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The Story of Grandmother Corn

Standing Feather:
I was angry. "Why," I asked the Grandmothers, "did you deny your heritage....our heritage? How could you adopt the ways of the white man, the conqueror, and emvrace the ways of the people who disrespect the Earth Mother? How could you conceal from the future generation their own identity and conceal even from your children that you and they were Cherokee? How could you do these things? How could you?" I felt betrayed by my own ancestors.


What She Saw and Heard:
THe smile was gentle and wise, but the voice was firm. It reverberated with strength. Power. "Standing Feather, you have much to learn. You will study the medicine of the Corn Mother and you will understand. We chose our path out of knowledge....the true and lasting knowledge of who and what we are as a people, the teachings of the Great Mystery and the Earth Mother, and the wisdom of the Selu. Do not be quick to judge. You do know the whole truth, you do not understand our purposes.


Standing Feather:
I trembled, but the fire still burned. I had to know, "How could I know the whole truth?" I saw missed opportunities....traditions forgotten, precious wisdom lost, and a world badly in need of knowledge that was no more, would never be again. Tears stung my eyes. I heard Laughter, and gentle chiding.


What She Saw and Heard:
"Standing Feather, you are as a child. Your tears are for nothing, the foolish whining of an infant who only considers herself and lacks the wisdom required for understanding. Stop this nonsense and be about your true mission. You walk your path for a purpose. Do not waste your tears. Our heritage is alive and well. It grows stonger with each sun. Help our people, do not cry for them. Respect our ways, do not see them as diminished or lost. Honor our wisdom. Use your heritage with pride. Everything we had....everything you think we denied....all you believe is lost....is whole and strong, and living in your world. It waits for you now. You only have to claim it."


Standing Feather:
I saw no way this could be. So much was gone, so much forgotten, so much swept away because it was denied. Lost. Surely they didn't understand.
"But Grandmother, for so many years, I did not know of my heritage. I didn't hear the stories, didn't learn of the healing, didn't know the beauty of the Great Mystery. I admired our people from a distance, not knowing I was one of them. My heart broke for their sorrow and for what was lost...."


What She Saw and Heard:
"Have you learned nothing? You felt a kinship with the people you watched from a distance, even without understanding it. You carry our ways and our wisdom within you. They are as complete as your Spirit and as valuable as your heart, yet you cry for them. What you require is waiting for you. It has always been there. But you said you were Black Dutch, born in a foreign land. You denied....The most elementary instruction. What hangs on the wall in your home? What rests on the table, on the hearth? What sits beside the door?"


Standing Feather:
"Grandmother, I don't understand."


What She Saw and Heard:
"ANSWER!"
"There are pictures of your children and grandchildren; a chair carved from a single length of cedar; ears of dried Indian Corn; a painting of the hills and trees in winter; a staff with prayer ties; a raw crystal from the Earth; a length of finger-woven leather strips; a quilt and a rug made by some of you; a vase of pheasant feathers; a wood carving of Chief Dragging Canoe; a hand-woven basket. We chose our path deliberately. Times were hard. Our people, ourways, were in danger of annihilation. We were hunted like deer. There was no place we could go that was safe. Our land and our possessions were stripped from us. Homes burned, people killed. Many died. Our children were taken away to boarding schools and forbidden to speak our language. Sometimes we never saw them again. There were prohibitions against our ceremonies. Our very beliefs were outlawed. The Spirit of our people was dying. We had to find a way to preserve these things."


Standing Feather:
There was a pause and I felt the eyes upon me, burning through my soul.


What She Saw and Heard:
"We turned for help to Grandmother Corn, and she taught us how to survive. We studied her teachings. We practiced her ways. One tiny kernel of corn carries everything that is needed to nourish our people physically and Spiritually for all time, with enough left over to provide the same for an entire world. Within that one kernel, one seed, there is food, fuel, material to build homes, ceremonies, teaching, nourishment for the Spirit, wisdom....the greater part of what is needed for a people to survive. They way of the seed is the way of the corn, the single seed, carries the heart and the Spirit of the mother. When it is planted in the sweet Earth, it rests, then when the time is right, it comes forth. It grows. First the sprout, then the blade, then the cornstalk and the ears. It is the Mother reborn, with her heart and Spirit intact. We knew then that we must do as Grandmother Corn. We took all that was important to us and drew it deep within our Spirit. It could not be seen by the outside world, just as the Spirit of Grandmother Corn is not apparent in the seed. What appears to be is not always what is. We kept the seeds hidden and protected, knowing that when the time was right they would come forth and produce fruit. We trusted the ways of the Creator, the Earth Mother, and Grandmother Corn. Our seed, our Spirit, would live dormant but intact in the future generations. When the conditions were right, our people's ways would live again. Nothing would be lost. It was the only way we could survive.

The White Man didn't understand the way of the seed. He didn't know how the Earth Mother can encourage the seed to bring forth the mature plant and the ears of corn. He believed that he could force us to speak his language, wear his clothes, follow his beliefs, and our ways would die. The White Man would devour our people, make them part of himself, and we would be no more. We allowed him to believe that, and his own belief defeated his purpose. We wore the clothes, spoke the language, and appeared to follow his beliefs. We raised our children in his ways, not telling them of their heritage. But we had placed our Spirit and all that was important to us in our seed. Children, Grandchildren, and Great-Grandchildren carried it, unknown but safe. The White Man could not take it from us. Nothing could destroy it. We looked into the swirling mists of the future and we saw our Nation rise again from the many seeds we had planted. We saw the ceremonies and the traditions once again. We heard the stories, found the wisdom passed from generation to generation. We saw our baskets woven by other hands, out clothing covering other bodies, our songs sung by other voices. But they were us and we are them. we lived again, and all that was important to us flourished. It is the way of the corn.

The White Man is not the conqueror. He never was. He was defeated long ago, participated in his own defeat. The White Man has always lived in the outside world, always cherished his material things....money, houses, status. That is why his ways can't endure. Those things never mattered to us. We long ago learned the lesson of the corn. We carry with us what is important: Our Spirit. And our Spirit will never die, never be diminished. Our blood rushes through your body, our heart beats in your chest, and our thoughts fill your mind. You are our seed. You are Cherokee. Whatever else you are or may be, you are still of our people. You carry the Spirit and the hope of our Nation. Honor Us. Allow us to live again through you. Bring forth our traditions, our stories and ceremonies, our knowledge and beliefs and wisdom. They will serve you well. Never forget the teaching of Grandmother Corn. And know that through the centuries, when white men and women travel far from Mother Earth, when they do things that you can't even dream of now, they....your children, your grandchildren....will carry with them the seed we planted. And the seed of Grandmother Corn. They will grow corn in many places. And the Cherokee Nation will flourish, will survive to be reborn again and again in the hearts and minds, the Spirits, of it's children."


(The Grandmothers have given this story to Standing Feather. I would like to thank her for sharing it with us. Bird Clan Mother of the Southern Cherokee Nation).


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