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The Navajo

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Title: The Navajo


1
The Navajo
  • The Dineh The People

Prepared by Rebecca Baird
2
When and where the religion was established
  • The Dineh, or "The People," as the Navajo call
    themselves, migrated to the Southwest from the
    North around the 15th century. They were first
    noticed by other peoples between the 14th and
    15th century, between the Champa and upper San
    Juan rivers.
  • The Spaniards brought sheep and horses which the
    Navajo adapted to their nomadic lifestyle. It is
    thought that the Navajo originally consisted of
    four clans and today has expanded to include over
    60.

3
Number of adherents
  • There are more than 210,000 Navajo today, but not
    all practice the traditional Navajo way of life.
  • Most adherents live in the Four Corners area.

4
Location of most people who practice the Navajo
Religion
5
Map of the Navajo Reservation
6
Dzil Naoodilij
Dzil Na'oodilii (El Huerfano Mesa ) is considered
to be the "lungs" of Navajo country. It is also
the home of Yódí'ashkii (Goods of Value Boy), and
Yódí at ééd (Goods of Value Girl), and one of the
homes of 'Altsé Hastiin (First Man), and 'Altsé
'Asdzáá (First Woman). In the beginning
DzilNa'oodilii was decorated with pollen, rugs,
hides, cloth, and Male Rain for the coming of a
special child (Changing Woman).
7
Shiprock Peak
  • A long time ago the Diné were hard pressed by
    their enemies. One night their medicine men
    prayed for their deliverance, having their
    prayers heard by the Gods. They caused the ground
    to rise, lifting the Diné, and moved the ground
    like a great wave into the east away from their
    enemies. It settled where Shiprock Peak now
    stands. These Navajos then lived on the top of
    this new mountain, only coming down to plant
    their fields and to get water.

8
The Hogan A Connection
9
The Hogan Place of Life, Place of Ceremonies
  • The performance of the Blessing Way ceremony
    would take place within a hogan, a lodge used to
    symbolize the universe, where a fire representing
    the sun is located in the middle. The diviner
    marks out four posts with cornmeal by moving
    within the hogan in a clockwise fashion. In this
    way, the four posts become symbolic of the four
    cardinal points within the hogan as that of the
    universe.

10
The Hogan Place of Healing
  • Holy Way diviners aim to cure the sick person
    through song, prayer, and drama by placing the
    individual in the middle of the hogan in order to
    identify them with Hozho as expressed by the
    deities.

11
Hogan Healing Ceremonies
  • Inside the hogan, the patient undergoes curative
    rites administered by those of a hand-trembler
    for those whose disease origins are not known.
    The hand-trembler diagnoses the further medicine
    rites that will be used to restore harmony to the
    particular patient. The hand-trembler feels his
    hand over the patient's body in order to decipher
    the nature of the disease.

12
Hogans and Sandpaintings
  • The ritual of an Holy Way Healing Ceremonies, if
    it is chosen as a treatment, carries the
    symbolism of sandpaintings made in the first day
    of the ceremony as models of the cosmos in order
    to gather the universal power of motivating
    forces.

13
Influential practitioners
  • The CodeTalkers of World War II

14
Growth of the Religion
  • Causes After the Long Walk
  • Effects Changes from influence of other
    cultures, yet resurgence in general practices

15
Holy Days
  • Every day is a holy day to the Navajo. There is
    no Sunday equivalent to Christian tradition.
  • Holy events take place all year long.
  • Ghost Ways and Healing Ways usually take place in
    the season when thunder sleeps (Winter).

16
Holy work
  • There is no holy work.
  • The holy works are preserved in the sand
    paintings and ceremonies of the haatalli
    (medicine men and women).
  • The legends of the holy people are preserved in
    oral tradition and in the enactment of ceremonies.

17
Ecclesiastical law?
  • One who is Navajo lives by the Navajo Way.
  • The Navajo do not punish wrong doers, but work to
    bring the people in harmony with the Blessing
    Way.
  • They believe evil/wrong is done if one is out of
    harmony (hozro).

18
Clergy
  • Hand-tremblers
  • Crystal-gazers
  • Singers

19
Function of Clergy
  • Both men and women may be hand-tremblers, crystal
    gazers, and singers, but most singers are male.
  • Hand-tremblers and crystal gazers determine how
    the patient is out of hozro.
  • Singers perform the ceremony to bring one into
    hozro again.

20
Rites/Rituals/Ceremonies
  • Communion with God(s)/holy ones
  • birth
  • rites of passage/puberty rites
  • baptism
  • marriage rites
  • death rites

21
Communion with God(s)/holy ones
  • The diyin diné, generally translated as Holy
    People, are the beings whose actions are
    recounted in the stories and myths that are the
    basis for the Navajo ceremonials Diné
    binahagha' and who are pictured in the
    sandpaintings 'iikááh.

22
The Navajo Pantheon
  • The core group of the Holy People contains First
    Man Á tsé hastiin, First Woman Á tsé asdz ,
    Coyote M 'ii, otherwise known as "first
    scolder" Á tsé hashké, First Boy Á tsé ashkii
    and First Girl Á tsé at'ééd, Talking God
    Haashch'éé ti'í Calling God Hashch'éoghan,
    and Changing Woman.

23
Changing Woman
  • Changing Woman is seen as the source for all good
    in the Navajo world.
  • She is almost an earth mother figure and
    represents the cyclical path of the seasons
    nináhágháhígíí, birth (spring daan d go),
    maturing (summer sh sh go), growing old (fall
    'ak'eed) and dying (winter haigo), only to be
    reborn again in the spring daan d go.

24
Changing Woman and the Clans
25
The Good Afterlife
  • The goal of the earth-surface people, by aiming
    for knowledge gained over a long and happy
    lifetime is to join the diyinii (the holy people)
    at the end of their lives.

26
Navajo Blessing for a Newborn
  • "Today, we are blessed with a beautiful baby
  • May his feet be to the eastmay his right hand be
    to the southmay his head be to the westmay his
    left hand be to the north
  • May he walk and dwell on Mother Earth
    peacefullyMay he be blessed with precious,
    variegated stonesMay he be blessed with fat
    sheep in variationMay he be blessed with
    respectful relatives and friends
  • May he be blessed with the essence of life in old
    ageMay he be blessed with the source of
    happiness in beautyWe ask all these blessings
    with reverence and holiness
  • My Mother the EarthMy Father the SkyMy Sister
    the Sun
  • All is PeaceAll is BeautyAll is HappinessAll
    is Harmony
  • Source navajo-coop.org

27
Yeibichai
During the Nightway ceremony, a team will be
composed of fourteendancers the leader
Yeibichai - the Talking God, sixmale dancers,
six women dancers, and finally, theWater
Sprinkler - the God of Precipitated Waters. 
Onthe final night, teams of dancers appear in
public inwhat is referred to as the Yeibichai
Dance until justbefore dawn.  The ceremony ends
with the chanting ofthe "Bluebird Song"  which
celebrates the happinessand the peace that the
bluebird symbolizes.
28
Yei in a Navajo Rug
29
Whirling Log Rug from Sand Painting
Mrs. Sam Maurelito, weaver, after Hosteen Klah,
Dineh healer, Whirling Log Ceremony Sand Painting
ca. Navajo nation, 1925. tapestry taken from
sacred sand painting.  Native American.
30
Sand Painting as Communion
31
Spider Woman and Weaving
  • Spider Woman taught Navajo ancestors of long ago
    the art of weaving upon a loom. Her husband,
    Spider Man, made the first loom, using sky and
    earth cords for the cross poles, sun rays for the
    warp sticks, rock crystal and sheet lightning for
    the herarlds, and a sun halo for the batten. The
    comb was made of a white shell.
  • Spider Woman lives on Spider Rock in Navajo lore.

32
Rug Weaving
Circa 1920 From the Tom O. and H. Lucille Kimball
Indian Collection.
33
Rug Weaving at Hogan
34
Symbols used in Navajo Prayers and Art
35
The Swastika
Many people have commented on the swastika in
Navajo artwork, specifically in carvings, in
blanket designs, and in sand paintings. It is the
result of basket weaving where the ends of a
simple cross design are turned either to the
right or left, depending on the direction of the
weaving, to form a swastika. Its meanings are as
diverse as its worldwide origins. For the Navajo,
the symbol is known as the Whirling Log.
36
Yei
Yei depicted in a contemporary navajo
rug. SourceVerkamps.com
37
The Four Sacred Stones
  • turquoise
  • white shell
  • abalone shell
  • black jet

38
Turquoise (Doot kl'izhii)
  • Turquoise is considered one of the four sacred
    stones of the Navajo. For centuries they have
    regarded it as a valuable talisman and take pride
    in its possession. Sheepherders have carried a
    turquoise fetish to insure fertility of the
    sheep, hunters to insure success in the hunt, and
    warriors to insure victory and a safe return.

39
Powers of Turquoise
  • Traditionally a bead of turquoise was fastened to
    a lock of hair to protect the Navajo from being
    struck by lightning and believed to be a
    safeguard against snake bite. Every household
    would have a buckskin pouch of herbs, turquoise
    and shell to add protection against any
    unexpected event or catastrophe.

40
Turquoise Squash Blossom Necklace
41
Four Sacred Colors
  • The white igai light of Dawn hayíí k in the
    east ha'a'aah,
  • The blue doot 'izh light of midday 'a ní'ní'
    in the south shádi'ááh,
  • The yellow itso light of twilight nahootsoii
    in the west 'e'e'aah,
  • The black izhin of Night t 'éé' in the north
    náhook

42
Sacred Pouch Medicine Bundle
43
Birth
  • Blessing Way Ceremonies are typically used for
    pregnant women, at weddings, and for girl's
    puberty rites.

44
Cradle Board Use and Blessing
  •      Many Navajos still use a traditional cradle
    board to keep their babies safe and protected.
    Made with cottonwood, pine or cedar laced
    together with thin strips of leather, the Cradle
    Board feature a wide, wooden hoop over the baby's
    head that protects the child. Navajos believe the
    flat boards will give the baby a strong, straight
    back, and that a soft supporting pad will help
    the infant form a nice rounded head. The Cradle
    Board is blessed with corn pollen, prayers, songs
    and good thoughts for the baby.
  • Source native-american-art.org

45
Purification Rites
46
Evil Way Ceremonies
  • Evil Way (Ghost Way) ceremonies involve
    purification rituals such as those of exorcism in
    order to realign the harmony of universal forces.
    In these types of exorcisms, the "ghostway" is
    usually incorporated as a way to restore a sick
    person to Hozho by rescuing them from the
    malevolent forces of ghosts.

47
Rites of passage/puberty rites
  • The Navajo celebrate a girls turning thirteen or
    her first and second menses with a huge ceremony
  • The kinaalda.

48
Kinaaldi
  • In the Blessing Way ceremony of the girl's
    puberty, sacred matter of cornmeal or cornpollen
    is applied to the body for blessing, signifying
    the changing of girl into woman--one of beauty,
    symbolic regeneration, and rejuvenation.

49
Changing Womans Ceremony
  • The Kinaaldi Ceremony was first performed by
    Changing Woman who is one of the most important
    of the Navajo Holy People.  Changing Woman
    represents the earth and as such is the source
    for all life and its sustenance on the earth.

50
Modeling Changing Woman
  • Many young Navaho  girls are painted with a white
    clay mixture on different parts of her body and
    costume. The painting and costume of shells and
    other ornaments depicting Changing Woman are like
    a mask enabling her to stand out from the others,
    to aid in her walk through womanhood.

51
Activities in Kinaaldi
  • The girl must
  • grind corn,
  • race,
  • prepare a cake called 'alkaan,'
  • Undergo hair washings and combings

52
Baptism
  • There is no baptism in the Navajo way of life.
  • However, corn pollen is sprinkled at many holy
    ceremonies and in a daily greating to the holy
    ones
  • Corn pollen is sprinkled on an infant.
  • Corn is the gift of the Holy People.
  • When the Navajo emerged into the fourth world
    (this world) they were hungry.
  • Turkey shook himself and kernels of corn fell
    from his wings.

Corn Pollen Pouch
53
Wedding tradition
  • Navajo Traditions White corn meal symbolizes
    the male and yellow the female. The Navajo
    combine the two meals into a corn mush and put it
    into a wedding basket before the traditional
    ceremony.The Navajo bride was an equal partner to
    her husband. The couple would share the maize
    pudding during the ceremony to symbolize the
    marriage bond.

54
A Navajo Wedding
55
From a Navajo Wedding
Sourceagaveproductions Navajo Wedding
Ceremony Arizona Humanities Council
56
Death Rites
  • The Navajo do not have funerals or bury their
    dead.
  • For 4 days after the death, family members must
    stay home and not mention the dead person for
    fear of convincing the chindi to stay in this
    world.
  • Volunteers take the body to a crevice in the
    sandstone and cover the sandstone.
  • Both family and volunteers must then undergo a
    four day purification ceremony for having had
    contact with the dead

57
A Dying Place
  • People who are dying ask do go outside to die.
    Dying inside a home means the home can no longer
    be occupied.
  • A death hogan has its wall caved in to allow the
    chindi to escape.
  • Navajo do not like hospitals because of the
    chindi who live there.

58
Preparing the Body
  • Bodies must be ritually washed.
  • Hair must be washed with Yucca.
  • Shoes must be put on the wrong feet so the chindi
    cannot find its way back.

59
The Chindi
  • The Navajos believe that, when a person dies, a
    ghostwhat they call a chindiis released with
    the last dying breath.
  • This chindi is always an evil force who returns
    to avenge some offense.
  • Contact with a chindi is very dangerous, and
    causes sickness or misfortune. So the Navajo are
    quite fearful of and take every precaution to
    avoid contact with a chindi, especially the
    malevolent witches knows as Skinwalkers.

60
Appearance of the Chindi
  • The chindi are seen only after dark and may
    appear in various forms as apparitions of the
    coyote, owl, mouse, spot of fire, whirlwind,
    human form, and indefinite dark objects.
  • Ceremonies purify after chindi contact.

61
Journey to the Afterwordl
  • That aspect of a Navajos spirit which represents
    the good in his or her life may, at death, go to
    an afterworld (ciditah). In a journey that take
    four days, the spirit of the newly dead is guided
    to the afterworld by deceased relatives and
    friends. The afterworld is really an underworld
    and is accessed through the "hole of emergence"
    (xajinai) from which the first Navajo people came
    forth at the beginning of time.

62
Navajo Divorce
  • Rules governing divorce in the Navajo Nation used
    to be quite simple because a husband moved in
    with the wife's clan, a woman who desired a
    divorce simply placed her husband's saddle (and
    other personal belongings) outside the door of
    their home. Instead of focusing on property
    settlements, traditional divorce practices
    emphasized family and clan relationships, with
    the wife and children staying with the
    wife/mother's unit . (sourcewww.ainc-inac.gc.ca )

63
Age of Reason
  • Children are respected in the culture because of
    clan relationships.
  • Children from your paternal grandfathers or
    grandmothers clan have the honorary status of
    revered adults.

64
Major tenets of the faith What do I have to
do/believe to become a Navajo?  
65
Is Conversion Possible?
  • One is born a Navajo.
  • Anyone is welcome to walk the Blessing Way, but
    the faith is of a place and of a people.
  • People may marry into a clan and adopt the ways,
    but most remain Belagaana's (other)

66
Lifes end
  • The goal of the earth-surface people, by aiming
    for knowledge gained over a long and happy
    lifetime is to join the diyinii at the end of
    their lives.

67
Sources
  • Navajo.org
  • ThePeople.org
  • Dinee.org
  • Dineteh.org
  • NavajoHealthInitiative.org
  • NativeAmericans.org
  • A lifetime of study
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