We are like salmon, swimming back upstream;
Leaping against waterfalls that thwart,
Cut and bruised; but strong; our only dream
Return to source; no thought save source of thought;
And in that fight, our iron age turns to bronze,
And we to heroes, in a war of soul,
As nature seeks the nature it had once;
Though wholly lost, remembering the whole.
We silver salmon, sparkling as the sun
Shines on our fierce and loving enterprise:
To rear our children where the world is one;
The source remembered, nature's greatest prize.
The golden age is ageless in its gleam
And we, like salmon, swimming back upstream.
The stream is a metaphor for life, and the progression of ages a sort of literary vehicle, if not metaphor, then allegory, for our "progress" toward our goal, which is to return to our origin.
Where did you get this? Can you add some of your own thoughts in the comments section?
Captain America is a fictional character that appears in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941), from Marvel Comics' 1940s predecessor, Timely Comics, and was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby...
The God of War: A Novel List Price:$14.00 Sale Price: $11.90 You save: $2.10 (15%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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The year is 1978. Ares Ramirez, age 12, lives with his mother, Laurel, and his younger brother Malcolm in a trailer at the edge of the Salton Sea, an unintentionally man-made body of water in the middle of the Southern California desert...
Packed between the covers of this undersized volume are classic film posters drawn by the likes of Norman Rockwell, Thomas Hart Benton, and many unknown illustrators. Bambi, Gone with the Wind, The Phantom of the Opera, Casablanca, The Thin Man, and King Kong are just a few of the film titles readers will recognize from Hollywood's heyday...
Introducing the ultimate role-playing game system for the superhero genre! Silver Age Sentinels invokes the themes and ideals of the Silver Age of comics placed in a modern context -- using the D20 system that everyone knows! This hardcover rulebook contains everything you need to play the entire range of superhuman power levels in your adventures -- from street vigilantes to spandex-clad heroes to galactic entities! Silver Age Sentinels also includes: the complete world setting of Empire City, new character classes and background, new skills, and exhaustive add-on mechanic for superpowers, dozens of sample character, and a template-driven vehicle and weapon creation system...
The cultural historian H. Stuart Hughes examines the works of Italo Svevo, Alberto Moravia, Carlo Levi, Primo Levi, Natalia Ginzburg, and Giorgio Bassani - six Italian prose writers of Jewish or part-Jewish origin - and shows how these writers combine in various measures their ancestral Jewish heritage with recent experiences of antisemitic persecution.
Silver writes like a good friend; who may just happen to have the ear of someone in Washington who knows something you don't. Silver is a man on a mission and his sincerity comes through loud and clear...
The new Silver Society has had enough interference from the F.F. and Spider-Man, and The Imperator unleashes some strong deterrents in response. While Reed Richards searches the galaxy for answers, our heroes find the situation so dire they have to make a deal with the devil or worse, Doctor Doom!
Traveling back in time from the rumbling thunderstorms of present-day Frog Creek, Pennsylvania, to the booming of Civil War cannonballs near Richmond, Virginia, Jack and Annie set out on their 21st Magic Tree House adventure...
Iron Man and War Machine T-Shirt This is an officially licensed Iron Man and War Machine t-shirt in which these Iron Man and War Machine shirts have been screen printed with a Iron Man and War Machine image. These Iron Man and War Machine tshirts are usually made from heavyweight preshrunk 6oz. cotton tee shirt blanks. Check back often for some of our new Iron Man and War Machine clothing and other Iron Man and War Machine Merchandise at great prices only at - www.StylinOnline.com .
Escott The Age of Chivalry: Off to War! - Giclee Print
The Golden Age Of The Vintage Jukebox
In today's world dominated by MP3 players and other digital media, it is highly unlikely that the vintage jukebox can survive. Yet against all odds, this traditional music machine is still here. If you look around you can find them in bars and cafes, even in peoples homes.
Jukeboxes are semi automated coin-operated music playing devices. The songs played by them are usually self- contained. Traditionally they are designed with rounded tops and the front and sides decked with colored flashing lighting. Their buttons are lettered and numbered such that different combinations stand for a particular song from a particular record. The designs progressed from the1930s austere wood boxes to the 1940s models which had brightly lit color animation and plastic displays like the Rudolf Wurlitzer 850 Peacock jukebox. However the United States government banned the manufacture of metal and plastic jukeboxes once it entered the Second World War in order to increase the amount of metal ad plastic that went into the war effort. This had an important effect on their design. An example is the 1943 Wurlitzer 950 which used wooden coin slides to reduce metal consumption. Instead of plastic, it also had glass lit panels.
After the Second World War however, metal and plastic for their construction was once again back in abundance which prompted a lot of growth in their making. The Bubber jukebox was made during this era and presents perhaps the best design of all time. Since most of them lived on into the 1950s, they have always been synonymous with the fifties pop culture despite the fact that they originated in the 1940s. The jukebox designs after the 40s increasingly became three-dimensional and more hi-tech in appearance. This was a complete shift from the "standard" box fashions like the renaissance, ancient Grecian and gothic architecture themes that had dominated the 40s jukeboxes.
The 1940s jukeboxes are referred to as Golden Age jukeboxes due to the yellow colored Catlin plastic that was used while the 1950s models are the Silver Age due to their chromium-plate material used in design. The explosion of the popularity of drive in restaurants caused a major increase in the use of them as restaurant owners tried to attract as many customers as possible using the jukeboxes.
Although other kinds of music entertainment media have replaced diner jukeboxes today, both old and young people still enjoy and are attracted to their garish styling wherever there is one to be found. The nostalgia for the jukebox music machine may never end even though this mass media device may be slowly disappearing.
About the Author
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(W) Ron Marz (A) Kenneth Rocafort (C) Kenneth Rocafort
The Pilot Season Winner is Back! Carin Taylor is the fastest woman in the world. At least, she'd better be if she wants to save her own life and the lives of her Cyberforce teammates...
The Pilot Season Winner is Back!
Carin Taylor is the fastest woman in the world. At least, she'd better be if she wants to save her own life and the lives of her Cyberforce teammates. When a former Cyberdata scientist -- and test subject -- seeks revenge against the members of Cyberforce, only Velocity can save her friends before the clock literally runs out...
Velocity Spins-off From The Pages Of Image Comics' CYBERFORCE!
Date: November 1995 to January 1996
*** Contains Issue #'s 1-3 ***
COMPLETE 3-ISSUE CYBERFORCE SPIN OFF MINI-SERIES!
The spotlight is on Velocity, Cyberforce's mistress of super-speed!!!
Homage Studios Swimsuit Special #1. Includes art by Jim Lee, Marc Silvestri, Scott Williams, Brian Stelfreeze, Adam Hughes, Jeffery Scott, Joe Chiodo, Trevor Scott, Karl Story, Cully Hamner, Jason Pearson, J...
Flash Terminal Velocity T-Shirt This is an officially licensed Flash t-shirt in which these Flash shirts have been screen printed with the Flash image on front. These Flash tshirts are usually made from heavyweight preshrunk 6oz. cotton tee shirt blanks. Check back often for some of our new Flash clothing and other Flash Merchandise at great prices only at - www.StylinOnline.com .
At last! After years of waiting, the much-anticipated IMAGE COMICS HC is here! The four remaining Image founders return to the characters that made them sensations for a celebration of the ...
In 1992, seven artists shook the comic book industry when they left their top-selling Marvel Comic titles to jointly form a new company named Image Comics...
1. Tim Burton Teams Up with Guillermo del Toro
to make a live action pokemon Movie?
2. Tim Burton Teams Up with Guillermo del Toro makes a live action winnie the pooh movie?
3. Tim Burton Teams Up with Guillermo del Toro makes a live action Goldie locks movie?
4. Tim Burton Teams Up with Wes Craven to make a live action Little red riding hood movie?
5. Tim Burton Teams Up with Guillermo del Toro made a live action street sharks movie?????
6. if Tim Burton Teams Up with Guillermo del Toro made a live action x-men (this time following the comics)?
I will watch every movie, that Tim Burton would do.
Pokemon- Red and Yellow's Love Story
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Let's Find Pokémon! Fire Red Leaf Green List Price:$11.99 Sale Price: $10.19 You save: $1.80 (15%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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All your favorite Pok - mon are hidden in different places--Professor Oak's House, Pewter City Gym, even the skies!! Can you spot them in the crowd? Gotta catch 'em all, but you have to find them first!
Pokemon ahoy! In the fourth volume of the Pokemon Adventures series, Red climbs aboard the seagoing St. Anne. But the ship holds unexpected dangers, including the hardheaded Lt. Surge and his team of electric Pokemon...
Each volume of the best-selling Pokmon comic series features three of the 150 lovable Pokmon in stories that cannot be found in the popular television series. This installation shines a spotlight on Starmie...
In this third entry in the Pokemon Adventures series, Red, Blue, and Green must rescue Professor Oak from Team Rocket in a deserted Saffron City. Then Red tracks down Giovanni, the leader of Team Rocket, in order to do battle...
Team Rocket is out to get Green, and the heroes rush to her defense. But when they find out their new ally has stolen something valuable from Team Rocket, they must teach her why a true Pokemon trainer doesn't steal - even from bad guys...
The trail of his rival, Blue, leads Red to Lavender Town and a graveyard of undead Pokemon. Red must fight Koga, a ninja-like trainer with an arsenal of slimy, ghostly creatures at his command. Will Blue be Red's ally or enemy in their toughest battle yet? Readers will be on the edge of their seats in the fifth volume of the best- selling Pokemon Adventures.
The most popular Pokmon character - Pikachu - was the subject of the first Pokmon comic miniseries. In this story, the human trainer journeys to Pewter City, where a Pokmon is wanted for vandalism. Can our hero catch (as well as make friends with) the electrical Pikachu?
Mew, one of the "New Species" Pokmon, is an innocent-looking catlike character - the super-rare 151st Pokmon. This story introduces the trainer, Pokmon expert Professor Oak, Professor Oak's nephew, and others, who try to capture all the Pokmon to complete the collection - and win a series of duels against other Pokmon trainers.
Baoppu/Pansear is a primate-like, red-and-yellow Fire-type Pok?mon. The proportion of its head and large ears are similar to that of Aipom, although the insides of its ears are orange with small points at the upper portions. The upper half of its head and the whorled scruff atop is red. Baoppu's eyes are oval-shaped, with large pupils, and the lower half of its face is yellow with a small, dot-like nose. Its upper body and its skinny forelimbs are also yellow, and its hands seem to have no fingers, aside from thumbs. Baoppu's lower body is red with small feet, and its wiry tail is tipped with an arrowhead-shaped feature. Imported from Japan. Cute and collectible. Perfect as a gift for all Pokemon fans. Comes with rotating stand. New and sealed inside retail packaging. Type: Action Figures Theme: Cartoons & Comics Gender: Male Age: Child
Desumasu is a shadow-like Pok?mon holding a simply designed stone face which was from its time as a human, one rather similar to that of the one in the forehead of Desukaan. It has two shadowy, tendril-like arms and large, red eyes. Type: Action Figures Theme: Cartoons & Comics Gender: Male Age: Child
Package includes (4) cotton and elastic sweat bands that are blue with a red and white Pokemon ball on them. Measures approximately 2.75" wide x 2" high. This is an officially licensed Pokemon product. (c)2008 Pokemon. (c)1995-2008 Nintendo/Creatures Inc.
I didn't give you people sensual and exciting sex organs to be used for your own amusement. I gave them to you to cover up and pretend that they aren't there.
From now on, if you see any nudity at all you should either cover it up, burn it or poke out your eyes. (This includes your own 'dirty bits'.)
And as always, any art that does not please me should be destroyed so that no one will ever be tempted to do anything filthy. In fact all art should just be destroyed. Except the comic strip Marmaduke, I love that wacky Great Dane.
Thus the Lord Your GOD has spoken, so let it be done.
Nope. Art is in the eye of the beholder and I think all your examples are beautiful. Remember, supposedly you gave us freewill so don't tell us what to do with it.
Batman The Animated Series The Lost Episode Part 2
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Cowboy Ninja Viking Volume 1 List Price:$17.99 Sale Price: $12.23 You save: $5.76 (32%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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"Cowboy Ninja Viking Volume 1 TP".
The Walking Dead, Vol. 10: What We Become List Price:$14.99 Sale Price: $10.19 You save: $4.80 (32%) Eligible for free shipping! Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Out on their own, danger lurking around every corner, our ragged band of survivors tries to live long enough to reach Washington D.C. Continuing the long-running saga, Robert Kirkman continues to take us to places we've never been...
From Frank Cho, the award-winning creator of Liberty Meadows and Zombie King, comes Frank Cho Women: Selected Drawings and Illustrations. This 112-page collection will showcase Cho's past and present illustrations and you will see why he's considered one of the top modern masters of the female form.
The popularity of the internet encyclopedia Wikipedia has attracted attention from small organizations to business enterprises. This book is a guide to installation and configuration of the wiki-clones MediaWiki and TWiki. It provides a tutorial based on collaborative planning for a conference, and includes a CD-ROM with OpenSource Wiki Tools.
At last! After years of waiting, the much-anticipated IMAGE COMICS HC is here! The four remaining Image founders return to the characters that made them sensations for a celebration of the ...
In 1992, seven artists shook the comic book industry when they left their top-selling Marvel Comic titles to jointly form a new company named Image Comics...
The Navajo traditionally live in octagonal houses known as hogans. Hogans are houses of forked poles and brush covered with earth. According to Kehoe, this style of housing is distinctive to the Navajo, even going as far as saying that, "even today, a solidly constructed, log walled Hogan is preferred by many Navajo families." However, the Navajo have another style of housing. Around the 17th century, the Navajo built rectangular stone homes known as pueblitos. These pueblitos are believed to have been adopted by the Navajos from Pueblo culture, and resemble small Pueblo houses.
Subsistence
Until they came into contact with the Spanish and Pueblos, the Navajo were hunters and gatherers. They adopted farming techniques and crops from the Pueblo people, growing mainly corn, beans, and squash. As a result of Spanish influence, they began herding sheep and goats, depending on them for their use in trade and food. (Kehoe, 133) They turned harvested wool into blankets and clothing which could be used for trading or personal use. They also depended on their flocks of sheep for meat. Their lives depended on sheep so much that, to the Navajo, sheep were in a sense currency and a mark of social status.
History
Early history
The Navajo/Din speak dialects of the language family referred to as Athabaskan. These people were once a single ethnic group that probably came from near the Great Slave Lake, in the modern Northwest Territories of Canada, having crossed the Bering land bridge thousands of years previously. In addition to language speakers residing in Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona, Athabaskan speakers are also found living today in Alaska and parts of northern Canada. An aboriginal people known as Dene live in an area centered around Great Slave Lake and have communities in the far north of adjacent provinces. The Apache, living in the American Southwest and other nearby areas, are also Southern Athabaskan speakers and are closely related to the Navajo/Din. Despite the time elapsed, these people reportedly can still understand the language of their long-lost cousins, the Navajo.[citation needed]
Archaeological and historical evidence suggests that the Athabaskan ancestors of the Navajo and Apache entered the Southwest after 1000 AD, with substantial population increases occurring in the 13th century. Navajo oral traditions are said to retain references of this migration.
Navajo oral history also seems to indicate a long relationship with Pueblo people and a willingness to adapt foreign ideas into their own culture. Trade between the long-established Pueblo peoples and the Athabaskans was important to both groups. The Spanish records say by the mid 16th century, the Pueblos exchanged maize and woven cotton goods for bison meat, hides and material for stone tools from Athabaskans who either traveled to them or lived around them. In the 18th century, the Spanish reported that the Navajo had large numbers of livestock and large areas of crops. The Navajo probably adapted many Pueblo ideas into their own very different culture.
The Spanish first use the word Navajo ("Apachu de Nabajo") specifically in the 1620s, referring to the people in the Chama valley region east of the San Juan River and northwest of Santa Fe. By the 1640s, the term Navajo was applied to these same people. The Spanish recorded in 1670s they were living in a region called Dinetah, which was about sixty miles (100 km) west of the Rio Chama valley region. In the 1780s, the Spanish were sending military expeditions against the Navajo in the southwest and west of that area, in the Mount Taylor and Chuska Mountain regions of New Mexico.
In the last 1,000 years, Navajos have a history of expanding their range and refining their self-identity and their significance to other groups. This probably resulted from a cultural combination of endemic warfare (raids) and commerce with the Pueblo, Apache, Ute, Comanche and Spanish peoples, set in the changing natural environment of the Southwest.
Conflict with Europeans
The Spanish started to establish a military force along the Rio Grande in the 17th century to the east of Dinetah (the Navajo homeland). Spanish records indicate that Apachean groups (which might include Navajo) allied themselves with the Pueblos over the next 21 years, successfully pushing the Spaniards out of this area following the Pueblo Revolt of 1680. Raiding and trading were part of traditional Apache and Navajo culture, and these activities increased following the introduction of the horse by the Spaniards, which increased the efficiency and frequency of raiding expeditions. The Spanish established a series of forts that protected new Spanish settlements and also separated the Pueblos from the Apaches. The Spaniards and later Mexicans recorded what are called punitive expeditions among the Navajo that also took livestock and human captives. The Navajo in turn raided settlements far away in a similar manner. This pattern continued, with the Athabaskan groups apparently growing to be more formidable foes through the 1840s until the United States Army arrived in the area.
New Mexico Territory
Manuelito, Navajo chief
Officially, the Navajos first came in contact with forces of the United States of America in 1846, when General Stephen W. Kearny invaded Santa Fe with 1,600 men during the Mexican American War. The Navajo did not recognize the change of government as legitimate. In September, Kearny sent two detachments to raid and subdue the Navajo. Kearny later took 300 men on an expedition to California from Santa Fe. As they traveled past Navajo homelands, his force lost livestock. He ordered another expedition against the Navajo, and this resulted in the first treaty with the United States government in November at Canyon de Chelly.
In the next 10 years, the U.S. established forts in traditional Navajo territory. Military records state this was to protect citizens and Navajo from each other. However, the old Spanish/Mexican-Navajo pattern of raids and expeditions against one another continued. New Mexican (citizen and militia) raids increased rapidly in 186061 earning it the Navajo name Naahondzood, "the fearing time."
In 1861 Brigadier-General James H. Carleton, the new commander of the Federal District of New Mexico, initiated a series of military actions against the Navajo. Colonel Kit Carson was ordered by Carleton to conduct expedition into Navajoland and receive their surrender on July 20, 1863. A few Navajo surrendered. Carson was joined by a large group of New Mexican militia volunteer citizens and these forces moved through Navajo land killing Navajos and destroying any Navajo crops, livestock or dwellings they came across. Facing starvation, Navajos groups started to surrender in what is known as The Long Walk.
Long Walk
Main article: Long Walk of the Navajo
Starting in the spring of 1864, around 9,000 Navajo men, women and children were forced on The Long Walk of over 300 miles (480 km) to Fort Sumner, New Mexico. This was the largest reservation (called Bosque Redondo)[citation needed] attempted by the U.S. government. It was a failure for a combination of reasons. It was designed to supply water, wood, supplies, and livestock for 4,0005,000 people, it had one kind of crop failure after another, other tribes and civilians were able to raid the Navajo, and a small group of Mescalero Apaches had been moved there. In 1868, a treaty was negotiated that allowed the surviving Navajos to return to a reservation that was a portion of their former nation.
Conflict on the Reservation
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The United States military continued to maintain the forts. Some Navajo were employed by the military as ndian Scouts through 1895. A Navajo Tribal Police operated between 1872 and 1875 and was used by the Navajo themselves to stop raiders from their tribe; it was created by Manuelito.
By treaty, the Navajo people were allowed to leave the reservation with permission to trade. Raiding by the Navajo essentially stopped, because they were able to increase the size of their livestock and crops, and not have to risk losing them to others. However, while the initial reservation increased from 3.5 million acres (14,000 km) to the 16 million acres (65,000 km) of today, economic conflicts with the non-Navajo continued. Civilians and companies raided resources that had been assigned to the Navajo. Livestock grazing leases, land for railroads, and mining permits are a few examples of actions taken by agencies of the U.S. government who could and did do such things on a regular basis.
Navajo woman & child
Regional newspapers have many accounts of Navajo and non-Navajo conflicts in this period. These conflicts were often embellished, for political purposes, by regional politicians. In some of these accounts, every Navajo was just about to leave the reservation and pillage the countryside or worse. While it is probably true that some Navajo strayed, it is equally true that some white citizens clearly strayed from the laws of the land themselves. In their reports, the U.S. Military never seemed to be that alarmed about a Navajo uprising, and they clearly did not want the Navajo stirred up by their neighbors.
In 1883, Lt. Parker went up to the San Juan River to separate Navajos and citizens who encroached on Navajo land with 10 enlisted men and two scouts. In the same year, Lt. Lockett, with the aid of 42 enlisted soldiers, was joined by Lt. Holomon at Navajo Springs. Evidently, citizens of the surname(s) Houck and/or Owens had murdered a Navajo chief's son and 100 armed Navajos were consequently looking for them.
In 1887, citizens Palmer, Lockhart, and King fabricate a charge of horse stealing and attack a random home on the reservation. Two Navajo men and all three whites died, but a woman and a child survived. Capt Kerr (with two Navajo scouts) examined the ground and then met with several hundred Navajo at Houcks Tank. Rancher Bennett, whose horse was allegedly stolen, pointed out to Kerr that his horses were stolen by the three whites to catch a horse thief. In the same year, Lt. Scott went to the San Juan River with two scouts and 21 enlisted men. The Navajo believed Lt. Scott was there to drive off the whites who have settled on the reservation and have fenced off the river from the Navajo. Scott tells them to wait, and he finds evidence of many non-Navajo ranches. However, only three are active, and the owners refuse to leave, wanting payment for their improvements. Scott ejected them.
In 1890, a local rancher refuses to pay the Navajo a fine of livestock. The Navajos try to collect it, and whites in southern Colorado and Utah claim that 9,000 of the Navajo people are on a warpath. A small military detachment out of Fort Wingate restores white citizens to order.
In 1913, an Indian agent orders a Navajo and his three wives to come in, and then arrests them for having a plural marriage. A small group of Navajo use force to free the women and retreat to Beautiful Mountain with 30 or 40 sympathizers. They refuse to surrender to the agent, and local law enforcement and military refuse the agent's request for an armed engagement. General Scott arrives, and with the help of Chee Dodge, defuses the situation.
In the 1930s, the United States government took action against the Navajo that was as culturally and economically devastating as the Long Walk. The United States government claimed the Navajos livestock was overgrazing the land. In another experiment, it decided to immediately kill over 80% of their livestock in what is known as the Navajo Livestock Reduction and start a permit system.
There were people who were sympathetic to the plight of the Navajo. In 1937, Mary Cabot Wheelright and Hastiin Klah, an esteemed and influential Navajo singer, or medicine man, founded The Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian as a repository for sound recordings, manuscripts, paintings, and sandpainting tapestries of the Navajo people and a place to sense the beauty, dignity, and profound logic of Navajo religion. When he met Cabot in 1921, Klah had witnessed decades of relentless efforts by the United States government and by missionaries to assimilate the Navajo people into mainstream society. Children were removed from their homes and placed in boarding schools, where they were punished for speaking their language and forced to adopt Christianity. The museum was founded to preserve the religion and traditions of the Navajo people, which Klah was sure would soon be lost forever.
In the 1940s, during World War II, the United States denied the Navajos relief because of the Navajos communal society. Eventually, in December 1947, the Navajos were provided relief in the post war period to relieve the hunger that they had to endure for many years.
Culture
A Navajo boy on horseback, in 2007, in Monument Valley, Arizona
Sheep remain an important aspect in Navajo Tradition and Culture.
The name avajo comes from the late 18th century via the Spanish (Apaches de) Navaj "(Apaches of) Navaj", which was derived from the Tewa navah "fields adjoining a ravine". The Navajo call themselves Din, which means "the people". Nonetheless, most Navajo now acquiesce to being called "Navajo."
Traditionally, like other Apacheans, the Navajo were semi-nomadic from the 16th through the 20th centuries. Their extended kinship groups would have seasonal dwelling areas to accommodate livestock, agriculture and gathering practices. As part of their traditional economy, Navajo groups may have formed trading or raiding parties, traveling relatively long distances.
A Navajo man working as a tourist guide, in 2007, in Monument Valley, Arizona
Historically, the structure of the Navajo society is largely a matrilocal system in which only women were allowed to own livestock and land. Once married, a Navajo man would move into his bride's dwelling and clan since daughters (or, if necessary, other female relatives) were traditionally the ones who received the generational inheritance. Any children are said to belong to the mother's clan and be "born for" the father's clan. The clan system is exogamous, meaning it was, and mostly still is, considered a form of incest to marry or date anyone from any of a person's four grandparents clans.
Navajo hogan
A hogan is the traditional Navajo home. These eight-sided houses are made of wood and covered in mud, with the door always facing east to welcome the sun each morning.
For those who practice the Navajo religion the hogan is considered sacred. The religious song "The Blessingway" describes the first hogan as being built by Coyote with help from beavers to be a house for First Man, First Woman, and Talking God. The Beaver People gave Coyote logs and instructions on how to build the first hogan. Navajos made their hogans in the traditional fashion until the 1900s, when they started to make them in hexagonal and octagonal shapes. Today they are rarely used as actual dwellings, but are maintained primarily for ceremonial purposes.
The Navajo people traditionally hold the four sacred mountains as the boundaries of the homeland they should never leave: Blanca Peak (Tsisnaasjini' Dawn or White Shell Mountain) in Colorado, Mount Taylor (Tsoodzil Blue Bead or Turquoise Mountain) in New Mexico, the San Francisco Peaks (Doko'oosliid Abalone Shell Mountain) in Arizona, and Hesperus Mountain (Dib Nitsaa Big Mountain Sheep) in Colorado.
Arts and crafts
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Silver Work
19th Century Navajo jewelry with the popular concho and dragonfly designs.
Silversmithing is said to have been introduced to the Navajo while they were in captivity at Fort Sumner in eastern New Mexico in 1864. At that time Atsidi Sani learned silversmithing and began teaching others the craft as well. By 1880 Navajo silversmiths were creating handmade jewelry including bracelets, tobacco flasks, necklaces, bow guards. Later smiths also made earrings, buckles, bolos, hair ornaments and pins. Turquoise has been used with jewelry by the Navajo for hundreds of years, but they did not use turquoise inlay, in silver, until the past century.
Weaving
Navajo weaver with sheep
Though some people say the Navajo learned the art of weaving from the Pueblo people, the origins of Navajo weaving may never be known. The first Spaniards to visit the region wrote about seeing Navajo blankets. By the 18th century the Navajo had begun to import yarn with their favorite color, Bayeta red. Using an upright loom the Navajos made almost exclusively utilitarian blankets. Little patterning and few colors on almost all blankets, except for the much sought after Chief's Blanket, which evolved from the 1st Phase, few wide bands, to the 2nd phase, wide bands with squares on the corners, to the 3rd Phase, which made more and more use of patterns and colors. Around the same time the Navajo people, who had long started traded for commercial wool, often from the uniforms of soldiers, rewove these into intricate multicolored blankets called Germantown.
Navajo art
Some early American settlers moved in and set up trading posts, often buying Navajo Rugs by the pound and selling them back east by the bale. Still these traders encouraged the locals to weave blankets and rugs into distinct styles. They included "Two Gray Hills" (predominantly black and white, with traditional patterns), "Teec Nos Pos" (colorful, with very extensive patterns), "Ganado" (founded by Don Lorenzo Hubbell), red dominated patterns with black and white, "Crystal" (founded by J. B. Moore), oriental and Persian styles (almost always with natural dyes), "Wide Ruins", "Chinlee", banded geometric patterns, "Klagetoh", diamond type patterns, "Red Mesa" and bold diamond patterns. Many of these patterns exhibit a fourfold symmetry, which is thought by Gary Witherspoon to embody traditional ideas about harmony or hzh.
Notable Navajo artists, dancers, and musicians
Ryan Singer, Navajo painter
Orville Tsinnie, silversmith/goldsmith
Atsidi Sani, silversmith
Raven Chacon, composer
Hosteen Klah, weaver
R.C. Gorman, painter
Yazzie Johnson, jeweler
Gerald Nailor, Sr., painter
R. Carlos Nakai, musician
Clara Sherman, weaver
Tommy Singer, silversmith
Jock Soto, ballet dancer
Douglas Spotted Eagle, musician
Emmi Whitehorse, painter
Melanie Yazzie, printmaker
Blackfire, rock band
James and Ernie, comic duo
Reggie Mitchell, martial artist
James Bilagody, Comedian, Song Writer, Recording Artist
Healing and spiritual practices
Navajo man in ceremonial dress with mask and body paint, c. 1904.
Navajo spiritual practice is about restoring health, balance, and harmony to a person's life. One exception to the concept of healing is the Beauty Way ceremony: the Kinaald, or a female puberty ceremony. Others include the Hooghan Blessing Ceremony and the "Baby's First Laugh Ceremony." Otherwise, ceremonies are used to heal illnesses, strengthen weakness, and give vitality to the patient. Ceremonies restore Hozh, or beauty, harmony, balance, and health.
When suffering from illness or injury, Navajos will traditionally seek out a certified, credible Hataii (medicine man) for healing, before turning to Western medicine (e.g., hospitals). The medicine man will use several methods to diagnose the patient's ailments. This may include using special tools such as crystal rocks, and abilities such as hand-trembling and Hata (chanting prayer). The medicine man will then select a specific healing chant for that type of ailment. Short prayers for protection may only take a few hours, and in some cases, the patient is expected to do a follow-up afterwards. This may include the avoidance of sexual relations, personal contact, animals, certain foods, and certain activities; it is not unlike a doctor's advice.
Possible causes of ailments could be the result of violating taboos. Contact with lightning-struck objects, exposure to taboo animals such as snakes, and contact with the dead are some of reasons for healing. Protection ceremonies, especially the Blessing Way Ceremony, are used for Navajos that leave the boundaries of the four sacred mountains, and is used extensively for Navajo warriors or soldiers going to war. Upon re-entry, there is an Enemy Way Ceremony, or Nid', performed on the person, to get rid of the evil things in his/her body, and to restore balance in his/her life. This is also important for Navajo warriors/soldiers returning from battle. Warriors or soldiers often suffer spiritual or psychological damage from participating in warfare, and the Enemy Way Ceremony helps restore harmony to the person, mentally and emotionally.
There are also ceremonies used for curing people from curses. Many people often complain of witches and skin-walkers that do harm to their minds, bodies, and even families. Ailments aren't necessarily physical. It can take any form it wishes. The medicine man is often able to break the curses that witches and skin-walkers put on families. Mild cases do not take very long, but for extreme cases, special ceremonies are needed to drive away the evil spirits. In these cases, the medicine man may find curse objects implanted inside the victim's body. These objects are used to cause the person pain and illness. Examples of such objects include bone fragments, rocks and pebbles, bits of string, snake teeth, owl feathers, and even turquoise jewelry.
There are said to be approximately fifty-eight to sixty sacred ceremonies. Most of them last four days or more; to be most effective, they require that relatives and friends attend and help out. Outsiders are often discouraged from participating in case they become a burden to others or violate a taboo. This could affect the turnout of the ceremony. The ceremony must be done in precisely the correct manner to heal the patient. This includes everyone that is involved.
Medicine men must be able to correctly perform a ceremony from beginning to end. If he does not, the ceremony will not work. Training a Hataii to perform ceremonies is extensive, arduous, and takes many years, and is not unlike priesthood, with the governing body or hierarchy omitted. The apprentice learns everything by watching his teacher, and memorizes the words to all the chants. Many times, a medicine man cannot learn all sixty of the ceremonies, so he will opt to specialize in a select few.
The origin of spiritual healing ceremonies dates back to Navajo mythology. It is said the first Enemy Way ceremony was performed for Changing Woman's twin sons (Monster Slayer and Born-For-the-Water) after slaying the Giants (the Y'ii) and restoring Hozh to the world and people. The patient identifies with Monster Slayer through the chants, prayers, sandpaintings, herbal medicine and dance.
Another Navajo healing, the Night Chant ceremony, is administered as a cure for most types of head ailments, including mental disturbances. The ceremony, conducted over several days, involves purification, evocation of the gods, identification between the patient and the gods, and the transformation of the patient. Each day entails the performance of certain rites and the creation of detailed sand paintings. On the ninth evening a final all-night ceremony occurs, in which the dark male thunderbird god is evoked in a song that starts by describing his home:
In Tsegihi [White House],
In the house made of the dawn,
In the house made of the evening light
(Sandner, p. 88)
The medicine man proceeds by asking the Holy People to be present, then identifying the patient with the power of the god and describing the patient's transformation to renewed health with lines such as "Happily I recover." (Sandner, p. 90). The same dance is repeated throughout the night, about forty eight times. Altogether the Night Chant ceremony takes about ten hours to perform, and ends at dawn.
In the media
In 2000 the documentary The Return of Navajo Boy was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. It was written in response to an earlier film, The Navajo Boy which was somewhat exploitative of the Navajo People involved. The Return of Navajo Boy allowed the Navajo People to be more involved in the depicting of their own people.
See also
Shonto Begay, Din painter
Blackfire
Navajo (disambiguation)
Navajo-Churro sheep
Navajo Code Talker
Navajo language
Navajo-language films
Navajo Nation
Navajo mythology
Navajo pueblitos
Notes
^ "The American Indian and Alaska Native Population: 2000". Census 2000 Brief. 2002-02-01. http://www.census.gov/prod/2002pubs/c2kbr01-15.pdf. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
^ a b Kehoe, 133
^ For example, the Great Canadian Parks website suggests that the Navajo may be descendants the lost Naha tribe, a Slavey tribe from the Nahanni region west of Great Slave Lake. "Nahanni National Park Reserve". Great Canadian Parks. http://canadianparks.com/northwest/nahninp/page2.htm. Retrieved 2007-07-02.
^ Hosteen Klah page 102 and others
^ Nash, Gary B., Julie Roy Jeffrey, John R. Howe, Peter J. Frederick, Allen F. Davis, Allan M. Winkler, Charlene Mires, and Carla Gardina Pestana. The American People, Concise Edition Creating a Nation and a Society, Combined Volume (6th Edition), 847. New York: Longman, 2007.
^ Bernstein, Alison R. American Indians and World War II Toward a New Era in Indian Affairs. New York: University of Oklahoma P, 1999.
Bailey, L. R. (1964). The Long Walk: A History of the Navaho Wars, 18461868.
Bighorse, Tiana. (1990). Bighorse the Warrior. Ed. Noel Bennett, Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
Brown, Dee (1970). Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee. ISBN 0-330-23219-3.
Brugge, David M. (1968). Navajos in the Catholic Church Records of New Mexico 16941875. Window Rock, Arizona: Research Section, The Navajo Tribe.
Clarke, Dwight L. (1961). Stephen Watts Kearny: Soldier of the West. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press a
Downs, James F. (1972). The Navajo. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
Dyke, Walter (1967). Son of Old Man Hat. Lincoln, Nebraska: Bison Books & University of Nebraska Press. LCCN 44-2654.
Forbes, Jack D. (1960). Apache, Navajo and Spaniard. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. LCCN 60-13480.
Gilpin, Laura. (1968). The Enduring Navaho. Austin: University of Texas Press.
Gold, Peter (1994). Navajo & Tibetan Sacred Wisdom: The Circle of the Spirit. Rochester, Vermont: Inner Traditions International. ISBN 0-89281-411-X. .
Hammond, George P. and Rey, Agapito (editors) (1940). Narratives of the Coronado Expedition 15401542. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Henderson, Richard.(1994). eplicating Dog Travois Travel on the Northern Plains. Plains Anthropologist, V39:14559
Iverson, Peter. (2002). Din: A History of the Navahos. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0-8263-2714-1
Kehoe, Alice Beck. North American Indians a comprehensive account. Upper Saddle River, N.J: Prentice-Hall, 2005. Print.
Kelly, Lawrence (1970). Navajo Roundup, Pruett Pub. Co., Colorado.
Kluckholm, Clyde & Leighton, Dorothea (1946). The Navaho. Cambridge: Oxford University Press.
Loewen, James. W. (1999). Lies Across America. Pages 100101; The New Press.
McNitt, Frank. (1972). Navajo Wars. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Newcomb, Franc Johnson (1964). Hosteen Klah: Navajo Medicine Man and Sand Painter. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. LCCCN 64-20759.
Plog, Stephen. Ancient Peoples of the American Southwest. Thames and London, LTD, London, England, 1997. ISBN 0-500-27939-X.
Compiled (1973). Roessel, Ruth (editor). Navajo Stories of the Long Walk Period. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College Press.
Compiled (1974). Roessel, Ruth. ed. Navajo Livestock Reduction: A National Disgrace. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College Press. ISBN 0-912586-18-4.
Terrell, J. U. (1970). The Navajos.
Underhill, Ruth M. (1956). The Navahos. Norman: The University of Oklahoma Press.
Witherspoon, Gary. (1977). Language and Art in the Navajo Universe. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Witte, Daniel. Removing Classrooms from the Battlefield: Liberty, Paternalism, and the Redemptive Promise of Educational Choice, 2008 BYU Law Review 377 The Navajo and Richard Henry Pratt
Zaballos, Nausica. (2009). Le systme de sant navajo. Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN: 978-2-296-07975-5
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Navajo
Middle Ground Project of Northern Colorado University with images of U.S. documents of treaties and reports 18461931
Navajo People information by State of Utah
A Brief Overview of the Navajo People (as of October 18, 2004)
Navajo Silversmiths, by Washington Matthews, 1883 from Project Gutenberg
Navajo Institute for Social Justice
Navajo Jewelry Information
Navajo Artcrafts Website created by students of GreyHills Academy High School in Tuba City AZ.
Navajo weaving
Historic photos of Navajo people, Timothy H. O'Sullivan, photographer
Spanish-Navajo dictionary on line AULEX
Navajo Tourism Website for the Navajo Tourism Department
Non-Profit Navajo Arts & Crafts Enterprise
"Navajo Indians". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_(1913)/Navajo_Indians.
The Long Trail, by Jessa Gamble, Up Here magazine (Yellowknife, NT). Archaeological ties between Dene and Dineh.
archive.org search for archive collections about the navajo
The Return of Navajo Boy, a documentary showing how Navajos have been depicted historically
v d e
Navajo Nation
People and culture
Navajo people Navajo language Navajo music Navajo mythology Din College Supreme Court of the Navajo Nation Navajo Nation Council Chamber Chapter houses Navajo rug Navajo-Churro sheep
History
Navajo Wars Long Walk of the Navajo Navajo Scouts Navajo pueblitos Code talker Dinetah Barboncito Manuelito Narbona
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