This is a story told by the northernmost Balazarings who harvest
wild rice from the shores of the Elf Sea. This story was collected by a Irripi Ontor
scholar who studied the area which accounts for the annotations.
You know that the Wild Mother1, She who
we honor so that She will not take notice of us has, many, many animal daughters.
There is the bison daughter, the hare daughter, the squirrel daughter2
who we also hope does not notice us yet always does, the grass snake daughter, the eagle
daughter, etc. You also know that she has many plant daughters as well, the beechnut
daughter, the cattail daughter, etc.3. The people who
live in the high places4 love best the grain daughter but we
are the only Balazarings who know the best daughter, the Rice Daughter.
All of the daughters require that we take something from them in
order to live. The animal daughters' children we slay, saying prayers of
thanksfulness to them before, during and after the act of slaying them. The plant
daughters we also pray to before, during and after we harvest them. Some we must
kill to benefit from, like the garlic daughter, others we must pick the fruit and nuts
from, in order to eat. The people from the high places must go out into the fields
and bend their backs in toil, using sharp knives to cut the heads from the grain
daughters' children. This is hard work for them and they cry while they do it as
they mourn the death of the grain daughters' children. And their tears soak into the
Wild Mother's breast as an offering and every year she hears their sacrifice and the grain
daughter is allowed to let her children come back. So they are glad but the work is
still hard.
The Rice Daughter is the best daughter though as we do not cry when
we harvest her bounty. We take our boats5 and we take
our baskets and sticks and we row out onto the Mother of Waters5and
we sing songs of praise to the Rice Daughter as bending them over our baskets we beat her
children so that the ripe grain falls into them. And so we are fed and we are
thankful and we do not have to kill the Rice Daughter's children in order to eat and we do
not have to work so hard to harvest their bounty as do the people in the high places.
And every year her children bear us their grain, grateful that we only beat them
instead of having to cut their heads off. And that my children is why the Rice
Daughter is the best daughter.
Footnotes
1. The Balazarings fear and worship the Wild Mother.
Worship for the gifts they receive from Her many children, and fear because she
does not like people and her wrath is dreadful.
2. The Squirrel is the Balazaring trickster.
3. Traditionally the storyteller goes on and on
until he or she runs out of daughters. In one telling I heard the list went on
for the length of time it took a log the thickness of my wrist to burn through. I
have shortened the list here for brevity's sake.
4. And so on in a similar fashion to the list of
animal daughters.
5. The citadel dwelling Balazarings. The most
traditional storytellers will spit when they mention the citadel dwellers because of their
disdain for their lifestyle.
6. Primitive log dugouts made of flattened logs that
have crude boards attached to their sides to sit in. The term boat is rather too
flattering I think for the reality.
7. The Elf Sea. The northern Balazarings are
the only group who use "boats" and they are very proud of this fact.
This page last modified March 27, 2002
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