He Walked the
Americas
A story about
Christ in the Americas
Transcribed by a Kituwah Elder of the Cherokee Nation
what you see is the way he wrote it
Excerpted from "He Walked the Americas"
By
L Taylor Hansen
Publisher
Legend
Press~9533 Clinton Rd.~Amherst, WI 54406
WEB
SITE
<http://members.aol.com/lgendpress/>
“In
a world of jaded emotions and broken dreams this book can reopen the doorways to
your heart. Taylor Hansen has created a classic work, one that honors the Christ
in all of us.”
Rev.
Dr. Robert Ghost Wolf
--Asa Delugie, War Chief of the Mescallero Apaches.
"This is our book. May you write it in beauty as we have told it in
beauty."--Zeahley Tso, Chief of the Navajo.
`"There is evidence that some of our ancestors may have come from the
ancient trading empire of Chan Chan centuries before the rise of the Incan Power
in Peru. Tell my people to learn of this great power which once ruled eyes. Tell
them to look up and learn."
--So-Sah-kuku,
Chief Snake Priest of Oraibi.
"This is our book-these legends of
Ancient times. They are of the blood which courses through our veins. We of the
Seven Tribes of the Black Tortoise once had a Dream of Empire. Yet farther back
through the cycles of Time we knew the Great Wakon-Tankah, but we forgot His words.
These legends should help us to look up and remember."
--Shooting Star, of the Dakota
Sioux.
The legends that follow are the legends
of the Healer. These legends were told by the fireside of a "saintly white
teacher," who performed miracles with healing and control over the winds,
waters, and other natural items. All describe his eyes as gray-green like the
ocean and told stories of the future. His symbol has been woven into blankets,
carved on canyon walls, put on pottery and danced in dances. His name has been
given to mountains and rivers.
Though the stories are many and spread throughout the Americas, they are broken
into bits and pieces, hard to follow and piece together into one tale. His name
varied, most names were reflective of his control over the wind and water, as he
would request each tribe to name Him as they wished, stating there was no value
to a name.
The information given here is given that you might see and feel for yourself see the
legends
for yourself the stories of the Pale Prophet from the Native Peoples of the
Americas. . To
determine within yourself if this prophet was actually Jesus, or some other. Is
there where Jesus was going when He talked about going to other sheep with his
Apostles?
John 10:16 (NIV) t "I have other sheep that are not of
this flock, I must bring them also. They too will listen to my voice, and
there shall be one flock and one shepherd."
*In Etowa, Georgia, the Prophet began to
mention the future after a rite of dedication (known today as Thanksgiving). His
first prophecy was concerning the Puan people moving northward and a civil war
taking place amongst them. His second was as thus,
"Farther
off there is another invasion. In ships many bearded men are coming from across
the Sunrise Ocean. Many are the ships as the snowflakes of winter. I see
these men taking the Broad Land; and the Mounds which hold the cests of our
cities are for them, alas!, but earth for the taking. They do not respect our
trees of cedar. They are but hungry, unenlightened children, and with them the
vision closes....Would that I could speak to those bearded farmers! I have
tried. They do not hear me. They go on their way like spoiled children, while I
return to you and the present here at the Temple at Eseecowah."
At the time of the writing of this book the author stated there were many tribes
now in Oklahoma that still remember this prediction, including the Choctaw,
Cherokee, Chickasaw and Creek.
*The Shawnee told the author that this
came from the Prophet...."Do not kill or injure your neighbor, for it is
not he that you injure; you injure yourself. Do good to him, thus adding to his
days of happiness even as you then add to your own. Do not wrong or hate your
neighbor; for it not he that you wrong: you wrong yourself. Rather love him, for
the Great Spirit loves him, even as He loves you."
*I have heard the Cherokee story a couple times now about when the Prophet was
with them. It was said that there were many tales, but most were as all the
other nations. The one that was unique to the Cherokee was one in which the
Healer was troubled by the events of the future. His twelve disciples (all
tribes say he chose twelve for his special training!) were following him through
the woods for fear any danger would come upon Him. At one point, the Healer came
across a fawn that was lost in the woods. The Healer asked him where his mother
was? The fawn turned his head and looked down a path. Not far away was the
mother, the victim of a huge cat. She had given her life to save her young.
The Healer knelt down beside the dead mother and started stroking the body. As
His hand passed over the wounds, they healed up, leaving no marks. The deer then
started breathing and rose. The disciples were upset at this and asked Him why
he was wasting His energy on the animals. The Pale One said, "There cannot
be too many good deeds. Such is the manner of compassion. A lost lamb is my
Father's business, as important as saving a nation, if one need not choose
between them. More precious in my Father's eyes is a good deed than the most
exquisite jewel."
*The Prophet was known to come across a
Puant city in the now known area of Oklahoma. It was the Prophet's custom to
always take their established temples and change them. He would chose the twelve
to teach them the priesthood and then lectured the people. This was again done
here as usual. But here, the people wanted to hear about his childhood.
He told them he was born across the ocean where all men had beards. Even in the
legends, he told them of his virgin birth and about the bright star that shone
over his city of his birth. The heavens opened up and winged beings sang chants
of exquisite beauty.
”When the University of Oklahoma was digging the Spiro Mound, they found mush
pottery showing winged beings singing, and also the hand with the cross through
the palm. To them, He was known as Chee-Zoos, the Dawn God, and they whisper of
Him about the campfires when no white man can listen. To quote the book,
"The love they bear Him is beyond measurement, for well they know He
watches over them, and that when their journey here is over, He will meet them
in the Land of Shadows, for such was His sacred promise.
“They smoke the Sacred Peace Pipe in His memory, and blow the
smoke to the four directions, knowing that to each man comes his retribution, no
matter how flows the river of history. Thus in great pride walks the Red Man,
even though now dire poverty stalks him and starvation or hunger sits at his
table. In the mask like calm of his expression there smiles a secret
satisfaction, a something which to puzzled white men is entirely beyond
understanding."
*An interesting story told in the book
is about the Great Mound Builders, Dakota (the last high priest of extinct
Elks, translated and recorded by Walter Pidgeon around 1850) described them as
tribes that spoke the Algonquin ~ Haudenosaunee language and they were the
Ancients of the country. According to him, these mounds marked the sites of
cities. They were a type of writing that recorded history. They were to be read
from the inside out and one had a history longer than London. The mounds were
thought to have been covered by wood and painted as the Mayans had done. It was
here too that the Prophet with his gray-green eyes and golden sandals came. They
tell He was the "Great White Robed Master."
In the Spiro Mound in Oklahoma, they found the symbol of the hand with the
"T" cross through its center. As aforementioned, this is where they
found the pottery with the winged beings. In the Indian Mound of Pittsfield was
found three pages of parchment, and according to the author, they are in
"old Harvard."
“One these pages were supposed to be
quotations, written in Archaic Hebrew, from the Old Testament. About 8 miles
southeast of Newark, the father of Bancroft, the Native American recorder of
untold legends, claimed to have the only stone pictograph of the Prophet. About
His head, again in ancient Hebrew were written the Ten Commandments.
Quoting the author...."His hair and
beard are well pictured as well as His flowing toga. It was a small stone,
highly polished, an inch and a half thick, eight inches long, four inches on one
end to three on the other. This had been placed in a casket completely
watertight, and many feet above it was the burial of the Indian high priest.
How many other mounds have been plowed and leveled, and their contents scattered
which the Red Men held as holy, planting trees of the sacred cedar upon them to
keep them safe through two millennia?
“True, the invasion of the Serpents from perhaps 700 AD onward,
coming up the Mississippi in their long snake-painted dugouts, carrying their
sacred fire, brought an end to peaceful living, brought with them war and
pillage and the priesthood of the Sacrificers. Yet they turned away from
the hills of cedar, seeing the symbols of the Healer."
*The Pawnee tell of a Prophet who taught
them of His Father, "The Mighty Holy of the Heavens." He warned them
not to forget what they were taught by Him, and when they would return to
warfare, they often thought about how He taught them that "war but breeds
more carnage." He had also told them about the white men coming. They
remember Him as Paruxti and His Father was Tirawa.
The Pawnee claim the Prophet visited them twice, the second time was out of
anger. As the story goes, some young men of the Pawnee had gotten together a
secret league to attack merchants and make "war" on them. One night
the Pawnee was by the Mississippi River and came across a camp of worn out
merchants. The merchants had not been aware these young Pawnees had returned to
the old ways and thought they were safe. One of the young merchants had stated
that he was sad he never got to see the Dawn God. But they smoked the Peace Pipe
and went to sleep.
The wild Pawnee then attacked, forced the merchants to carry their own goods
back to the bandits' camp. They had a wild night, dancing, yelling and preparing
the two men for a sacrifice to the Fire god. One old man protested, pointed to
the east where the Morning Star was beginning to rise. But no one paid attention
to him and carried on what they were doing. One of the prisoners was already
dead and the other was dying. The Pawnee stated, "Let Him come and revive
these men! That would be much better magic than stopping a wind storm or walking
on water!"
”At the point, the eastern sky lit up with fire, clouds reflecting the fire
ever brighter. Everyone turned toward the brightened sky and stopped in their
tracks. Suddenly there He was among them! They say He shined with a strange
radiance, each hair of His head luminescent, a weird glow rippling from His
garments and His sea-colored eyes flashing with lightning. He stood staring at
the wild Pawnees.
”He asked them if this was how they kept His commandments, insulting the
Father. "I came to shield you from His anger, or lo, great wind would
ignite the forest! And to ashes would be consigned the Pawnee Nation!"
”At this point, the prisoner that was still alive called to Chee-Zoos and
asked to be released. The Healer told the man he was free and to walk from the
fire. Those who were watching saw the man stumble toward the Healer. When he had
touched the Healer's robe, the man straightened up and didn't have a mark on him
from the fire. The Healer turned to the dead man, telling him that he wasn't yet
for the Land of the Shadows. The fire died away and the blackened body stirred.
The Healer told him to rise up. The man rose up and was completely healed.
”This story is still told sometimes by the elders at the fireside during the
winter evenings.”
*The "Algonquin of the Eastern
Seaboard" tell they received their name for the Dawn Light from the Pale
One. They wouldn't name the Prophet as He had asked them to do. They wanted to
know what He was called where He grew up and He told them a name that was
strange and hard to say. But they tried hard to say it: Chee-Zoos, God of the
Dawn Light, basically the same as the Puants.
*The Chippewa remember very well the
"pale Great Master." They tell He gave them medicine lodges where the
signs and emblems are secret and taken from those across the ocean. And
according to the author, they keep this secret to this day.
*The Dakota (Sioux) say He gave them
their rite of baptism and purification, also many of their lodges. They remember
Him talking about the coming of the white man and many other predictions.
"We have backslid from His teachings, but to Him we dance the Sun Dance. We
remember Great Wakona well." (Speaker not identified.)
*In the times of the Prophet, the place
which is now St Louis was once the capital of the Puant nation. The streets of
the city actually represented history. Each street started from the Central Hub
(which is where the Crest mounds were) and grew outward like a spoke on a wheel.
When a dynasty was complete, the line would end and pottery with significant
pictures of the period would be placed within the mound. The crest would be
closed with a Mound of Extinction. Beyond it, counterclockwise, the new crest
would begin.
The capitol buildings stood on the old crest, usually built of logs and
beautifully painted. Many crests had been closed at the time of the Prophet and
the city was large and many imports and exports went through the streets. The
Algonquin remember Him well at the time of His arrival. The fleets coming down
the river ceremoniously brought Him, always greeted with flowers. Once the
Prophet heard tales of the Sunrise Ocean and the Five Tribes of Warring Nations.
He wanted to go see them immediately; He was so opposed to war and left with the
merchants. He came upon the Seneca's and called the chiefs into a council.
Quoting....."Long He spoke to them on the ways of His Father, as He had
throughout the Broad Land, handling the language with great ease. He
explained His peace religion, then He asked of them quite simply: what was the
reason for their warfare? The Fire Chieftains were embarrassed, for they had
long forgotten the reason, if indeed they ever had a reason. Each warrior looked
upon the other and none could think of a valid answer.
"Therefore He bound them ceremonially into a never-ending alliance. To each
He gave a sacred duty to perform for the alliance, and then He asked them to
smoke the Peace Pipe, filled with tobacco and cedar shavings, and to blow the
smoke to the four directions making the sign of the Great Cross, which is a holy
symbol. Never from that time onward have the Five Nations fought each other, nor
has the trust He gave them been cracked and broken.
"At this Council was a Seneca chieftain who was tall, for we are a tall
nation. Like many of our people he had a lofty stature, and could easily look
down on the heads of the others. Indeed the Prophet was not a short man, but
neither was He as tall as the chieftain. The Seneca, seeing that he was the
tallest, and could look over the light hair of the Pale God, rose and waited to
speak.
"There
was a shocked silence. Would he presume to question the Prophet? The chieftain
looked upon the Healer.
"'I have been watching you while you were speaking, oh One whom the people
call the Dawn God. It is true that you hold a most strange fascination over the
minds of men. I know that the people call you the Dawn God. If
it is true, then you can prove it. Meet me here in four days in the early
morning before the sun has shot his first long red arrow, and we shall stand
before this door together. If the first red arrow of the dawn light,
touches your hair before it paints my eagle feather, then indeed you are the
Dawn God. This I give to you as a challenge. Now, for this day, I have spoken.'
"Everyone turned to look at the Prophet. He sat quite still as if in
deep thought. At last He arose. 'Your stand is well taken. I will meet you
here before the dawning. When from the Sunrise Ocean arises the golden light of
the Dawn Star, I will be standing here before the Great Lodge. I will use
up the moments of waiting to talk once more with the people-all who care to hear
me. For now, I too have spoken.'
"During the four days the Healer went among the tribes, and though He did
not speak of His appointment, everyone knew that He would keep it, for the Great
One never broke a promise. Accordingly, at the time appointed, great crowds
swarmed about the small mound where the Great Lodge stood open to the eastward.
First to climb the mound was the Prophet. As over the horizon arose the first
golden shafts of the Dawn Star, the Pale God spoke to the assembled nations. It
is said that He always charmed His listeners, but now there was almost a
breathless silence. Indeed it seemed the very trees were listening and also the
assembled animals of the forest, so softly He spoke and so well did they hear
Him, because of the silence that had settled.
"Now the tall chieftain left the others and slowly climbed the small mound,
taking his place beside the Prophet. The two eagle feathers in the hair of the
chieftain projected well above the head of the Healer, but no sign except a
friendly greeting was given by the Pale Heawahsah, who turned and began the
Chant of the Dawning. This was a prayer chant He had taught the people, which
has long since been forgotten. Everyone started to join in and then, suddenly, a
miracle happened.
"Before anyone else saw the sunlight, a golden shaft of radiant beauty came
down from some clouds banked high with firelight, and touched the curling hair
of the Prophet, diffusing itself like a halo until He stood, a luminous
creature, painting all the ground around Him with gold. The people then fell
down saying: 'Behold He is indeed the Dawn God who has come to walk among us!'
and 'He draws his power from the Star of the Dawning.'
"The tall chieftain, seeing the Great One clothed in gold light, knelt in
the dust beside Him and taking the hem of the Prophet's mantle, laid his cheek
on the line of creases. I know that you think this sounds something like the
Legend of Hiawatha written down by Longfellow, the poet. You are right;
there is a resemblance. O
“Once he was our guest and heard us chanting. He liked
our stories so well that he kept urging us onward through his interpreter of the
language. We told him many stories. When he returned and began to write them, he
mixed them all together; but he was not trying to make fun of our legends-he was
confused. We still honor him for enjoying the chants, and even trying to get the
rhythm of their language. We honor him although Heawahsah never sought a Dakota maiden. That was a much later hero, who married with a distant nation.
"The meaning of Heawahsah? It is He From Afar Off. It is our name for the
Prophet, who drew His great strength from the Dawn Star. All nations know He was
of the Dawn Star, and that is why, even now, no nation of the ancient people
know as 'red-skins' will ever make war or fight a battle while the Sacred Star
of Peace is still shining in the great heavens. They dare not, for it is the
Star of the Prophet."
(Note: Few know where to reach the ‘ Big Tree,’ the Seneca, or even if it is
still alive. He once told this legend to a child to illustrate the fact
that the tallest men are not always the greatest. I hope he will not mind its
inclusion here. Since there is a variation of this legend in Bancroft, recorded
over a hundred years ago, it seems to be quite authentic to Seneca
tradition-Author.)
*In Michigan, according to Decorah, was
the center of the Giant Cross of Waters. The Prophet was known to travel this
trail. No tribe was too far, too small, too poor, too war-like. If He heard of a
war, He went there. He would call all the chiefs together, divide the lands,
give seeds and show how them how to garden. He would teach them His
principles. "Do not kill unless you are hungry, and then ask the animal's
forgiveness, and explain your great need to him before ever you pull the
bow-string." This was one rule that Native Americans ever violated. Before
hunting, each tribe would hold a prayer-dance.
The Prophet was always called the Feathered Serpent or Eeseecotl among the Algonquians. They tell that He always wore a long white toga, with black crosses
embroidered along the bottom, and had golden sandals. Every new town He would
arrive in would have a new garment waiting for Him. They would keep the old
ones, treasuring them, saying that to touch them would bring healing. During the
visits He would train twelve disciples, with one to be their leader, who would
take His place when He left to "go about My Father's Business." After
He would leave, the grieving people would carve His sign upon the walls of
canyons-a hand with a T cross in it.
*While visiting the Chinooks, the
Prophet pointed to a plain laying below them, stating that He saw through the
cycles of time a great city spread across this plain, named Tacomah. It was to
be a white man's city. The Chinooks were confused as to why the white man would
name a city after Him, Tla-acomah. He explained that they would use the name of
the mountain named after Him, but they would not understand the meaning of the
name.
*It is said the hot springs of Tacobya mark the passage of the Healer. In a
canyon nearby is the hand with the T cross in it, and near this the Great Cross.
It is understood that He traveled to the Havasu, raising one arm in greeting
meaning "Peace and Prosperity to you". He then stopped and tapped a
large rock with his staff and water gushed out of it. He drank from this sacred
water and today it is called the Spring of Tacobya.
*Tacobya went on to the Pueblos where the Empire of Tula, the
capital of the peaceful Toltecs. He also went to the Wallapai tribe and gathered
the chiefs in a great counsel and redistributed the grain fields. He taught them
more clever gardening with melons, squashes, pumpkins, mescal, and beans; he
gave them many other plants which have been lost through the ages. He also
taught them how to conserve water under the ground.
“He
went on to the people of the White Rock. They told Him they had come here after
a great war in the south. Their cities had been burnt and they were all that was
left of the once great power. They were sad in their hearts and the Prophet told
them of another nation that had to flee oppression in days long gone. Then He
showed them the beauty of their land and taught them how to garden well.
As He was leaving the Pueblos, He told them, "In truth I give to you a
promise. Keep you my precepts, forsake all warfare and you shall ever have my
blessing even beyond White Man's coming. And
woe to the hands that are raised against you...If to my teaching you are
faithful, and to show that you have lived each day rightly, leave alight at
night burning against the time I will return through the Dawn Light, and lead
thee unto My Father's Kingdom." So every night a light is burning in Acoma
and other Pueblos among these tribes, which we call heathen. From there He moved
on.