Lakota Sioux Creation Myth
"In the beginning, prior to the creation of the Earth, the gods
resided in an undifferentiated celestial domain and humans lived in an
indescribably subterranean world devoid of culture.
Chief among the gods were Takushkanshkan ("something that moves"), the Sun, who
is married to the Moon, with whom he has one daughter, Wohpe ("falling star").
Old Man and Old Woman, whose daughter Ite ("face") is married to Wind, with whom
she has four sons, the Four Winds.
Among numerous other spirits, the most important is Inktomi ("spider"), the
devious trickster. Inktomi conspires with Old Man and Old Woman to increase
their daughter's status by arranging an affair between the Sun and Ite.
The discovery of the affair by the Sun's wife leads to a number of punishments
by Takuskanskan, who gives the Moon her own domain, and by separating her from
the Sun initiates the creation of time.
Old Man, Old Woman, and Ite are sent to Earth, but Ite is separated from the
Wind, her husband, who, along with the Four Winds and a fifth wind presumed to
be the child of the adulterous affair, establishes space.
The daughter of the Sun and the Moon, Wohpe, also falls to earth and later
resides with the South Wind, the paragon of Lakota maleness, and the two adopt
the fifth wind, called Wamniomni ("whirlwind").
The Emergence
Alone on the newly formed Earth, some of the gods become bored, and Ite prevails
upon Inktomi to find her people, the Buffalo Nation. In the form of a wolf,
Inktomi travels beneath the earth and discovers a village of humans. Inktomi
tells them about the wonders of the Earth and convinces one man, Tokahe ("the
first"), to accompany him to the surface.
Tokahe does so and upon reaching the surface through a cave (Wind Cave in the
Black Hills), marvels at the green grass and blue sky. Inktomi and Ite
introduces Tokahe to buffalo meat and soup and shows him tipis, clothing, and
hunting utensils.
Tokahe returns to the subterranean village and appeals to six other men and
their families to travel with him to the Earth's surface.
When they arrive, they discover that Inktomi has deceived them: buffalo are
scarce, the weather has turned bad, and they find themselves starving. Unable to
return to their home, but armed with a new knowledge about the world, they
survive to become the founders of the Seven Fireplaces."
http://www.crystalinks.com/sioux.html
The Black Hills (in western South Dakota, USA)
About 20 miles to the west of the Pine Ridge Reservation is the Black Hills
(Paha Sapa), a sacred, spiritual and hallowed spot to the Lakota Sioux. After
the treaty was signed in 1868, the Sioux were promised the Black Hills forever.
But after gold was discovered the promise was broken by the US Government. Now,
to many Indians, the Black Hills are tarnished with the heads of five dead
presidents and has become a veritable "Coney Island."
"We Indians saw it as a beautiful place where we can go and pray and to receive
something, perhaps, that is better than the gold that is in there. A lot of our
creation stories and a lot of our Indian medicine came from the Black Hills.
-Dog Eagle"
http://www.historychannel.com/exhibits/sioux/conflict.html