Thanks for the correction, Laufey! I truly appreciate the input.
Due to language issues It is only in recent years that I have been able to begin to understand the differentiation betwixt the "mainstream Japanese" and the original Ainu peoples ( and it does not help that the Japanese gov't refused to even acknowledge that they existed for decades ) . Thus the language barrier I encounter with Finnish makes my more recent efforts ... interesting .
Oooohhhh Professora Laufey, you speak Finnish as well as Swedish and British? ooooooooooooooooo
May I pick your brain?
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back to the U.S. Pacific NW :
There are over 500 recognized tribes or bands of Native Americans ( henceforth N.A. ) in the Pacific Northwest.
Native Americans of Puget Sound have been known as
- Puget Salish
- Southern Coast Salish,
- Duwamish,
- Nisqually,
- Skagit,
- Snoqualmie.
They are often lumped together as the Lushootseed People, who are not generally part of the "totem pole" cultures.
This is somewhat similar the the Iroquois Nation in New England , which was a confederacy of individual tribes,
or the "Sioux-an People" tribes that split off and share a common linguistic root .
There is an almost universal belief across the N.A. cultures of a supreme "Great Spirit" ( in Sioux Wakan-Tanka or "Great Mystery" ) responsible for all creation, with a varying hierarchary of "other spirits" , usually including major spirits of the directions, and often the entire planet itself as "Mother Earth" ( in Sioux Maca Unci or Grandmother Earth ) .
The deeper one goes the more complex it becomes.
here are some tidbits of the Lushootseed Peoples .
- The world is full of spirits. Things that seem inanimate, like rocks or weather, are living beings with their own spirits,
just like plants, animals, and people. Like other N.A. people, the Lushootseed beleive these spirits brought major gifts
( such as Raven Bringing Fire to Humans) and taught the skills and knowledge necessary to survive and flourish.
- The number of spirit powers in the world is limitless. there are spirits which help with everyday work.
eg: Clam or Duck help in hunting; others support the making of baskets ; Loon and Grizzly are warrior spirits; Wolf assists undertakers ; Thunder assists orators; Humanlike spirits provide wealth. Healing spirits include Otter, Kingfisher, and a giant horned serpent .
As in other traditions, sacrifices and long persistent effort are required to obtain spirit powers.
If a spirit does not consider an individual worthy , no amount of effort is enough. A person nearly always apprentices
themselves to a knowledgeable Elder in the art who prepares and assists them in all spiritual matters and teaches them
more "mundane stuff" ( ie: "do not eat the yellow snow" )
Individuals seldom discuss his/her spirit power with outsiders, and even insiders will not be granted details.
It is dangerous to speak about one's spirit power, and rude to ask about another person's.
Disrespecting the spirit powers could lead to losing the power, bad luck, illness, and even death. Whenever one uses the power
there is always a cost.
The spirit powers are forces to be reckoned with. Relations with them were governed by strict rules, the Spirits often have their own work and agendas, and they could never be fully understood by two-leggeds (mortal humans); One might as well try to teach physics to a mouse or explain why the economy is tanking to a bunny.
One elder said, spirits "wiggle away from your mind like a snake."
Spirit powers are most evident to the public during the ceremonies held in December and January, when the spirits visit Lushootseed towns and assist in the rituals that bound communities together. This is very similar to the Pueblo, Zuni and Hopi Peoples' Kachina Dances.
In the longhouses, individuals performed the Winter Dance, releasing their spirit power's via specific dance and songs.
Naming was also done during this time, with family names granted to younger generations as a link between the past and the future. The "Power Board" ceremony is done, using carved and painted plaques to cleanse the house and the people present.
One of the most important ceremonies is The "Spirit Canoe" ceremony, bringing "doctors" from several communities to perform a "journey to the Land of the Dead" in order to retrieve the souls of ill people.
Potlatch Ceremonies are performed -
The "Potlatch Ceremony" is one form of a "give-away" in which those people whose prayers were answered show their gratitude
to the spirits involved and to the community by making physical offerings to the spirits and feeding and giving away material goods to others.
In all cases ceremonies are specific to a thing, and have specific form, dances, prayers, and songs ( or "chants" or "spells" if you will, but do not refer to them in this way to any Native person) that are used to call in and invoke the power of a specific Spirit, which have been passed down.
As in western traditions, there are "good" and "evil" practitioners. Thus the aversion to any references of "magic, spells ,etc"
Further, the Pac NW peoples I have been in contact with maintain that any power does not come from the practitioner, but from the Spirits - and it can be withheld or revoked at any time.
FYI - Those who turn to "the dark side" can be quite dangerous, and practitioners are warned not to "go bad" .
Often those who turn "evil" are pursuing revenge or power or wealth for personal gain, and may attract powerful negative
entities. It always turns bad, often atrociously horrible, causing terrible events in the community, and is often difficult to deal with and dispell.
If one shows good intent, and sincerity and becomes trusted, one may learn of some of the events that make horror movies look like toddler's saturday cartoons.
hope this helps
prof marvel