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Tsalagi Creation Story - Cherokee

Many, many moons ago, in the beginning of time, the earth was all
water. There was no land. All the four-leggeds, all the animals, all
the winged-ones, lived up in the sky on the clouds. They were waiting
for the land to dry, but it would not dry. They would send one animal
but he would come back unable to find dry land. The animals would
regularly check the water below. Finally, after a dog had looked and
reported back that it was still wet, they sent the water beetle. The
water beetle dove into the water, grabbed a handful of mud at the
bottom, brought it up and placed it on top of the water and it
started to dry, started to build land. He brought more and more and
still they waited for it to dry, still they waited and waited.

Finally, they sent grandfather buzzard, the mighty buzzard, down and
the land was almost dry. As the buzzard flew, he'd fly down close to
the land and every time he would flap his mighty wings, he would form
a mountain and a valley. That's why the Cherokee land has mountains
and valleys in it today. All the animals came down and settled on the
earth.


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After they did, they realized they had no light. So they called to
Grandfather and asked would he give them light, and he did. He
brought to them the sun. He put the sun down right by the ground, and
it was too hot for the animals. So they pushed and pushed, till
finally they got it far enough out that it would not burn all the
time; but it was still so hot that the crawfish was baked. That's
why, if you look at him today, he is red from the sun being too close.

Finally, they got the sun far enough out so it would not burn and we
would have night. And Grandfather told them, "Now that I have done
this for you, I ask that all the four-legged, and all the animals,
and all the plants stay awake for seven days and for seven nights."
This is why today, when a warrior goes to cross his manhood, he fasts
and sweats for seven days.

All the animals and all the plants fell asleep except for some. The
owl stayed awake, and that's why he has vision to hunt at night now.
The plants, the Douglas fir, the cedar, the pine, and a few others
stayed awake for seven nights and for seven days. That's why only
these, among all the plants, are allowed to stay green all the year
round. The other plants fell asleep and so must sleep part of every
year.

Such was the beginning of our lands as told by a Cherokee grandmother
to her grandson.

From Blue Panther Keeper of Stories.