Paragraphs for Drawings Turtle With Tree: This picture is trying to portray not only how colourful the world can be but also giving a visual on what the iroquois thought that the world looked like. The tree is a symbol of life often found in other myths such as in Norse mythology with Yggdrasil but I thought it might give more meaning to the words in the myth. The iroquois believed that without the animals, humans and the earth would not be here today so the animals of the world deserve our respect. Also I drew the tree and the turtle alone due to the fact that the Iroquois are polytheistic because not only do they have the gods whom they called the sky people, but they also worship the animals and use animals as a way of communicating their …show more content…
However, there was a tribe called the sky people that lived in peace on a floating land above that of earth and the animals. No one had ever died or was sad or was born on this floating as they lived together in harmony. Nevertheless, a being called sky woman found out she was pregnant with twins and when she told her husband, he flew into a rage. He then proceeded to cast her out of this land through by forcefully pushing her through a gaping hole in the ground into the ocean below. The birds noticed her falling and held onto her clothes and became a winged blanket lowering her down gently on top of a gigantic turtle swimming in this ocean. Smaller turtles began to see this struggle and brought up mouths of plants and mud from the bottom of this ocean to make a living environment for sky woman on top of the turtle. This was how the earth was created. When she finally reached the land that the animals had made her, she sprinkled stars across the night and put a moon and sun in the sky. Soon after this she gave birth to twin boys named Sapling who was gentle and compassionate and Flint who was “hard and cold” as his namesake. Sapling created rivers that flowed only in one direction and animals that would be helpful to humans. He was all that was good in the world. Flint, on the other hand, was the chaos who tried to undo all that was good. He tried to destroy Saplings work and he created bushes with thorns on the and terrible monsters that Sapling eventually locked away deep underneath the earth. This caused sapling and flint to fight each other but eventually Sapling won and Flint was forced to live under the ground since he could not die but his anger is still felt through volcanoes
Humans have an innate need to understand how the world began and how they fit into the cosmic pattern. Creation myths provide many of these answers and serve to establish a foundation upon which a people can develop their world according to their expectations. For the Seneca, the genesis of their existence started on a utopian world in the sky. The sky world is part of the Seneca's unseen world. An argument could be made for its strong correlation to the concept of heaven found in many religions.
All different cultures have their own creation stories, mostly all containing the elements of a Higher Power of some sort, how the power created the world, and the creation a human man. The Christian belief in the Genesis story has these key elements , as does the Iroquois creation myth, The World on the Turtle's Back. Although these two creation stories share similarities, they also have some stark contrasts. These contrasts include, how the two cultures of the Native American Iroquois tribe and then Christians view life and aspects of good and evil, the way each culture views nature and the impact that has on their culture, and finally the way the Christian God and the Iroquois gods are portrayed to
In Modoc’s and Onondaga’s stories, they both involve people with great power from the sky. Also, they involve animals helping the woman, who get into trouble by being too curious. And that leads to something being created. In “The Earth on Turtle’s Back”, the Earth was created, because the woman couldn’t live in the water. And in “When Grizzlies Walked Upright”, a new species was created, the Indians.
This November, “Mary Jane” may become legalized in California. “California Proposition 64, the California Marijuana Legalization Initiative, will be on the November 8, 2016, ballot in California as an initiated state statute...A "yes" vote supports legalizing recreational marijuana for persons aged 21 years or older under state law and establishing certain sales and cultivation taxes (“California Proposition 64”). Experts are worried about how the passing of this proposition may negatively affect California students. They’re concerned because they’ve heard about “Mary Jane’s” bad reputation. After she was legalized in Colorado in 2013, the number of students using marijuana increased and academic performance declined (Colwell and “The Legalization
Creation stories are tools used to try to explain the unexplainable. For centuries humans have been searching for answers to the what, when, why, and how questions that encompass life. Genesis and the Iroquois Creation Myth are two different stories that seek to describe the creation of Earth and the universe that surrounds it. Genesis describes a Christian perspective, particularly one of the most popular Western explanations to life on Earth. The Iroquois Creation Myth, on the other hand, takes a less traditional approach, while only mildly alluding to religion. The similarities between the two lie in the timeless battle of good versus evil.
All humans are interested in their origins and trying to account for their existence through creation stories. Native Americans tribes are no different from the rest of humanity. The tribes’ stories explain how people came into existence, how they came to be live on the lands they do and the how people interact with nature and each other. These trends can be seen in the legends of three tribes hailing from New England to the Great Lakes Region.
The difference in writing styles between the Iroquois Creation Myth and Christopher Columbus’ letters is very significant. The Iroquois Creation Myth is much more mystical and entertaining while Columbus’ letters are more formal and simply recounting events. Though the two pieces of literature have their differences, there are still some similarities. The Iroquois Creation Myths focus on nature and animals. Likewise, when Christopher Columbus is writing his letters, he describes the nature around him in great detail.
Eternal inflation is an alternative theory of creation that is a modification of the Big Bang Theory. The earliest universe was expanding matter, and particles that were next to each other would routinely be sent whizzing away to the farthest reaches of their cosmological horizons. It is no longer like that, however, as the inflation stopped. The theory of eternal inflation is that the expansion did not stop all at once. Rather, little bubbles of space randomly stopped inflating, or fell onto trajectories that led to the end of their inflation. And, since the expansion is rapid, the inflating space creates more space than the bubbles that stop inflating lose -- so inflation never ends. The result is an ever-expanding multiverse, which means not only is Earth not the center of the universe but our universe isn’t the center of the universe.
There are many familiar archetypes found in the Creation stories of the Native American Indians. The Iroquois and Navajo Creation Stories from The Norton Anthology American Literature Vol. A, contains several archetypes similar to those of the Judeo-Christian Bible. The story of the Iroquois contains similarities such as a virgin mother, characters of good and evil, different steps to creation, Heaven and Hell. Some concepts follow through in the Navajo story, but it also mentions the importance of marriage, twelve tribes, interbred peoples, floods, and a rainbow.
In the Iroquois creation myth, Sky Woman understood that she was pregnant with twins and was pushed by her husband into the Earth’s waters below the above world. Little Toad was able to bring up mud to spread on Big Turtle’s back, and it grew to become the size of North America where Sky Woman created the Iroquois world. Her children, Sapling and Flint, were important in creating the details of the land such as rivers, fish, plants, and even the seasons. The Sky People, Demi-gods of the Iroquois, were critical to the Iroquois people as it helped to define who they were and what they believed. The Iroquois people were happy and peaceful. There was little to no violence within their tribes just as in their myth of creation that tells of the Sky People living on an island floating above the “earth” where there was no sadness, violence, or negativity. This shows the ways the Iroquois applied their myth to their everyday lives and their religion. The myth also explains how the Sky Women’s evil son, Flint, was beaten by his good brother, Sapling, and was required to live on the Big Turtle’s back. North America was carried upon Big Turtle’s back and according to the the myth, bones in fish, thorns on bushes, and volcanos erupting symbolized Flint’s anger. The myth of Sky Woman and her sons is the explanation of how all nature came to be.
Many Native Americans tell stories of the creation of earth that explain how they came to be before the Europeans entered North America. Creation myths vary among all cultures; however, they all have one thing in common; heaven and earth. One of the most popular creation myths was the Iroquois creation myth. The Iroquois or Haudenosaunee meaning “People of the Longhouse” (Iroquois Indian Museum, n.d.) consists of six Indian nations that include the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora tribes. In the beginning, there was a belief that before the creation of earth, there were two realms, the sky, and the lower world that consisted of water and water creatures. From the sky, a young woman named the Sky Woman was
Immigration of Latinos has long caused cultural conflict, especially when it comes to the illegal immigration of Latinos. Unfortunately, the issue has long been debated and there seems to be no clear cut answer on how to resolve the problem. Many Americans often overlook the struggles that Latinos endure and place stereotypes upon this group of people that are untrue. Furthermore, most Americans are misinformed or uninformed about the other side of this hot issue. The purpose of this essay is to give the reader a better understanding of Latino immigration from a cultural perspective and what these immigrants, both legal and illegal experience when relocating to a new country as well as a brief discussion on the issue of immigration reform.
Comparing The Earth on Turtle's Back, When Grizzlies Walked Upright, And the Navajo Origin Legend
Colonialism is the policy or practice of having full or partial political control over another country, occupying it with settlers, and exploiting it economically. Countries such as Africa, India, Indonesia, and other countries have been a part of colonialism, where they have been taken control by other dominating countries such as Britain, Belgium, or Netherlands. These countries then started to develop under the influence of their colonial leader countries. After becoming decolonized which is the release of colonialism, where a nation establishes and maintains its domination over dependent territories, these countries still suffered from being under the influence of their colonial leaders for so long. Long-term effects of colonialism are government and ethnic conflict. One long-term effect of colonialism is government has not been working in favor for the people. In Africa, the DRC has a democracy that is unsupportive of the people in its country, and India’s laws still do not protect the Dalits. A second long-term effect of colonialism is ethnic conflict increases, because India now has religious separation, and Rwanda in Africa continued to have an ethnic separation.
“The Iroquois Creation Story” tells the ancient myth when only two worlds existed. One, in the lower half, complete darkness filled with monsters and the other, the upper world, filled with mankind. There, in the second world, a women conceived twins. As her labor intensified she fell closer and closer to the lower, darker world. While in distress the twins were born and “entered the dark world by compulsion”. Only a few moments later the women fell to her death. As the twins grew older they possessed different minds. One was the good mind and the other was the bad mind. The good mind used the parent for his initial creations. Around the head, an orb was created to “bestow light to the new world”, now known as the sun. Another orb was placed around the body which was “inferior” to the light, now known as the moon. He also created spots of lights to connect the day and night which are now know as stars. All of these were created to help “regulate” the days, nights, season, years, etc.”. The good mind continued his creations by creating animals, oceans, mountains, insects and mankind.