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Except for the sacred ceremonies
themselves, we must assume that the stories recounted in
Navajo history have been elaborated over the years, expanded,
and otherwise changed from the original accounts.
We
must also assume that some stories are lost forever. A contemporary
wise woman from a Canadian border tribe remarked recently,
“Maybe we should let the stories die. They may have ended
their usefulness.”
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| Culver Pictures |
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A Navajo family stotry about the relations the family had in prehistory with the Holy People.
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Now, as television and radio
penetrate into the most remote corners and the highest mountain
settlements of the Navajo nation, and have their impact
on us all, it is important to record the Navajo stories
before the advent of electronic media, and its insidious
effect, transforms them once again.
To produce the book Navajo
History, I collected information from a number of qualified
people—trained people—who had spent many hours in lessons
from wise medicine men. These people are recognized by the
community as having lived their lives as close as possible
to the ways of the Holy People.
It took two years, long
hours, and many conversations. I fell in love with the prehistory
period, and wished passionately to be able to talk to the
Holy People themselves. I felt immensely priveleged to work
with these members of our community—to get inside the minds
of such people.
I began to realize that
there are few qualified people in the world today who are
able to transmit this kind of inside knowledge effectively—to
transfer not just the stories, but the spirit of the stories,
to the printed page. The stories finally appeared in book
form. Stories that by their nature require the intimate
form of a gifted storyteller in a small group are now in
a book form reaching an audience of thousands—children,
parents, scholarly experts, and an occasional interested
bilagaanaa (Anglo).
The total body of the oral
literature of our people is very large. Generally the stories
fall into two categories: there are the sacred stories,
including the emergence history, which would correspond
to the value Christians place on the Bible; and the folktales,
often, but not always, pointing a moral.
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