- In the Keres culture of Acoma Pueblo,
the cacique bore the title of Inside Chief, signifying his power within
the village. Beyond the pueblo walls, power passed to one or more war leaders,
or Outside Chiefs, who were responsible for constructing defenses and keeping
watch against invaders.
- say the earth was formed when the
Great Father Uchtsiti, Lord of the Sun, hurled a clot of his own blood
into the heavens. In the soil of this new world, he set germinating the
souls of two sisters, the Corn Mothers, who were raised to maturity by
a spirit called Thought Woman. When the time was ripe, Thought Woman gave
the two sisters baskets filled with seeds and showed them the way to the
earth's surface. Corn was the first thing they planted. They learned to
cultivate and harvest it, to grind and cook it, and to make daily offerings
of cornmeal and pollen to their father, Uchtsiti. These lessons the Acomans
would practice each day of their lives
.
- Drought in the 1100's to the 1200's
was caused, as explained by Acoma storytellers, who say that one night
the Horned Water Serpent, spirit of rain and fertility, abruptly left his
people. No amount of prayer, no charms or dances of the rain priests, would
bring him back. Unable to survive without their snake god, the people followed
his trail until it reached a river. There they established a new home.
- The people of Acoma-so the elders
recounted-once followed the Salt Mother's (an elderly matriarch who gave
herself freely to anyone who sought her) trail far into the wilderness,
trekking past dry gulches and sage-purpled hills for days on end. Finally
they reached a large salt lake. "This is my home," the Salt Mother
declared. After that, all who traveled there read their fortune in the
water, and if ailing in body they were made well again.
- When the column of Spanish troops
came into view on a cold winter afternoon-January 21, 1599, by European
reckoning-the fighting men of Acoma fanned out from their village to guard
the edge of the mesa. As the Spaniards drew closer, the defenders unleashed
a barrage of insults, rocks, and arrows from more than 300 feet above.
Just seven weeks earlier, a party of Spanish soldiers seeking food had
been treated in a friendly manner until their demands turned aggressive-and
provoked a furious reaction. When it was over, almost all the intruders
were dead, including their commander, Juan de Zaldivar, nephew of the military
govenror of New Mexico, Juan de Onate
Resolved to make an example of Acoma,
Onate dispatched 70 of his best men under the command of Vicente de Zaldivar...These
were the troops approaching the seemingly impregnable "Sky City"
that January afternoon, and with them arrived a harsh new reality. Over
the next 3 days the Spaniards fought their way to the top of the mesa,
where they rolled out a fearsome new weapon-a cannon that spewed thundrous
blasts of small stones, tearing flesh and shattering bones. The battle
became a massacre. As many as 800 Acomans soon lay dead in the rubble of
their ruined city. Some 500 survivors were herded into dismal captivity:
all males over the age of 12 were condemned to 20 years' servitude; those
over 25 were also sentenced to have one foot cut off. In time, some of
the Acomans managed to escape and made their way home, there to begin the
long process of rebuilding. The Sky City has been continuously inhabited
since then, and never again has it fallen to an invader.
- The Acoma 16th century pueblo-settlement
still survives west of the Rio Grande in midwest New Mexico.