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Illustration of the Tabu
Illustration Of The Tabu.
On a second visit to the reservation the writer once had a practical
illustration of the gaktū“nta or tabu, which may be of interest as showing how
little sanitary ideas have to do with these precautions. Having received several
urgent invitations from Tsiskwa (Bird), an old shaman of considerable repute,
who was anxious to talk, but confined to his bed by sickness, it was determined
to visit him at his house, several miles distant. On arriving we found another
doctor named Sū“nki (The Mink) in charge of the patient and were told that he
had just that morning begun a four days' gaktū“nta which, among other
provisions, excluded all visitors. It was of no use to argue that we had come by
the express request of Tsiskwa. The laws of the gaktū“nta were as immutable as
those of the Medes and Persians, and neither doctor nor patient could hope for
favorable results from the treatment unless the regulations were enforced to the
letter. But although we might not enter the house, there was no reason why we
should not talk to the old man, so seats were placed for us outside the door,
while Tsiskwa lay stretched out on the bed just inside and The Mink perched
himself on the fence a few yards distant to keep an eye on the proceedings. As
there was a possibility that a white man might unconsciously affect the
operation of the Indian medicine, the writer deemed it advisable to keep out of
sight altogether, and accordingly took up a position just around the corner of
the house, but within easy hearing distance, while the interpreter sat facing
the doorway within a few feet of the sick man inside. Then began an animated
conversation, Tsiskwa inquiring, through the interpreter, as to the purpose of
the Government in gathering such information, wanting to know how we had
succeeded with other shamans and asking various questions in regard to other
tribes and their customs. The replies were given in the same manner, an attempt
being also made to draw him out as to the extent of his own knowledge. Thus we
talked until the old man grew weary, but throughout the whole of this singular
interview neither party saw the other, nor was the gaktū“nta violated by
entering the house. From this example it must be sufficiently evident that the
tabu as to visitors is not a hygienic precaution for securing greater quiet to
the patient, or to prevent the spread of contagion, but that it is simply a
religious observance of the tribe, exactly parallel to many of the regulations
among the ancient Jews, as laid down in the book of Leviticus.
Neglect Of Sanitary Regulations
No rules are ever formulated as to fresh
air or exercise, for the sufficient reason
that the door of the Cherokee log cabin is
always open, excepting at night and on the
coldest days in winter, while the Indian is
seldom in the house during his waking hours
unless when necessity compels him. As most
of their cabins are still built in the old
Indian style, without windows, the open door
furnishes the only means by which light is
admitted to the interior, although when
closed the fire on the hearth helps to make
amends for the deficiency. On the other
hand, no precautions are taken to guard
against cold, dampness, or sudden drafts.
During the greater part of the year whole
families sleep outside upon the ground,
rolled up in an old blanket. The Cherokee is
careless of exposure and utterly indifferent
to the simplest rules of hygiene. He will
walk all day in a pouring rain clad only in
a thin shirt and a pair of pants. He goes
barefoot and frequently bareheaded nearly
the entire year, and even on a frosty
morning in late November, when the streams
are of almost icy coldness, men and women
will deliberately ford the river where the
water is waist deep in preference to going a
few hundred yards to a foot-log. At their
dances in the open air men, women, and
children, with bare feet and thinly clad,
dance upon the damp ground from darkness
until daylight, sometimes enveloped in a
thick mountain fog which makes even the
neighboring treetops invisible, while the
mothers have their infants laid away under
the bushes with only a shawl between them
and the cold ground. In their ball plays
also each young man, before going into the
game, is subjected to an ordeal of dancing,
bleeding, and cold plunge baths, without
food or sleep, which must unquestionably
waste his physical energy.
In the old days when the Cherokee was the
lord of the whole country from the Savannah
to the Ohio, well fed and warmly clad and
leading an active life in the open air, he
was able to maintain a condition of robust
health notwithstanding the incorrectness of
his medical ideas and his general disregard
of sanitary regulations. But with the advent
of the white man and the destruction of the
game all this was changed. The East Cherokee
of to-day is a dejected being; poorly fed,
and worse clothed, rarely tasting meat, cut
off from the old free life, and with no
incentive to a better, and constantly bowed
down by a sense of helpless degradation in
the presence of his conqueror. Considering
all the circumstances, it may seem a matter
of surprise that any of them are still in
existence. As a matter of fact, the best
information that could be obtained in the
absence of any official statistics indicated
a slow but steady decrease during the last
five years. Only the constitutional vigor,
inherited from their warrior ancestors, has
enabled them to sustain the shock of the
changed conditions of the last half century.
The uniform good health of the children in
the training school shows that the case is
not hopeless, however, and that under
favorable conditions, with a proper food
supply and a regular mode of living, the
Cherokee can hold his own with the white
man.
The
Sweat Bath-Bleeding-Rubbing-Bathing
In addition to their herb treatment the
Cherokees frequently resort to sweat baths,
bleeding, rubbing, and cold baths in the
running stream, to say nothing of the beads
and other conjuring paraphernalia generally
used in connection with the ceremony. The
sweat bath was in common use among almost
all the tribes north of Mexico excepting the
central and eastern Eskimo, and was
considered the great cure-all in sickness
and invigorant in health. Among many tribes
it appears to have been regarded as a
ceremonial observance, but the Cherokees
seem to have looked upon it simply as a
medical application, while the ceremonial
part was confined to the use of the plunge
bath. The person wishing to make trial of
the virtues of the sweat bath entered the
ā“si, a small earth-covered log house only
high enough to allow of sitting down. After
divesting himself of his clothing, some
large bowlders, previously heated in a fire,
were placed near him, and over them was
poured a decoction of the beaten roots of
the wild parsnip. The door was closed so
that no air could enter from the outside,
and the patient sat in the sweltering steam
until he was in a profuse perspiration and
nearly choked by the pungent fumes of the
decoction. In accordance with general Indian
practice it may be that he plunged into the
river before resuming his clothing; but in
modern times this part of the operation is
omitted and the patient is drenched with
cold water instead. Since the āsi has gone
out of general use the sweating takes place
in the ordinary dwelling, the steam being
confined under a blanket wrapped around the
patient. During the prevalence of the
smallpox epidemic among the Cherokees at the
close of the late war the sweat bath was
universally called into requisition to stay
the progress of the disease, and as the
result about three hundred of the band died,
while many of the survivors will carry the
marks of the visitation to the grave. The
sweat bath, with the accompanying cold water
application, being regarded as the great
panacea, seems to have been resorted to by
the Indians in all parts of the country
whenever visited by smallpox-originally
introduced by the whites-and in consequence
of this mistaken treatment they have died,
in the language of an old writer, "like
rotten sheep" and at times whole tribes have
been almost swept away. Many of the
Cherokees tried to ward off the disease by
eating the flesh of the buzzard, which they
believe to enjoy entire immunity from
sickness, owing to its foul smell, which
keeps the disease spirits at a distance.
Bleeding is resorted to in a number of
cases, especially in rheumatism and in
preparing for the ball play. There are two
methods of performing the operation,
bleeding proper and scratching, the latter
being preparatory to rubbing on the
medicine, which is thus brought into more
direct contact with the blood. The bleeding
is performed with a small cupping horn, to
which suction is applied in the ordinary
manner, after scarification with a flint or
piece of broken glass. In the blood thus
drawn out the shaman claims sometimes to
find a minute pebble, a sharpened stick or
something of the kind, which he asserts to
be the cause of the trouble and to have been
conveyed into the body of the patient
through the evil spells of an enemy. He
frequently pretends to suck out such an
object by the application of the lips alone,
without any scarification whatever.
Scratching is a painful process and is
performed with a brier, a flint arrowhead, a
rattlesnake's tooth, or even with a piece of
glass, according to the nature of the
ailment, while in preparing the young men
for the ball play the shaman uses an
instrument somewhat resembling a comb,
having seven teeth made from the sharpened
splinters of the leg bone of a turkey. The
scratching is usually done according to a
particular pattern, the regular method for
the ball play being to draw the scratcher
four times down the upper part of each arm,
thus making twenty-eight scratches each
about 6 inches in length, repeating the
operation on each arm below the elbow and on
each leg above and below the knee. Finally,
the instrument is drawn across the breast
from the two shoulders so as to form a
cross; another curving stroke is made to
connect the two upper ends of the cross, and
the same pattern is repeated on the back, so
that the body is thus gashed in nearly three
hundred places. Although very painful for a
while, as may well be supposed, the
scratches do not penetrate deep enough to
result seriously, excepting in some cases
where erysipelas sets in. While the blood is
still flowing freely the medicine, which in
this case is intended to toughen, the
muscles of the player, is rubbed into the
wounds after which the sufferer plunges into
the stream and washes off the blood. In
order that the blood may flow the longer
without clotting it is frequently scraped
off with a small switch as it flows. In
rheumatism and other local diseases the
scratching is confined to the part affected.
The instrument used is selected in
accordance with the mythologic theory,
excepting in the case of the piece of glass,
which is merely a modern makeshift for the
flint arrowhead.
Rubbing, used commonly for pains and
swellings of the abdomen, is a very simple
operation performed with the tip of the
finger or the palm of the hand, and can not
be dignified with the name of massage. In
one of the Gahuni formulas for treating
snake bites the operator is told to rub in a
direction contrary to that in which the
snake coils itself, because "this is just
the same as uncoiling it." Blowing upon the
part affected, as well as upon the head,
hands, and other parts of the body, is also
an important feature of the ceremonial
performance. In one of the formulas it is
specified that the doctor must blow first
upon the right hand of the patient, then
upon the left foot, then upon the left hand,
and finally upon the right foot, thus making
an imaginary cross.
Bathing in the running stream, or "going to
water," as it is called, is one of their
most frequent medico-religious ceremonies,
and is performed on a great variety of
occasions, such as at each new moon, before
eating the new food at the green corn dance,
before the medicine dance and other
ceremonial dances before and after the ball
play, in connection with the prayers for
long life, to counteract the effects of bad
dreams or the evil spells of an enemy, and
as a part of the regular treatment in
various diseases. The details of the
ceremony are very elaborate and vary
according to the purpose for which it is
performed, but in all cases both shaman and
client are fasting from the previous
evening, the ceremony being generally
performed just at daybreak. The bather
usually dips completely under the water four
or seven times, but in some cases it is
sufficient to pour the water from the hand
upon the head and breast. In the ball play
the ball sticks are dipped into the water at
the same time. While the bather is in the
water the shaman is going through with his
part of the performance on the bank and
draws omens from the motion of the beads
between his thumb and finger, or of the
fishes in the water. Although the old
customs are fast dying out this ceremony is
never neglected at the ball play, and is
also strictly observed by many families on
occasion of eating the new corn, at each new
moon, and on other special occasions, even
when it is necessary to break the ice in the
stream for the purpose, and to the neglect
of this rite the older people attribute many
of the evils which have come upon the tribe
in later days. The latter part of autumn is
deemed the most suitable season of the year
for this ceremony, as the leaves which then
cover the surface of the stream are supposed
to impart their medicinal virtues to the
water.
Sacred Formulas
of the Cherokee
Sacred Formulas Of The Cherokees, By James Mooney, 1885-1886
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