Legend of the Cherokee Rose
When gold was found in
Georgia, the government forgot its treaties and drove the Cherokees to Oklahoma. One
fourth of them died on the journey west. But God, looking down from heaven, decided to
commemorate the brave Cherokees and so, as the blood of the braves and the tears of the
maidens dropped to the ground, he turned them into stone in the shape of a Cherokee Rose.
This is why they are so plentiful in Oklahoma, the end of the Trail of Tears."
The State Flower of Georgia is also named "Cherokee Rose."
Legend of The Tlanuhwa and The Uhktena
As told by David Michael Wolfe, Inage. i Ani Yunwiya (Virginia Cherokee)
This story was taught to me by William Webber, Danawa Destoti - a Kalohna (War leader) of
the Ani Wahya (Wolf Clan)
- When the world of the Ani
Yunwiya was new all living things were great in size and strength. Two of the many
creatures that had been created and placed upon Ani Daksi Amayeli by Unethlana the
Apportioner were the Tlanuhwa and the Uhktena.
The Tlanuhwa were very large birds with markings much like the red-tail hawk of today. The
markings or symbols of the great Tlanuhwa could only be worn by the ancient Ani Kituhwah
warriors when they went into war. Some people say the Tlanuhwa were the original parents,
Ani Tawodi, of the great hawks that live today.
The Uhktena are enormous creatures that live in the rivers and lakes of the great
Ouascioto valleys and mountains (the Ohio Valley and Appalachians). The Uhktena come and
go from this world to the underworld. They enter the underworld through caves that are
found under the waters of rivers and lakes and also through certain entrances into the
earth where there are springs.
The Uhktena have the body of a snake with very pretty and colorful circles all around
their torsos. They also have wings like the great buzzard and horns upon their head like
the great deer. Upon their forehead there is a special crystal which people prize because
it has very special power over light and dark. This crystal is also a window into the
future and the past.
The crystal is called an Ulunsuti stone; it is the most powerful thing a person can
possess. The stone is carried in a circular buckskin pouch along with a little red pigment
and must never be kept in the house but in a safe dry place outside the house away from
people.
When one gazes into an Ulunsuti stone, one will see either a white or a red blood-like
streak appear. Only certain priests of the Ani Kuhtahni of the Ani Yunwiya know how to use
these Ulunsuti stones and can invoke certain formulas or prayers which are aides to humans
when used properly. One such protection prayer (Igowesdi) that calls upon a great Uhktena
is:
"Now! Nearby here the Great Red Uhktena now winds his way. Now! Now the glare of the
purple lightening will dazzle the Red Uhktena. Also, this ancient tobacco will be as much
of a thorough-going wizard. Now! The Seven Reversers (priests of the mounds) looking at me
will be dazzled by the Great Red Uhktena. Udohiyuh!"
At a certain place the Ani Yunwiya call Hogahega Uweyu i which lies
alongside the Wanegas (now known as the Tennessee River), there remains one of the ancient
cave homes of the Tlanuhwa. Located high up in the cliffs by the river, it is at this
place that an ancient fight took place between the Tlanuhwa and the Uhktena. Near the
caves of the Tlanuhwa was one of the towns of the Ani Yunwiya.
The people living in the town never had any problems with the Tlanuhwa until one day, the
Tlanuhwa began to swoop down out of the sky, grabbing young children in their talons and
taking them away to their caves by the Hogahega Uweyu i. The people of the town became
very upset and all the mothers started crying and shouting at the men to bring back the
children stolen by the Tlanuhwa.
So the men made a plan; they went very near the Tlanuhwa caves and took vines growing
there from some trees and made ropes to climb down over the cliffs to the caves. The men
waited until they were certain that the Tlanuhwa were out of the caves. Then down the
ropes some of the men went, into the caves of the Tlanuhwa.
All of the children that had been taken from the Ani Yunwiya town
were there in the caves and, were very anxious to get back to their homes. Also in those
caves were many eggs of the Tlanuhwa.
The men had gotten the children out just in time because as they started back up the vine
ropes they heard the great screams of the Tlanuhwa returning to their caves with more
children in their talons. So very quickly the men began throwing the unhatched eggs of the
Tlanuhwa down into the Hogahega Uweyu i far below.
When the eggs splashed into the waters far below the Tlanuhwa caves, the great Uhktena
came up from below the waters and began eating the eggs as fast as the men could throw
them into the water. This made the Tlanuhwa very angry and they dropped the children and
swooped down upon the Uhktena. The men waiting below the caves caught the children as they
fell. Thus began a long fight between the Tlanuhwa and the Uhktena.
The Tlanuhwa destroyed the Uhktena and tore it into four pieces. Afterwards, the pieces of
the Uhktena were thrown all around the country along with the great crystal, the Ulunsuti
stone. Many people are still searching for that Ulunsuti stone in the mountains along the
Hogahega uweyu I.
After that terrible fight the Tlanuhwa were so angry at what the humans had done with
their eggs that they flew far away, up above the sky vault and have never been seen since.
However, one can see the pictures that the ancient Ani Yunwiya made of the Tlanuhwa and
Uhktena, on the walls of the many caves among the Ouascito (Central Fire) Mountains, the
ancient home of the Ani Yunwiya.
It is said that today, far below the cave of the Tlanuhwa on the banks of the Hogahega
Uweyu i, one can still see the rocks that were stained from the blood of the Uhktena and
the Tlanuhwa from the fight they had that day.
Awanisgi (I am done)
A ya Wahya
Mr.Wolfe is an Original Native American Culturalist, Historian and Artist
©Teri Sodd
©Eagles Aerie
Mentor
-Editor : Wareagle
- Original artwork remains the
copyrighted property of
their respective artists.
-
Many thanks to
Teri Sodd
For permission to use your wonderful graphics
-
2000-2008
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