- GERONIMO
Part III
- Early Life
- I was born in No-doyohn
Canon, Arizona, June, 1829.
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- In that country which
lies around the head waters of the Gila River I was reared. This
range was our fatherland; among these mountains our wigwams were
hidden; the scattered valleys contained our fields; the
boundless prairies, stretching away on every side, were our
pastures; the rocky caverns were our burying places.
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I was fourth in a family of eight children-- four boys and four
girls. Of that family, only myself, my brother, Porico, and my
sister, Nah-da-ste, are yet alive. We are held as prisoners of
war in this Military Reservation (Fort Sill).
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- As a babe I rolled on
the dirt floor of my father's tepee, hung in my tsoch (Apache
name for cradle) at my mother's back, or suspended from the
bough of a tree. I was warmed by the sun, rocked by the winds,
and sheltered by the trees as other Indian babes.
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- When a child my mother
taught me the legends of our people; taught me of the sun and
sky, the moon and stars, the clouds and storms. She also taught
me to kneel and pray to Usen for strength, health, wisdom, and
protection. We never prayed against any person, but if we had
aught against any individual we ourselves took vengeance. We
were taught that Usen does not care for the petty quarrels of
men.
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- My father had often
told me of the brave deeds of our warriors, of the pleasures of
the chase, and the glories of the war path.
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With my brothers and sisters I played about my father's
home. Sometimes we played at hide-and-seek among the
rocks and pines; sometimes we loitered in the shade of
the cottonwood trees or sought the shudock (a kind of
wild cherry) while our parents worked in the field.
Sometimes we played that we were warriors. We would
practice stealing upon some object that represented an
enemy, and in our childish imitation often perform the
feats of war. Sometimes we would hide away from our
mother to see if she could find us, and often when thus
concealed go to sleep and perhaps remain hidden for many
hours.
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- When we were old enough
to be of real service we went to the field with our
parents: not to play, but to toil. When the crops were
to be planted we broke the ground with wooden hoes. We
planted the corn in straight rows, the beans among the
corn, and the melons and pumpkins in irregular order
over the field. We cultivated these crops as there was
need.
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- Our field usually
contained about two acres of ground. The fields were
never fenced. It was common for many families to
cultivate land in the same valley and share the burden
of protecting the growing crops from destruction by the
ponies of the tribe, or by deer and other wild animals.
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- Melons were gathered as
they were consumed. In the autumn pumpkins and beans
were gathered and placed in bags or baskets; ears of
corn were tied together by the husks, and then the
harvest was carried on the backs of ponies up to our
homes. Here the corn was shelled, and all the harvest
stored away in caves or other secluded places to be used
in winter.
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- We never fed corn to our
ponies, but if we kept them up in the winter time we
gave them fodder to eat. We had no cattle or other
domestic animals except our dogs and ponies.
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- We did not cultivate
tobacco, but found it growing wild. This we cut and
cured in autumn, but if the supply ran out the leaves
from the stalks left standing served our purpose. All
Indians smoked---men and women. No boy was allowed to
smoke until he had hunted alone and killed large
game--wolves and bears. Unmarried women were not
prohibited from smoking, but were considered immodest if
they did so. Nearly all matrons smoked.
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- Besides grinding the
corn (by hand with stone mortars and pestles) for bread,
we sometimes crushed it and soaked it, and after it had
fermented made from this juice a tis-win, which
had the power of intoxication, and was very highly
prized by the Indians. This work was done by the squaws
and children. When berries or nuts were to be gathered
the small children and the squaws would go in parties to
hunt them, and sometimes stay all day. When they went
any great distance from camp they took ponies to carry
the baskets
- I frequently went with
these parties, and upon one of these excursions a woman
named Cho-ko-le got lost from the party and was riding
her pony through a thicket in search of her friends. Her
little dog was following as she slowly made her way
through the thick underbrush and pine trees. All at once
a grizzly bear rose in her path and attacked the pony.
She jumped off and her pony escaped, but the bear
attacked her, so she fought him the best she could with
her knife. Her little dog, by snapping at the bear's
heels and distracting his attention from the woman,
enabled her for some time to keep pretty well out of his
reach. Finally the grizzly struck her over the head,
tearing off almost her whole scalp. She fell, but did
not lose consciousness, and while prostrate struck him
four good licks with her knife, and he retreated. After
he had gone she replaced her torn scalp and bound it up
as best she could, then she turned deathly sick and had
to lie down. That night her pony came into camp with his
load of nuts and berries, but no rider. The Indians
hunted for her, but did not find her until the second
day. They carried her home, and under the treatment of
their medicine men all her wounds were healed.
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- The Indians knew what
herbs to use for medicine, how to prepare them, and how
to give the medicine. This they had been taught by Usen
in the beginning, and each succeeding generation had men
who were skilled in the art of healing.
In gathering the herbs, in preparing them, and in administering
the medicine, as much faith was held in prayer as in the actual
effect of the medicine. Usually about eight persons worked
together to make medicine, and there were forms of prayer and
incantations to attend each stage of the process. Four attended
to the incantations and four to the preparation of the herbs.
Some of the Indians
were skilled in cutting out bullets, arrow heads, and other
missiles with which warriors were wounded. I myself have done
much of this, using a common dirk or butcher knife.
Small children wore
very little clothing in winter and none in the summer. Women
usually wore a primitive skirt, which consisted of a piece of
cotton cloth fastened about the waist, and extending to the
knees. Men wore breach clothes and moccasins. In winter they had
shirts and legging in addition.
Frequently when the
tribe was in camp a number of boys and girls, by agreement,
would steal away and meet at a place several miles distant,
where they could play all day free from tasks. They were never
punished for these frolics; but if their hiding places were
discovered they were ridiculed.
Text prepared by Jeroen Daanen, Peter Meindertsma, Else-Kirsten
de Schiffart, Elfie Theijs and Carlo Tinschert for From Revolution to Reconstruction
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