Tsayonah's Tales and Traditions
This page is designed to be a collection site for traditions and stories posted in full context so they may more easily fulfill the three purposes of entertaining, teaching and healing. For example, the Aniyunwiya have several stories about bears. A white who thinks of a bear often thinks of a large shaggy creature that has claws and sharp teeth, lives in the woods, eats berries off bushes, fishes for salmon, hibernates all winter and is often used for a rug. The Aniyunwiya who thinks of a bear does so within a culture that inculdes the SPIRITUAL context and it is this that will be the focus of this page.If your visit does not yield new story-links, please return again soon. Material will be processed and added as soon as possible. Note: some of this material is traditional and therefore not copywritten while some is copywritten and used by permission of the author. Please use all this material with respect. If the author's address appears on the story, poem or essay, please contact them directly before sharing their work. You may also contact me by using the convenient form below. When you do copy any of these works, be sure you do not change anything, not a word or punctuation mark. Wado.
Tsayonah
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Tsayonah (Three Bears) and Soquili Wodi (Red War Horse)
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Changes last made on: Sun July 13, 1997 12:28pm