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Cherokee Place Names
Cherokee Place Names
by John Currahee
Walking on the Wind: Cherokee Teachings for Harmony and Balance
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If You Lived With The Cherokees
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Medicine of the Cherokee: The Way of Right Relationship (Folk Wisdom Series)
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Trail of Tears: The Rise and Fall of the Cherokee Nation
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Cherokee Indian Colors

from:

Deb St. George, Publisher, Cherokee-Legends.com





The symbolic color system was as follows:


East = red = success; triumph

North = blue = defeat; trouble

West = black = death

South = white = peace; happiness


Up Above = yellow

Down Below = brown

Here in the Center = green


The Red Man, living in the East, is the spirit of power, triumph, and success.


The Black Man, in the West, is the spirit of death. The

shaman would invoke the Red Man to the assistance of his patient and

consign his enemy to the fatal influences of the Black Man.





According to Thomas Mails, in his book, "Cherokee People,"the

mythological significance of different colors were important in Cherokee lore.



Red was symbolic of success.


It was the color of the war club used to strike an enemy in battle as well as the other club used by the warrior to shield himself. Red beads were used to conjure the red spirit to insure long life, recovery from sickness, success in love and ball play or any other undertaking where the benefit of the magic spell was wrought.



Black was always typical of death.


The soul of the enemy was continually beaten about by black war clubs and enveloped in a black fog. In conjuring to destroy an enemy, the priest used black beads and invoked the black spirits-which always lived in the West,-bidding them to tear out the man's soul and carry it to the West, and put it into the black coffin deep in the black mud, with a black serpent coiled above it.






Blue symbolized failure, disappointment, or unsatisfied desire.


To say "they shall never become blue" expressed the belief that they would never fail in anything they undertook. In love charms, the lover figuratively covered himself with red and prayed that his rival would become entirely blue and walk in a blue path. "He is entirely blue," approximates meaning of the common English phrase, "He feels blue." The blue spirits lived in the North.








White denoted peace and happiness. In ceremonial addresses, as the Green Corn Dance and ball play, the people symbolically partook of white food and, after the dance or game, returned along the white trail to their white houses. In love charms, the man, to induce the woman to cast her lots with his, boasted, "I am a white man," implying that all was happiness where he was. White beads had the same meaning in bead conjuring, and white was the color of the stone pipe anciently used in ratifying peace treaties. The White spirits lived in the South.




About the author:
Deb St. George is Publisher of Indian Folk Culture and Cherokee Indian Greeting from Cherokee-Legends.com








Cherokee language lesson Colors

 

Cherokee Indian Woman News

A recipe for trouble

Boston So Elizabeth Warren, the Democratic candidate for Ted Kennedy’s former Senate seat in Massachusetts, is not an Indian — just a plagiarist. The bloodlines aren’t “faint”; they’re nonexistent. You may still hear that her claim to be one-thirty-second Cherokee is merely “dubious”; in fact, it’s false...

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Time to end racial roulette

In the earliest iteration of the Third Reich’s Nuremberg Laws, people with three or four Jewish grandparents were classified as Jews and stripped of their livelihoods and property. Individuals with one or two Jewish grandparents were deemed to be “crossbreeds” who were entitled, under certain conditions, to less discriminatory treatment. Terrible? Of course. But recent events have demonstrated ...

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Is Elizabeth Warren Native American?

Elizabeth Warren is not a citizen of the Cherokee Nation.

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Language was Cherokee woman's link to another time

Lula Hall's first words were in Cherokee.

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A Little Bit Indian

Why Elizabeth Warren’s embarrassment is a scandal for academia.

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Article Cites Elizabeth Warren As First Woman of Color Hired by Harvard Law School

A 1997 piece from the Fordham Law Review lists Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren as the “first woman of color” hired by Harvard Law School, according to reports. The article, which was unearthed by Politico, was titled  ”Intersectionality and positionality:  Situating women of color in...

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ELIZABETH WARREN DANCES WITH LIES

Elizabeth Warren, who also goes by her Indian name, "Lies on Race Box," is in big heap-um trouble. The earnest, reform-minded liberal running for Senate against Scott Brown, R-Mass., lied about being part-Cherokee to get a job at Harvard.Harvard took full advantage of Warren's lie, bragging to The Harvard Crimson about her minority status during one of the near-constant student protests over ...

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