This section contains 2,344 words (approx. 8 pages at 300 words per page) |
by David Rich Lewis
About the author: David Rich Lewis is an associate professor of history at Utah State University in Logan.
Traditionally Native Americans have had an immediate and reciprocal relationship with their natural environments. At contact, they lived in relatively small groups close to the earth. They defined themselves by the land and sacred places, and recognized a unity in their physical and spiritual universe. Their cosmologies connected them with all animate and inanimate beings. Indians moved in a sentient world, managing its bounty and diversity carefully lest they upset the spirit "bosses," who balanced and endowed that world. They acknowledged the power of Mother Earth and the mutual obligation between hunter and hunted as coequals. Indians celebrated the earth's annual rebirth and offered thanks for her first fruits. They ritually addressed and prepared the animals...
This section contains 2,344 words (approx. 8 pages at 300 words per page) |