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The Legend of the Cherokee Rose
More than 100 years ago, the Cherokee people were
driven from their home mountains when the white men discovered gold in
the mountains of North Carolina and Georgia. Their journey is remembered
as the Trail of Tears. Some of the people came across Marengo County in
West Alabama. It seems that after they had left the mountains, they came
this far south so not have to climb more mountains.
It was early summer and very hot, and most of the
time the people had to walk. Tempers were short and many times the soldiers
were more like animal drivers than guides for the people. The men were
so frustrated with the treatment of their women and children, and the soldiers
were so harsh and frustrated that bad things often happened. When two men
get angry they fight and once in a while men were killed on the trip. Many
people died of much hardship. Much of the time the trip was hard and sad
and the women wept for losing their homes and their dignity.
The old men knew that they must do something to
help the women not to lose their strength in weeping. They knew the women
would have to be very strong if they were to help the children survive.
So one night after they had made camp along the
Trail of Tears, the old men sitting around the dying campfire called up
to the Great One in Galunati (heaven) to help the people in their trouble.
They told Him that the people were suffering and feared that the little
ones would not survive to rebuild the Cherokee Nation.
The Great One said, "Yes, I have seen the sorrows
of the women and I can help them to keep their strength to help the children.
Tell the women in the morning to look back where their tears have fallen
to the ground. I will cause to grow quickly a plant. They will see a little
green plant at first with a stem growing up. It will grow up and up and
fall back down to touch the ground where another stem will begin to grow.
I’ll make the plant grow so fast at first that by afternoon they’ll see
a white rose, a beautiful blossom with five petals. In the center of the
rose, I will put a pile of gold to remind them of the gold which the white
man wanted when his greed drove the Cherokee from their ancestral home."
The Great One said that the green leaves will have
seven leaflets, one for each of the seven clans of the Cherokee. The plant
will begin to spread out all over, a very strong plant, a plant which will
grow in large, strong clumps and it will take back some of the land they
had lost. It will have stickers on every stem to protect it from anything
that tries to move it away.
The next morning the old men told the women to look
back for the sign from the Great One. The women saw the plant beginning
as a tiny shoot and growing up and up until it spread out over the land.
They watched as a blossom formed, so beautiful they forgot to weep and
they felt beautiful and strong. By the afternoon they saw many white blossoms
as far as they could see. The women began to think about their strength
given them to bring up their children as the new Cherokee Nation. They
knew the plant marked the path of the brutal Trail of Tears. The Cherokee
women saw that the Cherokee Rose was strong enough to take back much of
the land of their people.
From "Aunt Mary, Tell Me A Story" |