Contents

Title Page

Introduction: The Iroquois Supernatural—Reaching Beyond the Sacred

Chapter 1—The Longhouse Folk

The Iroquois

Origins

The League of Six Nations

The Longhouse

The Nations

Iroquois Languages

Iroquois Religious Influences

Into the Woods

Chapter 2—The Witches’ Craft

Iroquois Witches

Two Kinds of Witches

Spotting a Witch

Getting to the Root of the Hex

Arthur C. Parker on Witchcraft

Onondaga Witches

Mary Jemison on Witchcraft

The Heart of a Black Bird

Witch Bones

A Witch’s Bag

The Witch John Jemison

Two Seneca Witch Trials

Kauquatau

Witch Children

Chapter 3—The Witches’ Torch

Witch Lights

Anomalous Light Phenomena

The Hills of Rochester

The Lights of Oswego Bitter

Indian Hill

Train Tracks and Witch Lights

The Hill of Dead Witches

Onondaga Witch Lights

A Metaphysical Contract

Ghostly Walks and Phantom Hosts

Joe Bruchac on Witch Lights

Chapter 4—Medicine People

An Aura of the Spirit

Bear and Ted

Witch Doctors

Diviners of Mysteries

Herbs and Healings

The Seventh Son

Medicine Bags

Sabael and the Medicine Beads

For the Unborn Children

Mad Bear’s Method of Reading

Weapons of Friendship

House Clearings

Chapter 5—The False Faces

The Medicine Mask Society

The Headman of the Faces

Doctors and Doorkeepers

Beggars and Thieves

Opening the Eyes

Masks and Museums

Two Healers and the Masks

Other Masked Healers

Unmasked Healers

The Call of the Masks

The Good Crop

Power People

Ted Williams’s Tales of the False Faces

Chapter 6—Supernatural War

Directed Curses

Calling the Ancestors

The Liver Tree Curse

The Dust Devil of Boughton Hill

The Curse of the Bones

Signs of Supernatural War

Chapter 7—Power Spaces

Witches’ Walk

Hill of the Crows

Green Lake

Squakie Hill

Fort Hill and Bluff Point

The Valley of Madness

The Hill and the Stone

Kinzua

The Great Falls

Snake Hill

The Angel’s Mountain

Taughannock Falls

Lost Nation

The Dale

Lake Eldridge

High Rock Spring

The Great Hill

The Seneca National Creation Tale

Ring of Honor

Chapter 8—The Supernatural Zoo

The Celts and the Iroquois

The Fearsome Foursome

The Stone Giants

The Great Flying Heads

The Vampire Corpse

Super Serpents

The Thunderers

The Monster Bear

High Hat

The Legs

The Mischief Maker

Longnose

The Giant Mosquito

The Witch Hawk

The Servers

The Evil-Soul Gatherer

The Underground Buffalo

White Deer of the Genesee

Chapter 9—Talking Animals

Special Animals

Witch and Shape-Shifter

Changelings

Shape-Shifters

Altered Animals

Animal Clans

The Tender of the Flame

The Animals Talking

The Songs of the Dogs

Chapter 10—The Little People

The Wee Folk

Three Nations

Imparting a Ritual

Nineteenth-Century Little People

Two Nations

The Fairy Fishers

The Second Nation

Lanes of the Little People

The Djogao Skull

Fairy Trees

Chapter 11—The Land of the Elders

The Old Spirits

Five Iroquois Motifs

The Haunted Battlefield

Rogers Island

The Darkness on the Hill

The Wailing Spirits

The Ontario County Courthouse

The Kicking Chief of Cooperstown

The Five Ghosts of Red Jacket

The Tonawanda Presbyterian

Haunted Roads

Delaware Avenue

Black Nose Springs Road

The Forbidden Trail

13 Curves

West Road

Route 5

The Spirit World

I Feel My Friends Here

Bloody Mary

The Chief of the Blue Heron

The Land of the Elders

The Spirit Choirs

Footnote

Bibliography

About the Authors

About Inner Traditions • Bear & Company

Books of Related Interest

Copyright & Permissions

Approximate Positions of Today’s Cities

Niagara Falls

Rochester

Syracuse

Oneida

Saratoga Springs

Canadaigua

Auburn

Buffalo

Albany

Ithaca

Jamestown

Salamanca

Elmira

Binghamton

INTRODUCTION

The Iroquois Supernatural

Reaching Beyond the Sacred

The Native Americans known collectively as the Iroquois have had an impact on world destiny out of all proportion to their numbers and territory. They have been deeply admired for their leaders as well as for their national character, their League of Six Nations, and their simple moxie, but they have had a hold on so many far-flung imaginations that isn’t easy to explain. People all over the world who have no particular interest in anything Native American have found themselves strangely haunted by these industrious, adventurous, mystical Iroquois. What could be the source of it?

The Iroquois are unmistakably and for all time native North Americans, but they might be unique even among their native New York neighbors. Something drew these five, then six nations—the Cayuga, the Mohawk, the Oneida, the Onondaga, the Seneca, and latecomers the Tuscarora—into a single distinctive unit, this outfit we call the Confederacy, the League of Six Nations.

Enough books have been written about the character and history of the Iroquois. This book is devoted to the supernatural traditions of these first historic New Yorkers, from as far back as we can trace them, to the present day.

Figuring out what to include in this book has been tricky. Where do you draw the line between miracle and magic? Between religion and spirituality? Between the sacred and the merely spooky? This book doesn’t try to choose. How could anyone?

All religions are at heart supernatural. Throughout history most societies have had both a mainstream supernaturalism and others that are looked upon with more suspicion. The “out” supernaturalism is often that of a less advantaged group within the major society. What the mainstream culture calls “sacred” is its supernaturalism; terms like “witchcraft” are applied to the others. Someone’s ceiling is another’s floor, and one culture’s God is another’s Devil. To someone from Mars, what could be the objective difference?

Although all Iroquois supernatural belief may seem “superstitious” or “magical” to some observers, Iroquois society itself makes its own distinctions between the sacred and the spooky. Still, one often overlaps the other.

Dhyani Ywahoo, Mad Bear, the Dalai Lama, and Michael Bastine in Dharamsala, India, in 1980

This book is not about the sacred traditions of the Iroquois. It is a profile of the supernaturalism external to the religious material recognized as truly sacred. This is a book largely about the “out” stuff: witches, curses, supernatural beings, powerful places, and ghosts. It includes things on the spiritual side: healings, power people, visions, and prophetic dreams. Some of the material is historic, archaeological, and anthropological. Much of it is as alive and current as a paranormal report.

Algonquin coauthor Michael Bastine and I have written this book from the belief that one of the world’s great spiritual traditions is that of the Iroquois, and that it’s been under the radar for too long. A broader familiarity with Iroquois traditions would help world spirituality—and hence the world.

We also believe that the world might develop more sympathy for Iroquois causes if it knew the Iroquois better.

The partnership between us is an equitable one. I did most of the book research and keyboarded the words. The voice of the narrative is mine. Michael, a highly respected elder, trained with many people mentioned in this book. Vast stretches of its words—and most of the wisdom—are his.

MASON WINFIELD

AND

MICHAEL BASTINE

1

The Longhouse Folk

You must forgive me, therefore, for not always distinctively calling the creeds of the past “superstition” and the creeds of the present day “religion.”

JOHN RUSKIN,

THE QUEEN OF THE AIR

THE IROQUOIS

In 1609 on the west bank of the lake named for him, French explorer Samuel de Champlain had the white

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