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Cherokee Letters Section


 


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Cherokee Place Names
Cherokee Place Names
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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 Letters News

Letters in Cherokee: A Pen Pal Program Enhances Cultural Interactions - Indian Country Today Media Network.com


Indian Country Today Media Network.com

Letters in Cherokee: A Pen Pal Program Enhances Cultural Interactions
Indian Country Today Media Network.com
A pen pal program has immersion students from the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in North Carolina exchanging letters and promoting stronger cultural interactions. Participating students in kindergarten, ...

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Unlikely pals: Kids discover, and love, the art of letter writing - msnbc.com


msnbc.com

Unlikely pals: Kids discover, and love, the art of letter writing
msnbc.com
A second-grader in North Carolina crafts a handwritten letter to a pen pal in the rare Cherokee language. In elementary schools across the country, pen-pal programs are helping kids learn to love writing the old-fashioned way.
Unlikely Pals: Kids Discover the Art of Letter WritingHappyNews.com

all 2 news articles »

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Friday's letters: SC election law changes - Spartanburg Herald Journal


Friday's letters: SC election law changes
Spartanburg Herald Journal
I agree that this year's filing process was a debacle in Spartanburg County — although the GOP in Cherokee, Anderson and Greenville counties did not incur the same problems. During the delegation meeting May 7, I presented an outline of a process to ...

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Former state prison inmate goes to jail for wild chase in Woodland - Sacramento Bee (blog)


Former state prison inmate goes to jail for wild chase in Woodland
Sacramento Bee (blog)
Eventually, McClean slowed to about 15 mph and jumped out of the Jeep Cherokee he was driving. A woman in the passenger seat also bailed. The Jeep ended up hitting a home in the 400 block of Delta Drive. The pursuing officer chased after McClean, ...

and more »

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Mather man dies, second driver injured in crash on Highway 50 - Sacramento Bee


Mather man dies, second driver injured in crash on Highway 50
Sacramento Bee
By Carlos Alcalá The man, a resident of Mather who was not identified, apparently allowed his Jeep Cherokee to drift into the center divide on the eastbound side of the highway near 65th Street in Sacramento. The Jeep struck the right rear of an ...

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Cherokee Right Path seeking nominations - Cherokee One Feather


Cherokee Right Path seeking nominations
Cherokee One Feather
This 12-month leadership program is for EBCI tribal members to learn Cherokee history and culture, and to develop leadership competencies. Submit a one-page letter of nomination that describes your candidate. Candidates must be age 18 and over, ...

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Mother and missionary among the Cherokees - Muskogee Daily Phoenix


Mother and missionary among the Cherokees
Muskogee Daily Phoenix
She lived in a log cabin, but described it in letters to her mother as being “quite comfortable.” She enjoyed entertaining other single women missionaries and reveled in the role of hostess. She also led a bi-weekly sewing group among her Cherokee ...

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