The secret of no face (an Ireokwa epic)

Type
Book
Authors
ISBN 10
0913246018 
ISBN 13
9780913246016 
Category
Main Library  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1972 
Pages
174 
Description
"The late Chief Everett Parker was a man of a dozen ordinary lifetimes. There was little he couldn't do. World traveler, craftsman, narcotics agent, linguist, movie actor, circus performer, wrestler, boxer, lacrosse star, author and artist, naturalist and historian, lecturer and protector of Indian treaties, secrets and rights. He stood for the traditional Iroquois adherence. Unfortunately he died before he could see the completion of his work, The Secret of No Face. ABOUT THE BOOK: Mad Bear Anderson, the great Tuscarora leader, said "You owe this book to the dead." It is a sincere effort to communicate a genuine Seneca legend or 'telling'. Be thankful it's in your hands. Many others simply cannot be entrusted to the cold hearts of the white man. It is told to you just as it told to Iroquois children, that is, in an oral fashion. It's an attempt not only to entertain but to promote understanding of the Indian way of life. But how can it be true when the very work legend means fiction, fable or myth? As you read, seek out the many hidden meanings and separate them from the literal ones. Add the knowledge and experience of the Hageotah (story teller) in the ways of Indian values. Realize that without the written language the memory is, by necessity, a remarkable tool of accuracy. Remember that words were sacred magical utterances entrusted to only the wisest men among the Iroquois. Only those possessing the wisdom of the age and love could qualify. It's been said that only truth survives the passage of time. This legend has been handed down for centuries prior to the arrival of the white man. And it will be recited long after his passing. After reading and evaluating this authentic account of Seneca culture, pass it along to your friends. Transferring truthful knowledge to others is wisdom in the strictest sense of the term. That is the traditional method of Indian story telling." -- Richard G. Green (Oh-neh-dah-gohl), Oneida - from Amzon 
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