Chumash Values
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by Mati Waiya
Within the Chumash nation, there were northern, southern, and central
peoples, who resided along the coasts, on the islands, in the
mountains and valleys, and by the rivers. In a village, everyone
played a role. This was how they maintained continuity. Culture was
inspired by paying attention to the wisdom of the elders.
The Chumash are known for their advanced money (bead) system and for
their basketry, their cave paintings, and for being a maritime
culture. Every member of the various tribal communities were aware of
their roles. There were hunters, gatherers, medicine people, tomol
(canoe) makers, basket weavers, money makers, and people who observed
the seasons and the stars. They observed their affect upon the land
and the wilderness. The lessons of nature taught them the balance
between mind and nature, and they witnessed the consequences of
disrespecting their environment.
People learned the Three Basic laws first-hand: Limitation, Moderation
and Compensation.
Limitation: Realize our limitations; we are going to live and we will
die; we can only do so much. Once we identify and accept our
limitations, we can better accept who we are as individuals.
Moderation:
Harvest from the lands and oceans just what we need; leave
some for another day and for others. This applies to our work as well,
leave some for tomorrow; don't try to do everything at once.
Compensation:
If you want to do something for your children, for the
land, or for another person, do it because it's inside your heart;
don't expect anything in return. Compensation can come in many forms;
it can be a child, or happiness, or health, or wealth. It often comes
when you need it most, and you least expect it. That is true
compensation.
We can apply these three laws mentally and physically, and we can live
by them.
Time and Seasons
When we become a part of nature, and let nature become a part of us,
we start to understand the time that nature lives by, a natural time.
Salmon live by nature's time; they know when to swim upstream to
spawn; the birds know when to fly south, or north - nature tells them.
The Chumash lived by Nature's time, not man's time. When we pay
attention to the seasons, and the changes, and the helpers and the
keepers from each direction, we gain useful lessons about life; they
help us understand our role in it. Each season held a special place in
relationship with life's cycles.
People are going against the grain and living by the time of man. If
we live by the time of nature, I believe people will be enlightened.
The North is the Winter
It is the color white. This represents the New Sun, and the Winter
Solstice, the shortest day of the year. In winter there is a cold
wind, and the sun begins its new cycle and a new year begins.
The Eagle and the Bear symbolize the winter season. The eagle
represents man's pride and strength. The eagle, with its great vision
observes the land and if it sees danger, warns the Bear. The Bear
represents the strength of Mother Earth; no other creature is
stronger. The Bear protects the land.
The South is the Summer
It is the color blue, for the warm winds and the soft waves of the
ocean. The Chumash thrived as a maritime culture.
The Owl and the Snake represent the Summer season. The Owl represents
clarity of mind and spirit, and wisdom. The Snake represents the
sensitive side of the Mother. The snake's body is pressed against
Mother Earth, feeling its movements and emotions, moving like waves
across its surface. It senses her passion.
The East is the Spring
It is the color yellow, for the Rise of the Sun and the birth of new
life.
The Hawk and the Deer represent the Spring season. The Hawk is the
Deer's helper. Chumash legend has it that the Hawk returned the
missing sun on its red-tipped tail. The Deer symbolizes Life. Every
part of a Deer is consumed: its hide, its meat, its bones and antlers,
its hooves - nothing is lost or wasted.
There are stories, songs and dances, for the Spring.
The West is the Fall
The color of Fall is Red, for the colors of the sky when the sun sets.
This is the direction where life exits the land.
The Fall is a time of Transition, the time of the Dolphin and its
helper, the Raven. As the Rainbow Bridge story tells it, when the
Chumash crossed over from the islands to the mainland, on the Rainbow
Bridge, the Creator told them not to look down, or they would die.
However, some could not resist. Instead of letting them die, the
Creator saved them, turning them into Dolphins. Hence, the transition
- from humans to Dolphins. The Ravens are chatterboxes; they
constantly talk and speak names, communicating, carrying messages from
one place to another. They watch the spirits exit this world where the
sun sets and the Milky Way makes its path.
The Chumash are the Keepers of the Western Gate. We have to pay
attention to the seasons, the changes of the land, the language of
nature and the voices of its creatures. They give us insight about
balance between us and our surroundings. They teach us respect for the
plants that heal us, and make our homes. The lessons teach us
sustainability, and how to maintain our relationship with nature.
It is a balance of survival.
Balance and Sustainability
We need to respect this balance and be responsible for it, as were our
ancestors. The three bodies of life - land, air and water - sustain
us; we are dependent on them for our existence and survival. The
Chumash tribes came together each year, to share our stories, and meet
the newborn, and dance together. We shared our knowledge and our
experiences with each other.
Man wants to control everything; this is a problem. Man's greed
interrupts nature's way of life. We need to incorporate nature's laws
into man's laws. In today's world, we have forgotten this balance. We
have forgotten our responsibility. Our mind's eye - our 3rd eye -
knows this; one cannot ignore their inner thoughts and visions. It
drives our interpretation of what we deem right or wrong. Through our
sacred fires, our ceremonies, our dances, we remember: m'uptamai -
memory - the visions of our past. This can never be taken away from
our people. We carry our ancestors' thoughts and ways. The prayers and
ceremonies teach us to respect our balance with nature. We must
listen.
The more we remove ourselves from nature's role - our natural role -
the more we will become obsolete; we won't be a part of it. What we do
in this century will set the stage for future generations. From the
strongest to the weakest, we have to remember that we are ALL in this
together. As the foreigners saw the frontier as a place to explore new
horizons and bring their families, the Indian people see nature and
the environmental laws as a frontier.
It is said, without man, this world would flourish. It is true. We
have to learn to live in this world in a sustainable way. Life will
continue, it will find itself again, with or without us.
Responsibility
We can not justify our way of looking at the world if it's only to
benefit man.
If our children swim in toxic, polluted waters, we pull them out. If a
bird drinks from that water, little do we know if it flies away and
dies. We don't want to realize the consequences of what we've done. We
have become greedy; we consume and we waste our resources.
There was a time when people quenched their thirst with fresh water,
they respected and appreciated every drink they took from that water,
because it took time and effort to get it; it didn't just come out of
a faucet. We were involved in what we had, what we used. Our food and
our resources, as well as our songs and stories, were a gift. The
wood, the willow and the tule were gifts. Nature gave us the materials
to build our homes. The sacred fire kept us safe and warm.
Little by little people are waking up to the fact that we need to be
responsible for the impact of what we do with respect to the
environment. We cannot benefit from our luxuries without recognizing
that we are going to pay the price for it. Unfortunately, too often
Man is oblivious or in denial of the consequences of his actions that
are harmful to nature's system of life.
We are losing that connection to an effort. It is critical to change
the standard back to a normal. The standard is a condition that man
has made. It is a chosen method of relating what life should be versus
what life IS.
The Children
When you share nature with a child, you are planting a seed in their
minds, of their role. Exposing children to nature will introduce them
to their responsibility for it in the future. Nature teaches us. The
children need to experience it and they will be empowered by it.
Children are like 'crystal', which contains strength and power, if you
discover how to use it.
There are many paths from which to choose. We need to put the children
on the right path, without influencing them with current beliefs that
are harming us, our wildlife and our planet.
Three Important
Phrases
1. Planting a Seed
Plant a seed in a child's mind that will give them a stronger
understanding for the future.
2. The Eyes of the Children
Children's eyes do not lie. Pay attention to them. We can learn from
them.
3. Building a Foundation
Build a foundation for a new world, which consists of better choices.
Leave behind a legacy of knowledge. The ongoing practice of customs
and traditions secures our survival in the modern world.
Nature's Voices
There are sounds that can break through stone, and there are words
that can give us understanding. There is no difference between the
two, if we pay attention. Sometimes we need to be out in the sun,
sometimes we need to be in the mountains, or in the oceans or the
rivers. We need to stop and listen to the wind, the voices of the
past, the breath of life. We need to feel nature, our wilderness, and
be cleansed.
Listen to the songs - whether from a bird, or from a coyote. We also
make sounds that are not words. Learn to pay attention to the
elements; they have a body and a strength of their own. Wind, water
and fire have their own life and spirit; we can't control them. That's
why floods, earthquakes and fires put man in check.
We need to stop and listen to the voice of the past. If we open our
minds and pay attention, we receive the knowledge that nature is
trying to give, like waves crashing on the shore: we can look at them
like hands reaching out for help, because the sea creatures are dying.
Once again, we can't justify our way of looking at the world, if it is
only for the benefit of Mankind.
Memory
Within ancient stones lies the memory of the past and the knowledge of
the future. Sometimes we awaken the stones, through ceremonies, when
we heat them up. When we water the heated stones, the steam coming
from the stones is the breath of the ancestors, the breath of life
that gives us insight and allows us to share our dreams and prayers.
Death
Death has beauty; death brings birth. When we talk about life, we
don't talk about death. But they go hand in hand. There is a beautiful
side to death: the songs for remembering, the stories and messages
people left to us. We carry the spirits of those we love who have
passed away. We can feel their presence; they live on inside of us.
When we think of the life of a human, where does that life lie - in
the body, or in the heart and mind? The feelings we feel are not
physical; they are internal, like our personalities. Within all of us
lies the spirit, the sacredness.
When you have lost your loved ones - your family and friends, and you
find yourself with the memories they left behind, it gives you the
understanding that you too will pass.
When someone dies, they are remembered by songs and stories. They live
in a memory; their spirit, their identity, their power, and their
sacredness exist within us.
Story - The Birth of a Rainbow
When a seed of water falls from a cloud in the sky, and lands upon
Mother earth, the Mother gives birth to a Rainbow. The Rainbow reaches
up from the earth and goes around in the sky. It brings us a promise,
for the past and for the future. There is beauty at both ends of life;
the Mother's love inspires us and touches our hearts at both ends of
the Rainbow.
Chumash Word: tuhuy - rain
The Rainbow Bridge
Wishtoyo is a bridge connecting the past and the future. The creator
told the Chumash people on Santa Cruz Island to cross over the rainbow
bridge to the mainland, where there was an abundance of land and food
for their families. Wishtoyo Foundation is building a bridge to bring
an understanding about the relationship between nature and man. And
this education and knowledge will hopefully bring a sense of security
and abundance for the future and allow us to look through the eyes of
our ancestors…who nurtured and respected our planet.
Copyright © Mati Waiya
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