Dwellings were often constructed of earth, stone, split planks, redwood
bark, or a combination of the four. Some were dug slightly below ground
level, with a round hole for an entrance. Smaller huts framed with willow
branches were common in some regions. Circular dancehouses with floors
sunk a few feet into the earth and roofs of heavy timbers were used much
the way whites used their own churchesfor worship, meetings, games,
and social functions. Men usually held cleansing sweats in these structures,
often followed by an icy plunge into a nearby creek.
In most societies, women were not allowed to participate in dancehouse
activities--yet in many tribes, only women were allowed to achieve the
powerful position of Shaman. Dances often related to what anthropologists
once called the Kuksu system of beliefs, incorporating principles of both
spirit transformation and world renewal.
Unlike Indians in colder climateswho typically celebrated the coming
of spring and the end of cold weatherCalifornia Indians often celebrated
the coming of fall, which meant an end to dry conditions, the sprouting
of new grass, and the shedding of acorns in Valley and foothill areas.
In both their dances and stories, spirits were often depicted as animals.
Commonest among these was an intriguingly complex and witty character
named Coyote, whose persona mirrors the paradoxically good, evil, honest,
and deceitful traits of human beings--whose lives he could manipulate
at will.
Tribes had their creation stories, many of which involved Coyote or other
spirit beings. Religions often stressed a concept of world renewal, where
things that have gone bad are restored to order, sometimes with a catastrophic
event. Marriages were often marked with an exchange of gifts, and polygamy
was common. The dead were usually cremated and their possessions burned,
in ceremonies involving the unhindered expression of grief.
Some societies (e.g. the North Coast Yurok) had rigid social hierarchies
with distinct upper and lower classes. In other, more egalitarian, tribes,
tribal decisions were made by an informal group of elders rather than
a designated "chief." Some tribes practiced careful land-management (arguably
a form of agriculture), in which vegetation was burned at specified intervals
to bring out edible plants and create forage for game. Pruning and cultivation
were also practiced, and some of California's rapidly-disappearing oak
woodlands may have originated from Indian acorn planting.
And then the white settlers came. It's always these same six words, over
and over again, haunting every historical discourse and neutrally-worded
tourism brochure. Clichéd as the idea has become, California's Indians
suffered a holocaust at the hands of Europeans and Americans. The Spanish
Missionaries, who looked upon them as heathens (but at least regarded
them as human), killed their culture with words, their people with diseases.
Gold rush settlers, who often hailed from slave states, where non-white
races were regarded as chattel, took over their land, bedded their women,
retaliated against their slightest hostility with all-out massacre, and
eventually had them rounded up and crammed into reservations.
Is there a happy ending? You tell me. Blackjack, anyone?