
A long time ago, a really long time when the world was still freshly made,
Unktehi the water monster fought the people and caused a great flood. Perhaps
the Great Spirit, Wakan Tanka, was angry with us for some reason. Maybe he let
Unktehi win out because he wanted to make a better kind of human being.
Well, the waters got higher and higher. Finally everything was flooded except
the hill next to the place where the sacred red pipestone quarry lies today. The
people climbed up there to save themselves, but it was no use. The water swept
over that hill. Waves tumbled the rocks and pinnacles, smashing them down on the
people. Everyone was killed, and all the blood jelled, making one big pool.
The blood turned to pipestone and created the pipestone quarry, the grave of
those ancient ones. That's why the pipe, made of that red rock, is so sacred to
us. Its red bowl is the flesh and blood of our ancestors, its stem is the
backbone of those people long dead, the smoke rising from it is their breath. I
tell you, that pipe, that *chanunpa*, comes alive when used in a ceremony; you
can feel power flowing from it.
Unktehi, the big water monster, was also turned to stone. Maybe Tunkshila, the
Grandfather Spirit, punished her for making the flood. Her bones are in the
Badlands now. Her back forms a long high ridge, and you can see her vertebrae
sticking out in a great row of red and yellow rocks. I have seen them. It scared
me when I was on that ridge, for I felt Unktehi. She was moving beneath me,
wanting to topple me.
Well, when all the people were killed so many generations ago, one girl survived,
a beautiful girl. It happened this way: When the water swept over the hill where
they tried to seek refuge, a big spotted eagle, Wanblee Galeshka, swept down and
let her grab hold of his feet. With her hanging on, he flew to the top of a tall
tree which stood on the highest stone pinnacle in the Black Hills. That was the
eagle's home. It became the only spot not covered with water.
If the people had gotten up there, they would have survived, but it was a
needle-like rock as smooth and steep as the skyscrapers you got now in the big
cities. My grandfather told me that maybe the rock was not in the Black Hills;
maybe it was the Devil's Tower, as white men call it , that place in Wyoming.
Both places are sacred. Wanblee kept that beautiful girl with him and made her
his wife. There was a closer connection then between people and animals, so he
could do it. The eagle's wife became pregnant and bore him twins, a boy and a
girl. She was happy, and said:
"Now we will have people again. *Washtay*, it is good."
The children were born right there, on top of that cliff. When the waters
finally subsided, Wanblee helped the children and their mother down from his
rock and put them on the earth, telling them: Be a nation, become a great Nation
– the Lakota Oyate."
The boy and girl grew up. He was the only man on earth, she the only woman of
child-bearing age. They married; they had children. A nation was born.
So we are descended from the eagle. We are an eagle nation. That is good,
something to be proud of, because the eagle is the wisest of birds. He is the
Great Spirit's messenger; he is a great warrior. That is why we always wore the
eagle plume, and still wear it. We are a great nation.
It is I, Lame Deer, who said this.
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Myth of the
Lakota-Sioux - free of traditional myth of the native American

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