Make
Prayers to the Raven
How Raven Stole
the Sun Talking Raven Who Became a HeroRaven Stories
Raven that is,
Raven that was,
Raven that always will be.
Make prayers to the Raven.
Raven, bring us luck.
from the Koyukon
(Tsimshian
Clan Dance)
How
Raven Invented Fire
How
Raven Lost His Beak
How
Raven Made the World
In the Beginning
Man and the Ravens (Chippewa)
Raven and His Grandmother (Aleuts)
Raven's Great Adventure (Alaska)
(Omar the Amazing Raven)
Before Raven came, the earth was dark and cold. When he saw people living without shadows, he began a search for light. He finds it at the house of Sky Chief, who does not want to share it. Raven changes himself into a pine needle and floats down into the water that Sky Chief's daughter is drinking. In her stomach, he turns into a baby, to Sky Chief's delight. When the baby asks for and receives the shiny ball in the box, he turns back into Raven and flies into the sky, placing the ball where all may enjoy it. That is why Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest feed the raven.
Background of the
Raven Stories
Bibliography
Crow
with Raspy Voice
Dotson'
Sa, Great Raven Makes The World
Eldrbarry's
Raven Tales
Raven and the
Whale
Raven Mythology
Raven in
Literature
The Raven stories of the native peoples of the Pacific Northwest give us a glimpse of the customs and life of a people who depend on and respect their enviornment. The lives of the many tribes of the Northwest coast: Tlingit, Tsimshian, Haida, Kwakiutl, Makah and Quileute-Hoh, and the Coast Salish (to name a few) are closely linked to both forest and sea.
Raven in
Mythology
Raven in Southeast
Mythology
Raven Stories
Raven Tales
Raven Tales [Videos]
Raven was White
Yelth: the Raven
RAVEN:
A TRICKSTER TALE FROM THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
written and illustrated by Gerald McDermott.
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers
111 Fifth Ave., N.Y., NY 10003
(800) 543-1918.
For ages 4-8.
Illustrated. 32 pp., 0-15-265661-8.
Return to Indigenous Peoples' Literature
Compiled by: Glenn Welker
ghwelker@gmx.com
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