Honor The Ancestors

Sep 06, 2010 - 09:26 PM
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Why not teach school children more of the wholesome proverbs and legends of our people? That we killed game only for food, not for fun... Tell your children of the friendly acts of the Indians to the white people who first settled here. Tell them of our leaders and heroes and their deeds... Put in your history books the Indian's part in the World War. Tell how the Indian fought for a country of which he was not a citizen, for a flag to which he had no claim, and for a people who treated him unjustly. We ask this, Chief, to keep sacred the memory of our people

-- Grand Council Fire of American Indians to the Mayor of Chicago, 1927

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Legends: Legend of the Cherokee Rose
Posted by: willow on Jan 31, 2004 - 01:03 AM
Stories and Legends

The Cherokee were driven from their homelands in North Carolina and Georgia
over 100 years ago when gold was discovered in their lands. The journey known as the "Trail of Tears". It was a terrible time for the people. Many died from the hardships and the women wept. The old men knew the women must be strong to help the children survive so they called upon the Great One to help their people and to give the mothers strength.
The Great One caused a plant to spring up everywhere a Mother's tears had fallen upon the ground on the journey. He told the old men that the plant would grow quickly, then fall back to the ground and another stem would grow. The plant would be strong and grow quickly throughout the land all along the Trail of Tears.
The stickers on the stem would protect it from those who might try to move it, as it spread to reclaim some of the lost Cherokee homeland.
The next morning, the women saw the beautiful white blossoms far back on the trail. When they heard what the Great One had said they felt their strength returning and knew they would survive and the children would grow and the People would flourish in the new Cherokee Nation.



 
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Most read story in Stories and Legends:
A Brief History of the Trail of Tears


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