Manataka American Indian Council
HERBS, PREGNANCY
and CHILDBIRTH
To
Speed Childbirth:
Partridgeberry The Cherokee used a tea of the boiled leaves.
Frequent doses of the tea were taken in the few weeks preceding the
expected date of delivery.
Blue Cohosh To promote a rapid delivery, an infusion of the
root in warm water was drunk as a tea for several weeks prior to the
expected delivery date.
To
Speed Delivery of the Placenta:
American Licorice A tea was made from the
boiled roots.
Broom Snakeweed Navajo women drank a tea of the whole plant to
promote the expulsion of the placenta.
To Stop Post-Partum
Hemorrhage:
Buckwheat Hopi women were given an infusion of the entire
buckwheat plant to stop bleeding.
Black Western Chokecherry Arikara women were given a drink of the berry juice to stop bleeding.
Smooth Upland
Sumac
The Omahas boiled the smooth upland sumac fruits and applied
the liquid as an external wash to stop bleeding.
To Relieve the Pain of
Childbirth:
Wild Black Cherry Cherokee women were given a tea of
the inner bark to relieve pain in the early stages.
Cotton The Alabama and Koasati tribes made a tea of the roots of the plant to relieve the pains of labor.
Milkweed Navajo women drank a tea prepared of the whole plant after childbirth.
Clay The purple, yellow and blue clay
surrounding crystals was sifted to remove tiny crystals and ground
into a powder, made wet into a paste and rolled into small
marble-size balls. One clay ball was consumed each day
of pregnancy to promote good health.
CAUTION!
If you
are pregnant, the herbs listed below have the potential to cause
uterine contractions:
| Black Cohosh | Fenugreek | Parsley |
| Black Walnut | Ginger | Peppermint |
| Blessed Thistle | Ginseng | Red Clover |
| Catnip | Goldenseal | Rhubarb Root |
| Cat's Claw | Horsetail | Rosemary |
| Cascara Segrada | Jumper | Sarsaparilla |
| Damiana | Lavender | Thyme |
| Devil's Claw | Licorice | Uva Ursi |
| Dong Quai | Lobelia | White Willow |
| Fennel | Myrrh | Wood Betony |
Good
Pregnancy Herbs
Rasbery Leaf Strengthens uterine
muscles. Soothes upset stomach and alleviates mild
morning sickness. It increases breast milk and after
birth, it slows bleeding and helps the uterus to gain
tone. Contains easily digested calcium, magnesium and
iron.
Nettle Leaves A powerhouse of nutrition, with iron and calcium. It has folic acid that is so important during pregnancy. Can strengthen veins, kidneys and adrenals. It can also help to increase breast milk.
Oatstraw Provides a relaxing sleep after nervous exhaustion.
Dandelion Root Tea Improves digestion, relieves
constipation and water retention. High in calcium and
iron. A good diuretic that does not deplete
potassium. Good for the liver.
Pregnancy Tea and
Baths
Sweet Dreams Tea Mix equal parts of rose
buds, muswort, sweet melilot and peppermint.
Baby Bath for Mom Lavender, peppermint, strawberry leaf, raspberry leaf, orange petals, orange peel, lemon grass, chamomile, rosemary, sage, celandine, rosehips and rose buds. Mix equal parts in a large bowl, add water, heat and let cool. Strain off and pour liquid into a storage container. You may also add individual herbs to bath water or purchase products at a health food store with these ingredients.
Sore Feet
Bath
Comfrey, rosemary, goldenseal, marigold, chamomile, and
tea tree oil. Prepare same as above.
The Cherokee have always been an agricultural people
and their old country is a region of luxuriant flora, with
tall trees and tangled undergrowth on the slopes and ridges,
and myriad bright-tinted blossoms and sweet wild fruits along
the running streams.
The
vegetable kingdom consequently holds a far more important
place in the mythology and ceremonial of the tribe than it
does among the Indians of the treeless plains and arid sage
deserts of the West, most of the beliefs and customs in this
connection centering around the practice of medicine, as
expounded by the priests and doctors in every settlement.
In
general it is held that the plant world is friendly to the
human species, and constantly at the willing service of the
doctors to counteract the jealous hostility of the
animals. The sacred formulas contain many curious
instructions for the gathering and preparation of the
medicinal roots and barks, which are selected chiefly in
accordance with the theory of correspondences. The
Indians are close observers, and some of their plant names are
peculiarly apt.
Thus
the
mistletoe,
which never grows alone, but is found always with its roots
fixed in the bark of some supporting tree or shrub from which
it draws its sustenance, is called by a name which signifies
"4 it is married" (uda'`lï).
The
violet is
still called by a plural name, dinda'skwate'skï, "they pull
each other's heads off," showing that the Cherokee children
have discovered a game not unknown among our own. The
bear-grass
(Eryngium), with
its long, slender leaves like diminutive blades of corn, is
called sälikwâ'yï, "greensnake," and the larger grass known as
Job's
tears, on account
of its glossy, rounded grains, which the Indian children use
for necklaces, is called sel-utsï' "the mother of corn."
The black-eyed Susan
(Rudbeckia) of
our children is the "deer-eye" (a`wï'-aktä') of the Cherokee,
and our lady-slipper
(Cypripedium) is their "partridge moccasin" (gügwë'-ulasu'la).
The
May-apple
(Podophyllum),
with its um rella-shaped top, is calledu'niskwetu'`gï, meaning
"it wears a hat," while the
white puff fall fungus
is näkwïsï'-usdi' "the little
star," and the common rock lichen
bears the musical, if rather unpoetic, name of
utsäle'ta, "pot scrapings."
Some plants are named from their real or supposed place
in the animal economy, as the
wild rose, tsist-uni'gistï, "the rabbits eat
it"--referring to the seed berries--and the
shield fern
(Aspidum), yân-utse'stû, "the
bear lies on it." Others, again, are named from their domestic
or ceremonial uses, as the
fleabane (Erigeron canadense), called
atsil'-sûñ`tï, "fire maker," because its dried stalk was
anciently employed in producing fire by friction, and the
bugle weed
(Lycopus
virginicus), known as aniwani'skï, "talkers," because the
chewed root, given to children to swallow, or rubbed upon
their lips, is supposed to endow them with the gift of
eloquence.
Some few, in addition to the ordinary
term in use among the common people, have a sacred or symbolic
name, used only by the priests and doctors in the prayer
formulas. Thus ginseng, or "sang," as it is more often called by the
white mountaineers, is known to the laity â'talï-gûlï',
the mountain climber," but is addressed in the formulas as
Yûñwï Usdi', "Little Man," hileselu (corn) is invoked under the name of Agawe'la, "The Old
Woman."
One or
two plant names have their origin in myths, as, for instance,
that of Prosartes
lanuginosa, which
bears the curious name of walâs'-unûl'stï, "frogs fight with
it," from a story that in the long ago--hïlahi'yu--two
quarrelsome frogs once fought a duel, using its stalks as
lances. In the locative form this was the name of a former
Cherokee settlement in Georgia, called by the whites
Fighting-town, from a misapprehension of the meaning of
the word. Of the white clover, the Cherokee say that "it follows the white
man."
The
division of trees into evergreen and deciduous is accounted
for by a myth, related elsewhere, according to which the
loss of their leaves in winter time is a punishment visited
upon the latter for their failure to endure an ordeal to the
end.
With
the Cherokee, as with nearly all other tribes east and west,
the cedar
is held sacred
above other trees. The reasons for this reverence are
easily found in its ever-living green, its balsamic fragrance,
and the beautiful color of its fine-grained wood, unwarping
and practically undecaying. The small green twigs are
thrown upon the fire as incense in certain ceremonies,
particularly to counteract the effect of asgina dreams, as it
is believed that the anisgi'na or malevolent ghosts can not
endure the smell; but the wood itself is considered too sacred
to be used as fuel. In the war dance, the scalp trophies,
stretched on small hoops, were hung upon a cedar sapling
trimmed and decorated for the occasion.
According to a myth the red color comes
originally from the blood of a wicked magician, whose severed
head was hung at the top of a tall cedar. The story is
now almost forgotten, but it was probably nearly identical
with one still existing among the Yuchi, former neighbors of
the Cherokee.
According to the Yuchi myth, a malevolent magician
disturbed the daily course of the sun until at last two brave
warriors sought him out and killed him in his cave. They
cut off his head and brought it home with them to show to the
people, but it continued still alive. To make it die
they were advised to tie it in the topmost branches of a
tree. This they did, trying one tree after another, but
each morning the head was found at the foot of the tree and
still alive. At last they tied it in a cedar, and there
the head remained until it was dead. While the blood
slowly trickling down along the trunk gave the wood its red
color, and henceforth the cedar was a "medicine" tree.
The
linn or basswood
(Tilia) is believed never to be struck by lightning. and the
hunter caught in one of the frequent thunderstorms of the
southern mountains always seeks its shelter. From its stringy
bark are twisted the hunting belts worn about the waist.
Sour
wood (Oxydendrum)
is used by the hunters for barbecue sticks to roast meat
before the fire, on account of the acid flavor of the wood,
which they believe to be thus communicated to the meat.
Spoons and combs are also carved from the wood, but it is
never burned, from all idea that lye made from the ashes will
bring sickness to those who use it in preparing their
food. It is said also that if one should sleep beside a
fire containing sour wood sticks, the sour wood "will barbecue
him." which may possibly mean that he will have hot or
feverish pains thereafter.
The
laurel, in
its two varieties, large and small
Rhododendron and
Kalmia, or "ivy"), is much used for spoons and
combs, on account of its close grain, as also in medicine, but
is never burned, as it is believed that this would bring on
cold weather, and would furthermore destroy the medicinal
virtues of the whole species. The reason given is that
the leaves, when burning, make a hissing sound suggestive of
winter winds and falling snow. When the doctor is making
up a compound in which any part of the laurel is an
ingredient, great precautions are taken to prevent any of the
leaves or twigs being swept into the fire, as this would
render the decoction worthless.
Sassafras
is not used as fuel among the Cherokee, as also among their
white neighbors, perhaps for the practical reason that it is
apt to pop out of the fire when heated and might thus set the
house on fire.
Pounded
walnut bark is thrown into small streams to stupefy the fish, so
that they may be easily dipped out in baskets as they float on
the surface of the water. Should a pregnant woman wade
into the stream at the time, its effect is nullified, unless
she has first taken the precaution to tie a strip of the bark
about her toe.
A fire
of post-oak
and the wood of
the telûn'lätï or summer grape
(Vitis æstivalis) is believed to bring a spell of warm
weather even in the coldest winter season.
Mysterious properties attach to the wood of a tree
which has been struck by lightning, especially when the tree
itself still lives, and such wood enters largely into the
secret compounds of the conjurers. An ordinary person of
the laity will not touch it, for fear of having cracks come
upon his hands and feet, nor is it burned for fuel, for fear
that lye made from the ashes will cause consumption. In
preparing ballplayers, for the contest, the medicine-man
sometimes burns splinters of it to coal, which he gives to the
players to paint themselves with in order that they may be
able to strike their opponents with all the force of a
thunderbolt.
Bark
or wood from a tree struck by lightning, but still green, is
beaten up and put into the water in which seeds are soaked
before planting, to insure a good crop, but, on the other and,
any lightning-struck wood thrown into the field will cause the
crop to wither, and it is believed to have a bad effect even
to go into the field immediately after having been near such a
tree.
Among
all vegetables the one which holds first place in the
household economy and ceremonial observance of the tribe is
selu, "corn,"
invoked in the sacred formulas under the name of Agawe'la,
"The Old Woman," in allusion to its mythic origin from the
blood of an old woman killed by her disobedient sons, "Kana'tï
and Selu". In former times the annual thanksgiving
ceremony of the Green-corn dance, preliminary to eating the
first new corn, was the most solemn tribal function, a
propitiation and expiation for the sins of the past year, an
amnesty for public criminals, and a prayer for happiness and
prosperity for the year to come.
Only those who had properly prepared themselves by
prayer, fasting, and purification were allowed to take part in
this ceremony, and no one dared to taste the new corn until
then. Seven ears from the last year's crop were always
put carefully aside, in order to attract the corn until the
new crop was ripened and it was time for the dance, when they
were eaten with the rest. In eating the first new corn after
the Green Corn dance, care was observed not to blow upon it to
cool it, for fear of causing a wind storm to beat down the
standing crop in the field.
Much ceremony accompanied the planting and tending of
the crop. Seven grains, the sacred number, were put into each
hill, and these were not afterward thinned out. After
the last working of the crop, the priest and an
assistant-generally the owner of the field-went into the field
and built a small enclosure (detsänûñ'lï) in the center.
Then entering it, they seated themselves upon the
ground, with heads bent down, and while the assistant
kept perfect silence the priest, with rattle in band, sang
songs of invocation to the spirit of the corn. Soon, according
to the orthodox belief, a loud rustling would be heard
outside, which they would know was caused by the "Old Woman"
bringing the corn into the field, but neither must look up
until the song was finished.
This ceremony was repeated on four successive nights,
after which no one entered the field or seven other nights,
when the priest himself went in, and, if all the sacred
regulations had been properly observed, was rewarded by
finding young ears upon the stalks. The corn ceremonies could
be performed by the owner of the field himself, provided he
was willing to pay a sufficient fee to the priest in order to
learn the songs and ritual. Care was always taken to
keep a clean trail from the field to the house, so that the
corn might be encouraged to stay at home and not go wandering
elsewhere. Most of these customs have now fallen into disuse
excepting among the old people, by many of whom they are still
religiously observed.
Another curious ceremony, of which even the memory is
now almost forgotten, was enacted after the first working of
the corn, when the, owner or priest stood in succession at
each of the four corners of the field and wept and wailed
loudly. Even the priests are now unable to give a reason
for this performance, which may have been a lament for the
bloody death of Selu, as the women of Byblos were wont to weep
for Adonis.
Next
to corn, the bean
(tuya) is the most important food plant of the Cherokee and
other southern Indians, with whom it is probably native, but
there does not appear to be much special ceremony or folklore
in connection with it. Beans which crack open in cooking
are sometimes rubbed by mothers on the lips of their children
in order to make them look smiling and good-tempered.
The association of ideas seems to be the same as that which in
Ireland causes a fat mealy potato, which cracks open in
boiling, to be called a "laughing" potato.
Melons and
squashes must not be counted or examined too
closely, while still growing upon the vine, or they will cease
to thrive; neither must one step over the vine, or it will
wither before the fruit ripens. One who has eaten a
May-apple
must not come near the vines under any circumstances, as this
plant withers and dries up very quickly, and its presence
would make the melons wither in the same way.
Tobacco
was used as a sacred incense or as the
guarantee of a solemn oath in nearly every important
function--in binding the warrior to take up the hatchet
against the enemy, in ratifying the treaty of peace, in
confirming sales or other engagements, in seeking omens for
the hunter, in driving away witches or evil spirits, and in
regular medical practice. It was either smoked in the
pipe or sprinkled upon the fire, never rolled into cigarettes,
as among the tribes of the Southwest, neither was it ever
smoked for the mere pleasure of the sensation.
Of
late years white neighbors have taught the Indians to chew it,
but the habit is not aboriginal. It is called tsâlû, a name
which has lost its meaning in the Cherokee language, but is
explained from the cognate Tuscarora, in which charhû',
"tobacco," can still be analyzed as "fire to hold in the
mouth," showing that the use is as old as the knowledge of the
plant.
The
tobacco originally in use among the Cherokee, Iroquois, and
other eastern tribes was not the common tobacco of commerce (Nicotiana
tabacum), which has been introduced from the West
Indies, but the Nicotiana rustica, or wild tobacco, now
distinguished by the Cherokee as tsâl-agäyûñ'lï, "old
tobacco," and by the Iroquois as "real tobacco." Its various
uses in ritual and medicine are better described under other
headings.
The
cardinal flower
(Lobelia),
mullein
(Verbascum), and
one or two related species are called "like tobacco," on
account of their general resemblance to it in appearance, but
they were never used in the same way.
The poisonous
wild parsnip
(Peucedanum) bears an unpleasant
reputation on account of its frequent use in evil spells,
especially those intended to destroy the life of the victim.
In one of these conjurations seven pieces of the root are laid
upon one hand and rubbed gently with the other, the omen being
taken from the position of the pieces when the hand is
removed. It is said also that poisoners mix it secretly with
the food of their intended victim, when, if he eats, he soon
becomes drowsy, and, unless kept in motion until the effect
wears off, falls asleep, never to wake again. Suicides are
said to eat it to procure death.
Before starting on a journey a small piece of the root
is sometimes chewed and blown upon the body to prevent
sickness, but the remedy is almost as bad as the disease, for
the snakes are said to resent the offensive smell by biting
the one who carries it. In spite of its poisonous
qualities, a decoction of the root is much used for steaming
patients in the sweat bath, the idea seeming to be that the
smell drives away the disease spirits.
The
poison oak
or
poison
ivy (Rhus
radicans), so abundant in the damp eastern forests, is feared
as much by Indians as by whites. When obliged to approach it
or work in its vicinity, the Cherokee strives to conciliate it
by addressing it as "My friend" (hi'gïnaliï). If
poisoned by it, he rubs upon the affected part the beaten
flesh of a crawfish.
One
variety of brier
(Smilax) is
called di`nû'skï, "the breeder," from a belief that a thorn of
it, if allowed to remain in the flesh, will breed others in a
day or two.
Ginseng,
which is sold in large quantities to the local traders, as
well as used in the native medical practice, is called
âtalï-gûlï', "the mountain climber," but is addressed by the
priests as Yûñwï Usdi', "Little Man," or Yûñwï Usdi'ga
Ada'wehi'yu, "Little Man, Most Powerful Magician," the
Cherokee sacred term, like the Chinese name, having its origin
from the frequent resemblance of the root in shape to the body
of a man.
The
beliefs and ceremonies in connection with its gathering and
preparation are very numerous. The doctor speaks constantly of
it as of a sentient being, and it is believed to be able to
make itself invisible to those unworthy to gather it. In
hunting it, the first three plants found are passed by.
The fourth is taken, after a preliminary prayer, in which the
doctor addresses it as the "Great Ada'wehï," and humbly asks
permission to take a small piece of its flesh. On digging it
from the ground, he drops into the hole a bead and covers it
over, leaving it there, by way of payment to the plant spirit.
After that he takes them as they come without further
ceremony.
The catgut
or
devil's shoestring
(Tephrosia) is
called distai'yï, "they are tough," in allusion to its
stringy roots, from which Cherokee women prepare a
decoction with which to wash their hair in order to impart to
it the strength and toughness of the plant, while a
preparation of the leaves is used by ballplayers to wash
themselves in order to toughen their limbs. To enable
them to spring quickly to their feet if thrown to the ground,
the players bathe their limbs also with a decoction of the
small rush
(Juncus
enuis) which they say, always recovers its erect position, no
matter how often trampled down.
The white seeds of the
viper's bugloss
(Echium vulgare) were formerly used in
many important ceremonies of which the purpose was to look
into the future, but have now been superseded by the ordinary
glass beads of the traders. The
culver root
(Leptandra) is used in love conjurations,
the omen being taken from the motion of the root when held in
the hand.
The campion
(Silene stellata), locally known as "rattle snake's master,"
is called ganidawâ'skï, "it disjoints itself," because the
dried stalk is said to break off by joints, beginning at the
top. As among the white mountaineers, the juice is held to be
a sovereign remedy for snake bites, and it is even believed
that the deadliest snake will flee from one who carries a
small portion of the root in his mouth.
Almost all varieties of
burs, from the
Spanish needle tip to the
cocklebur
and Jimsonweed, are classed together under the generic name of
u'nistilûñ'istï, which may be freely rendered as
"stickers." From their habit of holding fast to
whatever object they may happen to touch, they are believed to
have an occult power for improving the memory and
inducing stability of character. Very soon after a child
is born, one of the smaller species, preferably the Lespedeza
repens, is beaten up and a portion is put into a bowl of water
taken from a fall or cataract, where the stream makes a
constant noise. This is given to the child to drink on four
successive days, with the intention of making him quick to
learn and retain in memory anything once heard.
The
noise of the cataract from which the water is taken is
believed to be the voice of Yûñwï Gûnahi'ta, the "Long Man,"
or river god, teaching lessons which the child may understand,
while the stream itself is revered for its power to seize and
hold anything cast upon its surface. A somewhat similar
ceremony is sometimes used for adults, but in this case the
matter is altogether more difficult, as there are tabus for
four or seven days, and the mind must be kept fixed upon the
purpose of the rite throughout the whole period, while if the
subject so far forgets himself as to lose his temper in that
time he will remain of a quarrelsome disposition forever
after.
A flowering
vine, known as
nuniyu'stï, "potato-like," which grows in cultivated fields,
and has a tuberous root somewhat resembling a potato, is used
in hunting conjurations. The bruised root, from which a
milky juice oozes, is rubbed upon the deer bleat,
a`wï'-ahyeli'skï with which the hunter imitates the bleating
of the fawn, under the idea that the doe, hearing it, will
think that her offspring desires to suck, and will therefore
come the sooner.
The
putty-root
(Adam-and-Eve,
Aplectrum hiemale), which is of an oily, mucilaginous
nature, is carried by the deer hunter, who, on shooting a
deer, puts a small piece of the chewed root into the wound,
expecting as a necessary result to find the animal unusually
fat when skinned. Infants which seem to pine and grow
thin are bathed with a decoction of the same root in order to
fatten them.
The
root of the plant known as
Venus' flytrap
(Dionæa), which has the remarkable
property of catching and digesting insects which alight upon
it, is chewed by the fisherman and spit upon the
bait that no fish may escape him, and the plant is tied
upon the fish trap or the same purpose.
The
root of a plant called unatlûñwe' hitû, "having spirals," is
used in conjurations designed to predispose strangers in favor
of the subject. The priest "takes it to water"--i.e.,
says certain prayers over it while standing close to the
running stream, then chews a small piece and rubs and
blows it upon the body and arms of the patient, who is
supposed to be about to start upon a journey, or to take part
in a council, with the result that all who meet him or listen
to his words are at once pleased with his manner and
appearance, and disposed to give every assistance to his
projects.
From Mooney's "Myths of the Cherokee and Sacred Formulas of the Cherokee"
| THE ORIGIN OF MEDICINE | INDIAN REMEDIES |
| HERBS AND PREGNANCY | CHEROKEE PLANT LORE |
| BEAR'S ONE TIME CURE | POISON PLANTS |