The Great Law

CDNBear

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The Great Law is the founding constitution of the Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy. It is an oral tradition, codified in a series of wampum belts now held by the Onondaga Nation. It defines the functions of the Grand Council and how the native nations can resolve disputes between themselves and maintain peace.

The Peace Maker travelled among the Iroquois for many years, spreading his message of peace, unity and the power of the good mind. Oral history says that it may have taken him forty some years to reach everyone. Born of a Huron woman who was still a virgin, the Peace Maker, grew rapidly and one day announced that he had to journey forth to deliver a message from the Creator. He selected a white stone canoe to carry him to the Iroquois as proof of the power of his message. But he was met with much skepticism and the men that he came across refused to listen to him. After Jikohnsaseh rejuvenated his spirit, he continued and was able to persuade fifty leaders to receive his message. He gathered them together and recited the passages of the Great Law of Peace. He assigned duties to each of the leaders. To honor the role of Jikohnsaseh, he selected women as the Clan Mothers, to lead the family clans and select the male chiefs.

Women were given the right to the chief's titles and the power to remove dissident chiefs. Jikohnsaseh, by hearing of her actions, taught me to respect women and honor their role. Women are the connection to the earth and have the responsibility for the future of the nation. Men will want to fight. Women know the true price of war and must encourage the chiefs to seek a peaceful resolution.

The Peace Maker then established clans among the Haudenosaunee as a way to unite the Five Nations and as a form of social order. It is said that after he had assembled the leaders together around the Tree of Peace, he bestowed Chieftainship and clan affiliation on the fifty men who stood in a circle. He would assign clans based upon the order of animals that he saw that day. Some say that he sent each chief out into the woods and would report back on the first animal that they encountered, and that animal became their clan. A clan is a group of families that share a common female ancestry. Members of one clan are considered relatives and intermarriage in the same clan is forbidden. Clans are named after animals that have special assistance to the people - water (turtle, eel, beaver); land (bear, deer, wolf), sky (snipe, heron, hawk) Clanship identity is very important to the Haudenosaunee.

The Great Law is like a Great White Mat of Law upon which the Chiefs sit as they deliberate on the affairs of the nations. Burning before the assembled chiefs is the council fire, called "the great light," that never dies as long as the people believe in the Great Law. The kindling the council fire, considered sacred in that it purifies the words of those assembled, obligates the Chiefs to speak the truth. Also holding a council only in the daylight is another cultural mechanism to assure clear thinking. Meeting held at night are considered inappropriate and meant for foster dissent.

The Chiefs were to use the power of their mind to reason, to figure out what was best for the welfare of the people. The three main principles of the Great Law of Peace are: Righteousness (Good News), Civil Authority (Power), and also Mind (Reason) and the welfare work." We are to view the chiefs like a circle of standing trees, supporting the Tree of Peace that grows in the middle. They help to keep it from falling over. With each Chief was to be a helper, to keep the Chief standing tall.

Take the word Gaihwiyo, which has been translated in this document to mean righteousness. It's meaning is more like a wholesome doctrine that is good to be heard, because it teaches ethical behavior and communal values. But it also denotes the idea of justice, of being right because of the customs, manners, beliefs and ritualistic summations of the past experiences of the people. It is putting words into action.

The hardest part of the Great Law is to understand the meaning of the concept of peace. Peace is not simply the absence of war. In the Iroquoian mind, peace is a state of mind. Power, which can easily be thought of as military strength, but more appropriately, it means that one heart, one mind, one head, and one body allowed the Confederacy to remain united in the face of many enemies. Certainly, historians have painted a picture of the Iroquois as cruel expansionists. Iroquois fighting power was legendary. So the question arises: how can the Great Law promote peace if one of the conditions is to have power over weaker nations? Power can be the united strength of the Confederacy, standing together, negotiating together. Unity of action allowed the Iroquois to enjoy great success in dealing with the warring colonial powers.

But there is also a different kind of power in the Iroquoian universe. Each individual has a base spiritual power. As you go through life as Haudenosaunee, experience different things, learn more, comprehend more and tap into other forms of spiritual power, your own spirit grows as well. The old timers called it orenda. Everyone is thought to have it to some degree. It effects how we do things. Good minds have strong orenda. So the ultimate power of the Great Law rests in how well the individual person develops their sense of self, but develops that sense in regard to the well-being of the others, in the clan, in the village, in the nation and in the Confederacy of the Six Nations.

There have been several written versions of the Great Law, called Gawyehnehshehgowa. Today, no one version is preferred over the other and many traditional leaders feel that none of the written versions have all of the known oral history included. In examining the written versions the following common elements of the story of the Great Law of Peace become evident:

1) The Birth and Growth of the Peacemaker
A boy is born to the virgin daughter of a Huron woman. Ashamed and depressed, the grandmother tries to destroy the baby three times, until she is told in a dream that the boy is destined to bring forth a good message from the Creator. He grows rapidly and is honest, generous and peaceful.

2) The Journey to the Mohawks
The Peacemaker leaves in a white stone canoe for the land of the Mohawks where he finds war, killing, destruction and cannibalism. He announces that he is there to deliver a message from the Creator that war must cease.

3) Jikonsahseh Accepts the Message
The Mother of Nations takes in the weary Peacemaker and feeds him. He explains the principles of Peace, Righteousness and Power and the concept of the longhouse as a metaphor for the Great Law. She accepts the message, and in doing so, women are given priority in the League as Clan Mothers.

4) Ayenwatha Converts to Peace
Looking into the smoke hole of a house, the Peacemaker sees a man carrying a human body to the cooking fire. About to eat the flesh, the man appears into the pot but sees the face of the Peacemaker and is magically transformed. The Peacemaker teaches him to bury the body and eat deer meat instead. The antlers of the deer will be symbols of authority. The former cannibal, Ayenwatha, accepts the message of peace.

5) Peacemaker proves himself to the Mohawks
To prove his power, the Peacemaker sat in a tall tree that was chopped down into a deep ravine but emerged unharmed. The Mohawk chiefs accept the message.

6) The Confrontation with Tododaho
An evil and deadly wizard of the Onondaga with a twisted body and snakes for hair, blocked the path to peace. Tododaho made it so that the chiefs could not gather, making the waterways tip over their canoes.

7) Ayenwatha'''s Daughters are killed
A witch, Osinoh, transformed into an owl and killed the daughters, casting Ayenwatha into a deep depression.

8) Ayenwatha Leaves Onondaga
He left his home at Onondaga and became lost in his sorrow. He "split the sky" heading southward.

9) Ayenwatha invents wampum
Using either twigs, bird quills or shell beads, Ayenwatha makes strings of wampum that he hangs across a suspended wooden pole in an attempt to sooth himself.

10) Ayenwatha institutes protocols
He visits a Mohawk community and is given a honored seat as a chief. He teaches them to make a signal fire at the edge of the clearing to announce the arrival of a peaceful visitor, how to make wampum, and how to use the wampum strings to deliver messages. He leaves to continue his search for consolation.

11) The Peacemaker Condoles Ayenwatha
Using 8 of the 13 wampum strings made by Ayenwatha, the Peacemaker removes the pain and suffering of Ayenwatha and restores his mind so they can bring forth the message of the Creator. The Peacemaker decides that wampum will be used to carry that message.

12) Emissaries seek out Tododaho
The Peacemaker sends transformed animals - crows, bears, deer - to locate Tododaho.

13) The Cayuga, Oneida and Seneca Join
The two messengers visit the various nations as well as several visits with Tododaho. The other nations accepts the message. Tododaho still refuses.

14) Hai Hai - The Peace Hymn
With the combined power of all the assembled leaders who had accepted the message, the two messengers lead a procession, singing a magic song to soothe Tododaho. The song thanked the League, the Great Peace, the Honored Ancestors, the warriors, the women, and the families. Tododaho shouted his objection as the procession approached his encampment.

15) Tododaho is Transformed
With all of the other chiefs assembled, the Peacemaker promised to give Tododaho a central position in the Confederacy and to make Onondaga the capital for the Grand Council. He finally accepted the message and the messengers combed the snakes from his hair, straightened his body and dressed him properly. Tododaho became a man of peace.

16) The Circle of Chiefs
The messengers established the chieftainships as the protectors of peace. They were given instruction about what it takes to be a good chief. They announced the roll call of chiefs by nation and clan. The protocols for selecting chiefs, operating the council, and the role of the Clan Mothers was described. Warnings of the future were given. Deer antlers were placed on the heads of the chiefs, a wing fan to sweep dirt away from the council fire, and a pole to flick creatures away from the fire. The League was completed.

17) The Cultural Metaphors

The Peacemaker established the symbols of the Great Law. The longhouse has five fireplaces but one family. Wampum will record the messages. The Tree of Peace was planted in the center of the circle of chiefs. An eagle was placed on top to watch out for enemies. The White Roots of Peace stretched out across the land. The weapons of war were buried under the Tree. A meal of beaver tail was shared. Five arrows were bound together. The council fire was kindled and the smoke pierced the sky. These are all symbols of power that comes from the unity of peace.

18) The Protection of the League
Laws for adoption, emigration and rights of individuals and nations were established to allow those who seek peace to join. Warring nations would be given three warning they would be subdued.

19) The Condolence Ceremony
The same procedure used on Ayenwatha will be used when a chief dies in order to console the mourners and reaffirm life. This Requickening Address will maintain the stability and mental health of the Chiefs and the Confederacy.

20) The Peacemaker Departs
The message delivered and the Confederacy completed, the Peacemaker leaves but announces that in a future time of strife he will return. He also asked that his name not be used except in special cases.
http://sixnations.buffnet.net/Great_Law_of_Peace/
 

Sparrow

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Nov 12, 2006
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CND Bear

Thank you for posting "The Great Law" with the website. I love history and can never get enough, you can be sure that this is in my favorites and that I will enjoy browsing the site.
 

Dexter Sinister

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Oct 1, 2004
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Bear, you continue to impress me, and to teach me things we all should have learned in primary school, but didn't. I have long argued to anyone who'll listen (which is lamentably few) that there is much to be learned from the aboriginal cultures of this continent, and I've just started reading a fat little paperback book by Charles Mann about pre-Columbian culture in the Americas called 1491. Many years ago, in my early teens, I read a book my dad bought for himself (he was an academic with a particular interest in Canadian history and politics) called Apologies to the Iroquis, which disturbed me profoundly. More recently I studied a most excellent book called Stolen Continents, about the European invasion of the Americas. As I've said here before, I'm trying to understand, and a man like you is of great help.

You my friend are one of the reasons I keep coming back to this place. I hope you never leave. I need to hear from you. I think we all do.
 

L Gilbert

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Bear, you continue to impress me, and to teach me things we all should have learned in primary school, but didn't. I have long argued to anyone who'll listen (which is lamentably few) that there is much to be learned from the aboriginal cultures of this continent, and I've just started reading a fat little paperback book by Charles Mann about pre-Columbian culture in the Americas called 1491. Many years ago, in my early teens, I read a book my dad bought for himself (he was an academic with a particular interest in Canadian history and politics) called Apologies to the Iroquis, which disturbed me profoundly. More recently I studied a most excellent book called Stolen Continents, about the European invasion of the Americas. As I've said here before, I'm trying to understand, and a man like you is of great help.

You my friend are one of the reasons I keep coming back to this place. I hope you never leave. I need to hear from you. I think we all do.
You'd have understood The Great Law in primary school? Wow!
 

sanctus

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20) The Peacemaker Departs
The message delivered and the Confederacy completed, the Peacemaker leaves but announces that in a future time of strife he will return. He also asked that his name not be used except in special cases.
http://sixnations.buffnet.net/Great_Law_of_Peace/

A most interesting read for me, and I assume you can guess why that would be so. I wonder at the effect of this teaching on the native population prior to the arrival of the European peoples? In other words, when we did arrive, we didn't find a peaceful continent. some warred and continued to war. Interesing that this was also true in Europe who also had the great over-riding philosophy of Jesus commanding peace. One wonders why God sends people to us to teach us peace, we listen and than carry on as if it was of no importance to us!? Or, even worse in my opinion, we take the teaching of the pacisfist and use it to justify murdering other people in our "holy wars".

Side question, did this teaching have an impact on the Mohawks?
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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CND Bear

Thank you for posting "The Great Law" with the website. I love history and can never get enough, you can be sure that this is in my favorites and that I will enjoy browsing the site.
Thank you, There are litterally thousands of sites out there with all sorts of info on all the many Nations. I have the info on just a few, the few that I am best assosiated with as it were. I hope you enjoy all you find, and please, if I may ask, share all that you learn with as many as you can.
Bear, you continue to impress me, and to teach me things we all should have learned in primary school, but didn't. I have long argued to anyone who'll listen (which is lamentably few) that there is much to be learned from the aboriginal cultures of this continent, and I've just started reading a fat little paperback book by Charles Mann about pre-Columbian culture in the Americas called 1491. Many years ago, in my early teens, I read a book my dad bought for himself (he was an academic with a particular interest in Canadian history and politics) called Apologies to the Iroquis, which disturbed me profoundly. More recently I studied a most excellent book called Stolen Continents, about the European invasion of the Americas. As I've said here before, I'm trying to understand, and a man like you is of great help.

You my friend are one of the reasons I keep coming back to this place. I hope you never leave. I need to hear from you. I think we all do.
Thanx again Dex, I know I can be brash and bourish at times, and my point of view, is deffinetly not for all, but I have long beleived in the "know thine enemy" phylosophy. That is to say, that I see myths and misconceptions about Native peoples everywhere, and this site was not imune to it. So I felt shedding some light on us would be a help. Whether or not I can change someones mind is a totally different topic, but If you remove some of the unknowns, there is always the chance.

I know my people are no angels, I know that we built our own stereotypes and continue to perpetuate them, but beyond that lies the truth about us as a whole.

You to sir are a voice I have come to revel in.

A most interesting read for me, and I assume you can guess why that would be so. I wonder at the effect of this teaching on the native population prior to the arrival of the European peoples? In other words, when we did arrive, we didn't find a peaceful continent. some warred and continued to war. Interesing that this was also true in Europe who also had the great over-riding philosophy of Jesus commanding peace. One wonders why God sends people to us to teach us peace, we listen and than carry on as if it was of no importance to us!? Or, even worse in my opinion, we take the teaching of the pacisfist and use it to justify murdering other people in our "holy wars".

Side question, did this teaching have an impact on the Mohawks?
In the beginning we were the 5 Nations, the Tuscarora were not members until around 1720, but as a Confederacy we were at peace with each other and worked as a team, each Nation having its purpose.

As much as I would love to dissagree with the assertion that we were at war with other Nations at the time of the arrival of the Europeans, it would be a false statement. But I would like to put these conflicts into perspective.

They were not about differring ideologies or theologies, it was more so over hunting territories and violations of turf. The Algonquin being one the many that were in these varied conflicts, were the source of the more recognisable name of the 5 Nations/Haudenosaunee, which would be Iroquois. The Algonquin called them the Iroqu (Irinakhoiw) "rattlesnakes." After the French added the Gallic suffix "-ois" to this insult, the name became Iroquois. But these conflicts were nothing more then raiding parties and small skermishes. They were not the full out battles and slaughters, later seen at places like Sainte-Marie Among the Hurons Mission. Acts such as these were seen by us as necessary to stem the outbreaks of disease, we saw as bad omens, brought on by the Blackrobes(Jesuit Preists).

These natural divisions were further expoited by the French and English, for political gains and the Dutch for fur trading. But the conflicts prior to the European settlement, were not seen as war, but more so retrobutive and in some cases, sport. See how to count coup.

Ah the Mohawks, The People of Flint. The guards of the Eastern Door. The Bark Eaters. Long considered the war branch in the 5/6 Nations, although, each Nation had its own Warriors, the Mohawk were and still are, extremely good at waging war and are feirce Warriors. The Mohawks along the St Lawrance(Kahnawake/St Regis/Oka/Akwesasne) fought alongside the Francais, while the rest of the now 6 Nations were allied to the Anglais. This caused the Francais Mohawk's, expulsion from the Confederacy.

But the Mohawk followed the Great Law for the most part, for some time. I would charge that it was the influence of the Europeans that has manifested into what the Mohawk have become. Mind you not all the Mohawk, but a fair number that have resorted to a mafia like approach to all things, from gun smuggling to land claim disputes. I say that because of who I see standing in the lines. They are more often then not, Francais Mohawk. It hurts me to type that, but it is true.

You have to understand that the Great Law primerily applied to the Confederacy. Now the Great Peace of 1701, is another story...
 

Sassylassie

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Jan 31, 2006
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A wonderful read Bear, now we are waiting for the story of The Great Peace. I did see something about this on TV, it had one of the charactors from North of 60 doing the government commericial I believe.
 

sanctus

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As much as I would love to dissagree with the assertion that we were at war with other Nations at the time of the arrival of the Europeans, it would be a false statement. But I would like to put these conflicts into perspective.

They another story...

Ahh, don't let European people fool you. Wars have never been about theology, or any other "ology"..they are always about one thing...money in whatever form that takes. People are united in this one thing, all over the world, their greed and jealousy over what their neighbour might have that they suddenly have decided is something they need!
 

CDNBear

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A wonderful read Bear, now we are waiting for the story of The Great Peace. I did see something about this on TV, it had one of the charactors from North of 60 doing the government commericial I believe.
Actually that commercial is about the Great Law, I think they got it wrong. The Great peace was a different matter. But I'm fuzzy on the Canada Post commercial, I could be wrong.
Ahh, don't let European people fool you. Wars have never been about theology, or any other "ology"..they are always about one thing...money in whatever form that takes. People are united in this one thing, all over the world, their greed and jealousy over what their neighbour might have that they suddenly have decided is something they need!
You got me there.

I was thinking of the Crusades as I typed my post, lol.
 

CDNBear

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I need to print this out to read it properly. But its so nice to read your threads on the First Nation (is that correct?)
Pretty much, self.

This is from the Haudenosaunee/Six Nations/Iroquois. Who are members of the Assembly of First Nations.
 

temperance

Electoral Member
Sep 27, 2006
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Like Dexter said they didn't teach this history to us in Canadian history class ,I wonder what a grade 5 class in history would be taught now of Six Nations? -I do hope it is included --I enjoyed that immensely if only our goverment could adopt some of it !!
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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I have a dumb question.......Are the tribes devided by the borders? Such as the Canadian Iroquios vs the States? Or are the all brethren with no borders?
Under the Jay treaty, we are to have unrestricted acces to Turtle Island, north or south, but besides that, no there is no difference between the Nations in the states and those here in Canada, we are all part of the same Confederation of the Six Nations.

Like Dexter said they didn't teach this history to us in Canadian history class ,I wonder what a grade 5 class in history would be taught now of Six Nations? -I do hope it is included --I enjoyed that immensely if only our goverment could adopt some of it !!
Oh I'm sure they'll learn all about Oka, Caledonia, but not anything truly relavent.
 

canadarocks

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Dec 26, 2006
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Under the Jay treaty, we are to have unrestricted acces to Turtle Island, north or south, but besides that, no there is no difference between the Nations in the states and those here in Canada, we are all part of the same Confederation of the Six Nations.


Oh I'm sure they'll learn all about Oka, Caledonia, but not anything truly relavent.

I always wondered about that too. Thanks for the answer. So, further, are natives considered Canadianor American citizens, or are they a separate nationality?
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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I always wondered about that too. Thanks for the answer. So, further, are natives considered Canadianor American citizens, or are they a separate nationality?
We're considered to be citizens of North America, though many hold birth, citizenship and passport documentation, from the country of their origin.

It all comes down to the individual.
 

selfactivated

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Apr 11, 2006
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Under the Jay treaty, we are to have unrestricted acces to Turtle Island, north or south, but besides that, no there is no difference between the Nations in the states and those here in Canada, we are all part of the same Confederation of the Six Nations.


Oh I'm sure they'll learn all about Oka, Caledonia, but not anything truly relavent.

Do they participate in the same ceramonies/ Are theirr governments the same governmnts.......are you seeing my point?