THE WARRIOR MAIDEN~~(ONEIDA)
Long ago, in the days before the white man came to this continent, the
Oneida people were beset by their old enemies the Mingos. The invaders
attacked the Oneida villages, stormed their palisades, set fire to their
long- houses, laid waste to the land, destroyed the corn fields, killed
men and boys, and abducted the women and girls. There was no resisting the
Mingos, because their numbers were like grains of sand, like the pebbles
on a lake shore............................................ ~ The
villages of the Oneida lay deserted, their fields untended, the ruins of
their homes blackened. The men had taken the women, the old people, the
young boys and girls into the deep forests, hiding them in secret places
among rocks, in caves, and on desolate mountains. The Mingos searched for
victims, but could not find them. The Great Spirit himself helped the
people to hide and shielded their places of refuge from the eyes of their
enemies................................................. ~ Thus
the Oneida people were safe in their inaccessible retreats, but they were
also starving. Whatever food they had been able to save was soon eaten up.
They could either stay in their hideouts and starve, or leave them in
search of food and be discovered by their enemies. The warrior chiefs and
sachems met in council but could find no other way
out...................................... ~ Then a young girl
stepped forward in the council and said that the good spirits had sent her
a dream showing her how to save the Oneida. Her name was Aliquipiso and
she was not afraid to give her life for her people. ~ Aliquipiso
told the council: "We are hiding on top of a high, sheer cliff. Above us
the mountain is covered with boulders and heavy sharp rocks. You warriors
wait and watch here. I will go to the Mingos and lead them to the spot at
the foot of the cliff where they all can be crushed and
destroyed.".......................... ~ The chiefs, sachems, and
warriors listened to the girl with wonder. The oldest of the sachems
honored her, putting around her neck strands of white and purple wampum.
"The Great Spirit has blessed you, Aliquipiso, with courage and wisdom,"
he said. "We, your people, will always remember
you."...................... ~ During the night the girl went down
from the heights into the forest below by way of a secret path. In the
morning, Mingo scouts found her wandering through the woods as if lost.
They took her to the burned and abandoned village where she once lived,
for this was now their camp. They brought her before their warrior chief.
"Show us the way to the place where your people are hiding," he commanded.
"If you do this, we shall adopt you into our tribe. Then you will belong
to the victors. If you refuse, you will be tortured at the stake."...
~ "I will not show you the way," answered Aliquipiso. The Mingos
tied her to a blackened tree stump and tortured her with fire, as was
their custom. Even the wild Mingos were astonished at the courage with
which the girl endured it. At last Aliquipiso pretended to weaken under
the pain. "Don't hurt me anymore," she cried, "I'll show you the
way!".......................................... ~ As night came
again, the Mingos bound Aliquipiso's hands behind her back and pushed her
ahead of them. Don't try to betray us, they warned. "At any sign of it, we
will kill you." Flanked by two warriors with weapons poised, Aliquipiso
led the way. Soundlessly the mass of Mingo warriors crept behind her
through thickets and rough places, over winding paths and deer trails,
until at last they arrived beneath the towering cliff of sheer granite.
"Come closer, Mingo warriors," she said in a low voice, gather around me.
The Oneidas above are sleeping, thinking themselves safe. I'll show you
the secret passage that leads upwards..................... ~ The
Mingos crowded together in a dense mass with the girl in the center. Then
Aliquipiso uttered a piercing cry: "Oneidas! The enemies are here! Destroy
them!" ~ The Mingos scarcely had time to strike her down before
huge boulders and rocks rained upon them. There was no escape; it seemed
as if the angry mountain itself were falling on them, crushing them,
burying them. So many Mingo warriors died there that the other bands of
Mingo invaders stopped pillaging the Oneida country and retired to their
own hunting grounds. They never again made war on Aliquipiso's
people............... ~ The story of the girl's courage and
self-sacrifice was told and retold wherever Oneidas sat around their
campfires, and will be handed down from grandparent to grandchild as long
as there are Oneidas on this earth. ~ The Great Mystery changed
Aliquipiso's hair into woodbine, which the Oneidas call "running hairs"
and which is a good medicine. From her body sprang honeysuckle, which to
this day is known among her people as the "blood of brave women." ~ ~
THE END................................................ Told By: LtL ANT
\ |