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Kachinas
The
Hopi Indians have lived in the same area of the Southwest since before
the time of Columbus. They lived in what is now Arizona. They lived on
desert land at the foot of the mesas.
The Hopi Indians believed
in many gods. In the Hopi religion, everything in the world has two forms:
the visible object and the spirit form. The Hopi used Kachinas to talk
to their gods. . Kachina dolls are reincarnations of the spirit form returned
from the clouds. The men of the Hopi tribe have more contact with the
supernatural world than the women. "Tihu", or dolls in the Anglicized
form, are given by the men who impersonate kachinas to women in their
family in order to increase their connection to the spiritual world. Tihu
are definitely not playthings, but are a part of the spirit of the kachina.
When given to children, Kachina dolls are a part of their religious training.
Kachinas were Hopi spirits or gods which
lived within the mountains. Hopi dancers would dress like Kachinas to
represent, or stand for, the gods. Wooden Kachina dolls were made to teach
the children about the gods. The Hopi believed the Kachina costume gave
magic power to the man who wore it. They felt a man needed magic to talk
to the gods. Hopi Kachinas talked to the gods by singing and dancing.
In order to carve a Katsina, a Hopi person
must belong to a certain society and has earned the right to carve the
doll. In fact unless one belongs to the Hopi society which allows Hopis
to carve, anyone, even a Hopi who carves a so called Kachina doll who
is not a member of the particular society is making a carving without
the proper spiritual authority which renders that carving an evil thing
tantamount to a voodoo doll.
Just the mere word "Kachina"
conjures up vivid images of masked figures dancing and chanting on ancient
mesas. Well it should, because that is part of what a Kachina does. A
Kachina is a God to the Hopi and Pueblo tribes. The Hopi have over 300
different Kachinas which are part of their daily culture. The actual "Gods"
are believed to live high atop the San Francisco peaks outside of Flagstaff,
Arizona, and near the Hopi Reservation. Each God has a job to do and a
lesson to teach. The Kachinas arrive at the Hopi mesas in February in
the form of a Hopi man dressed in traditional attire to represent a certain
Kachina. The arrival of the Kachinas in February for Powamu or the Bean
Dance starts the cycle of Kachina appearances. They appear regularly through
harvest time in the fall ending with the Niman Dance or Home Dance, whence
the Kachinas return to their ancestral home on the San Francisco peaks.
In
actuality, there are three "forms" of kachinas; first there
are the mystical deities who reside high upon the San Francisco peaks.
Second, there are the masked dancers and performers who are actually men
of the tribe portraying their Gods in their ceremonies, and third there
are kachina dolls or carvings. These were originally carved to be passed
on to the children by a kachina during a ceremony as a remembrance and
teaching aid. Each Kachina has an important role in the daily lives of
the Pueblo people. Ogres teach discipline, Chief Kachinas teach wisdom
and have powers comparable to that of a religious elder. There are Kachina
women, who with the exception of only one Kachina, the Pachavuin Mana,
are portrayed strictly by the men of the villages. The "women"
teach values such as a mother would. There are cloud spirits called Shalakos
who bring rain. There are also clown Kachinas whose primary function is
one of amusement during pauses in Kachina dancing or as leavening for
the seriousness of a major ceremony. "Borrowed" Kachinas are
deities which have traveled from one Pueblo to another at an earlier date
and have since been "adopted" by that Pueblo.
As mentioned earlier, the
Kachina "doll" was originally carved as a gift and learning
tool for the child to learn about its many Gods. Today they are highly
sought after sculptures in wood, but are still carved traditionally by
hand, out of cottonwood root, and painted with earth tone colors as well
as rainbow hues. The early Kachinas were quite simple in appearance, entirely
of wood, with simple or little adornment. The 1950's through the 1980's
brought changes in appearances with feathers, fur, shells, leather, yarn
etc. being popular accents.
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