masauwu is described as wearing a hideous mask but again showing the diversity of myths among the Hopi Masauwu was alternately described as a handsome bejewelled man beneath his mask or as a bloody fearsome creature He is also assigned certain benevolent attributes 10 One story has it that it was Masauwu who helped settle the Hopi at Oraibi and gave them stewardship over the land He also charged them to watch for the coming of the Pahana see section below the Lost White Brother 11 Other important deities include the twin war gods the kachinas and the trickster Coyote Maize is vital to Hopi subsistence and religion For traditional Hopis corn is the central bond Its essence physically spiritually and symbolically pervades their existence For the people of the mesas corn is sustenance ceremonial object prayer offering symbol and sentient being unto itself Corn is the Mother in the truest sense that people take in the corn and the corn becomes their flesh as mother milk becomes the flesh of the child 12 Four Worlds editBarry Pritzker writes According to Hopi legend when time and space began the sun spirit Tawa created the First World in which insectlike creatures lived unhappily in caves With the goal of improvement Tawa sent a spirit called Spider Grandmother to the world below Spider Grandmother led the first creatures on a long trip to the Second World in which they took on the appearance of wolves and bears As these animals were no happier than the previous ones however Tawa created a new Third World and again sent Spider Grandmother to convey the wolves and bears there By the time they arrived they had become people Spider Grandmother taught them weaving and pottery and a hummingbird brought them a fire drill 13 16 Entrance into the Fourth World edit nbsp An Ancestral Puebloan petroglyph in Mesa Verde National Park The boxy spiral shape near the center of the photo likely represents the sipapu the place where the Ancestral Puebloans emerged from the earth in their creation story Two main versions exist as to the Hopis emergence into the present Fourth World In one version after evil broke out amongst the people in the Third World with the help of Spider Grandmother or bird spirits a hollow bamboo reed grew at the opening of the Third World into the Fourth World This opening sipapu is traditionally viewed to be the Grand Canyon According to Barry Pritzker the people with good hearts kindness made it to the Fourth World 13 16 17 The other version mainly told in Oraibi has it that Tawa destroyed the Third World in a great flood Before the destruction Spider Grandmother sealed the more righteous people into hollow reeds which were used as boats On arrival on a small piece of dry land the people saw nothing around them but more water even after planting a large bamboo shoot climbing to the top and looking about Spider Woman then told the people to make boats out of more reeds and using island stepping stones along the way the people sailed east until they arrived on the mountainous coasts of the Fourth World While it may not be possible to positively ascertain which is the original or more correct story Harold Courlander writes at least in Oraibi the oldest of the Hopi villages little children are often told the story of the sipapu and the story of an ocean voyage is related to them when they are older 14 He states that even the name of the Hopi Water Clan Patkinyamu literally means a dwelling on water or houseboat However he notes the sipapu story is centered on Walpi and is more accepted among Hopis generally 14 According to Barry Pritzker In this Fourth World the people learned many lessons about the proper way to live They learned to worship Masauwu who ensured that the dead return safely to the Underworld and who gave them the four sacred tablets that in symbolic form outlined their wanderings and their proper behavior in the Fourth World Masauwu also told the people to watch for the Pahana the Lost White Brother 13 17 Migrations edit Upon their arrival in the Fourth World the Hopis divided and went on a series of great migrations throughout the land Sometimes they would stop and build a town then abandon it to continue on with the migration They would leave their symbols behind on the rocks to show that Hopi had been there Long the divided people wandered in groups of families eventually forming clans named after an event or sign that a particular group received upon its journey 15 These clans would travel for some time as a unified community but almost inevitably a disagreement would occur the clan would split and each portion would go its separate way However as the clans traveled they would often join together forming large groups only to have these associations disband and then be reformed with other clans These alternate periods of harmonious living followed by wickedness contention and separation play an important part of the Hopi mythos This pattern seemingly began in the First World and continues even into recent history In the course of their migration each Hopi clan was to go to the farthest extremity of the land in every direction Far in the north was a land of snow and ice which was called the Back Door but this was closed to the Hopi However the Hopi say that other peoples came through the Back Door into the Fourth World Back Door could refer to the Bering land bridge which connected Asia with North America The Hopi were led on their migrations by various signs or were helped along by Spider Woman Eventually the Hopi clans finished their prescribed migrations and were led to their current location in northeastern Arizona Most Hopi traditions have it that they were given their land by Masauwu the Spirit of Death and Master of the Fourth World citation needed Sacred Hopi tablets edit This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Hopi mythology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Hopi tradition tells of sacred tablets which were imparted to the Hopi by various deities Like most of Hopi mythology accounts differ as to when the tablets were given and in precisely what manner Perhaps the most important was said to be in the possession of the Fire Clan and is related to the return of the Pahana In one version an elder of the Fire Clan worried that his people would not recognize the Pahana when he returned from the east He therefore etched various designs including a human figure into a stone and then broke off the section of the stone which included the figure s head This section was given to Pahana and he was told to bring it back with him so that the Hopi would not be deceived by a witch or sorcerer 16 This one is Truth the stone has an Indian face of black white and grey with black feathers and it is not etched but looks more like ink that soaked into the stone Kachinas edit nbsp Drawings of kachina dolls from an 1894 anthropology book One of the Hopi religious societies is the katsina society According to Barry Pritzker Reflecting the close association between the world of the living and that of the dead spirits play an integral role in the land of the living They are associated with clouds and with benevolent supernatural entities called katsinam the plural of katsina which inhabit the San Francisco Peaks just north of Flagstaff Arizona According to Susanne and Jake Page the katsinam are the spirits of all things in the universe of rocks stars animals plants and ancestors who have lived good lives 13 Around 1325 CE Kachina masks and Kachina dancers appear as rock art 17 Raymond Friday Locke discusses the Hopi legend of the Pahana writing that The Hopis had long anticipated the coming of Pahana and either by coincidence or because of a common root of the legends Pahana was due to visit the Hopi in the very same year that Quetzalcoatl was expected to return to the Aztecs He arrived some twenty one years later in the person of the Spaniard Pedro de Tovar one of Coronado s conquistadors and was the first white man to be seen by the Hopis and very probably the Navajo Unlike the Aztecs the Hopis put this Spanish Pahana to a series of tests and when he failed them they sent him on his way 18 The Hopi say that during a great drought they heard singing and dancing coming from the San Francisco Peaks Upon investigation they met the Kachinas who returned with the Hopi to their villages and taught them various forms of agriculture The Hopi believe that for six months of the year Kachina spirits live in the Hopi villages The nine day Niman or Going Home ceremony concludes the Kachina season with an outdoor Kachina Dance 19 where the line of Kachinas bring harvest gifts for the spectators and Kachina dolls for the young girls Different sets of Kachinas perform year Most favored is the Hemis group of Kachinas who perform accompanied by a variety of Kachina manas After the Going Home Dance in late July or early August the Kachinas return to the San Francisco Peaks for six months 20 The Hopi believe that these dances are vital for the continued harmony and balance of the world It serves the further and vital purpose of bringing rain to the Hopi s parched homeland Pahana editThis section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The true Pahana or Bahana is the Lost White Brother of the Hopi Most versions have it that the Pahana or Elder Brother left for the east at the time that the Hopi entered the Fourth World and began their migrations However the Hopi say that he will return again and at his coming the wicked will be destroyed and a new age of peace the Fifth World will be ushered into the world As mentioned above it is said he will bring with him a missing section of a sacred Hopi stone in the possession of the Fire Clan and that he will come wearing red Traditionally Hopis are buried facing east in expectation of the Pahana who will come from that direction 21 The Hopi realized that the Spanish were not the Pahana based upon the destruction of a Hopi town by the Spanish Thus when the Spanish arrived at the village of Awatovi they drew a line of cornmeal as a sign for the Spanish not to enter the village but this was ignored While some Hopi wanted to fight the invaders it was decided to try a peaceful approach in the hope that the Spanish would eventually leave 22 However Spanish accounts record a short skirmish at Awatovi before the Hopis capitulated In popular culture editThe 1982 art film avant garde opera Koyaanisqatsi references both the Hopi term Ko yan nis qatsi life out of balance and three Hopi prophecies dubious discuss i e warnings or eschatology If we dig precious things from the land we will invite disaster Near the day of Purification there will be cobwebs spun back and forth in the sky A container of ashes might one day be thrown from the sky which could burn the land and boil the oceans David Lanz and Paul Speer s 1987 new age album Desert Vision has a track named Tawtoma The novel by Tony Hillerman The Dark Wind first published in 1982 discusses Hopi mythology throughout the story as key characters are Hopi men and events of the story occur near important shrines or during an important ceremony The fictional Navajo sergeant Jim Chee works with fictional Hopi Albert Cowboy Dashee who is a deputy for Coconino County Arizona and speaks Hopi and English translating for Chee on occasion as well as explaining shrines and ceremonies to him In the 2001 novel American Gods by Neil Gaiman Mr Ibis an incarnation of the ancient Egyptian god Thoth discusses the reluctance of scientists to accept evidence of pre Columbian visitors to the Americas and refers to the sipapu story as historical fact Heaven knows what ll happen if they ever actually find the Hopi emergence tunnels That ll shake a few things up you just wait In the Jordan Peele film Us Addy as a little girl in 1986 walks up to and into the Shaman s Vision Quest attraction the entrance of which is topped by a Native American man with a headdress on and his right hand pointing at potential questers Underneath him just above the entrance light bulbs form the words FIND YOURSELF and an arrow slowly flashing on and off Although difficult to hear closed captioning makes clear that a recorded narration on the speaker system for the attraction is recounting aspects of the Hopi creation story These the earth and water he divided into places from which life could spring The mountains and the valleys and the waters were all where they belonged Then Sotuknang went to Taiowa and said I want you to see what I have done And I have done well And Taiowa looked and said It is very good But you are not done with it Now you must create life of all kinds and set it in motion according to my plan A fake owl hooting pops out of a fake tree so a few words are obscured and went into space and gathered substance to create his helper the Spider Woman Look all about you Spider Woman said Sotuknang Here now is endless space but in the world there is no joyful movement The world Then the electricity goes out Decades later when the adult Addy with her husband and children return to the same boardwalk where Shaman s Vision Quest was it is now called Merlin s Forest See also editBlue Star KachinaNotes edit Christopher Vecsey The Emergence of the Hopi People in American Indian Quarterly vol 7 no 3 American Indian Religions 70 Summer 1983 Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopis The Epic Story of the Hopi Indians as Preserved in their Legends and Traditions 201 University of New Mexico Press 1987 Susan E James Some Aspects of the Aztec Religion in the Hopi Kachina Cult Journal of the Southwest 2000 Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopis The Epic Story of the Hopi Indians as Preserved in their Legends and Traditions 17 University of New Mexico Press 1987 Sekaquaptewa Helen Udall Louise 1969 Me and Mine The Life Story of Helen Sekaquaptewa Illustrated by Phillip Sekaquaptewa 1st ed Tucson University of Arizona Press p 7 LCCN 68 54714 OL 24767180M Retrieved 2023 09 06 Recorded in the 1950s by Oswald White Bear Fredericks and his wife Naomi from the storytelling of older Hopi at the village of Oraibi reproduced in Creation Stories from around the World Archived 2019 12 20 at the Wayback Machine 2000 4th ed H R Voth The Traditions of the Hopi 1 Chicago 1905 Harold Courlander explains that this version of the story is an attempt to amalgamate two conflicting Hopi traditions dealing with two female deities Spider Grandmother and Huruing Wuhti Hard Being Woman Spider Grandmother has a central role or myth where the Hopi arrive in the Fourth World via the sipapu whereas Hard Being Woman is related to Hopi legends that they arrived in the Fourth World by boat The Fourth World of the Hopi 205 Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopis 22 Tyler Hamilton A 1964 Pueblo Gods and Myths 1st ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press pp 5 7 ISBN 0806111127 OL 18370109M Retrieved 2023 09 06 The Improvement Era Salt Lake City The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 1897 1970 February 27 1936 via Internet Archive Dennis Wall and Virgil Masayesva People of the Corn Teachings in Hopi Traditional Agriculture Spirituality and Sustainability American Indian Quarterly Summer Fall 2004 pp 435 453 a b c d Pritzker Barry 2011 The Hopi New York Chelsea House pp 26 27 ISBN 9781604137989 a b Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopis p 205 See e g Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopi 35 Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopi 31 Robert Layton 2012 Rock art identity and indigeneity In McDonald Jo Veth Peter eds A Companion to Rock Art Wiley p 448 ISBN 978 1444334241 Locke Raymond Friday 1992 The Book of the Navajo 5th ed Los Angeles Mankind Publishing Company p 140 ISBN 0876874065 OL 3859748W Pecina Ron and Pecina Bob Hopi Kachinas History Legends and Art pp 85 98 Schiffer Publishing Ltd 2013 ISBN 978 0 7643 4429 9 Pecina Ron and Pecina Bob Hopi Kachinas History Legends and Art Schiffer Publishing Ltd 2013 ISBN 978 0 7643 4429 9 Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopis 31 Harold Courlander The Fourth World of the Hopis 176 References editCourlander Harold The Fourth World of the Hopis The Epic Story of the Hopi Indians as Preserved in Their Legends and Traditions University of New Mexico Press 1987 Dozier Edward The Pueblo Indians of North America Case Studies in Anthropology New York Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc 1970 Gunn Allen Paula The Sacred Hoop Boston Beacon Press 1992 Hultkrantz Ake The Religion of the Goddess in North America The Book of the Goddess Past and Present An Introduction to Her Religion Carl Olson editor New York Crossroad Publishing Co 1990 McLeod Roxie Dreams and rumors a history of Book of the Hopi Thesis M A University of Colorado 1994 MLA Pecina Ron and Pecina Bob Hopi Kachinas History Legends and Art Schiffer Publishing Ltd 2013 ISBN 978 0 7643 4429 9 Wall Dennis and Virgil Masayesva People of the Corn Teachings in Hopi Traditional Agriculture Spirituality and Sustainability American Indian Quarterly Summer Fall 2004 Vol 28 Issue pp 435 453 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hopi mythology amp oldid 1214476159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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