Arizona's Hopi culture, ceremonial cycle of the year, Katsinas, visitor protocols.

 

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Hopi Cycle of the Year

This information is a general outline of the year gathered from many sources and my personal observation and presented here for your interest and education.

My life has been so enriched by involvement with Hopi friends over the years. I have been honored to see many of the ceremonials of the year that are open to non-Hopis and feel in my bones how the turning of the year is so amplified by these reverent and moving ceremonies. These ways have evolved over thousands of years of natured-based living in community here in the Americas. I am very grateful the Hopi people have so faithfully kept them alive and allow us to into their world. That, in fact, they are carrying on these ways for all peoples.

If you go up on your own, please check with village offices, the Hopi Tribe or even individual Hopi people who may have shops open, what the rules are for access to the villages. Each village has their own rules about visitors to their villages. Respect their privacy. The activities, dances, and ceremonies are part of a real and living culture and religion and many are not open to non-Hopi people. No photography or sketching in the villages is allowed at any time. It is a great privilege that they allow us to come to their lands. Please be respectful.
Sandra Cosentino

this is a Hopi symbol of the 4 directions

"We Hopi are a deeply religious people. We follow divine instructions and prophecies received from the caretaker of this world, Maasaw. Our religion teaches us a lifeway of humility, cooperation, respect and earth stewardship. We practice our religion with different ceremonies throughout the year which are timed according to phases of the moon and solstices of the sun.

Many of our ceremonies seek to maintain and improve our harmony with nature, enhance our prospects for good health and a long, happy life, and are supplications for rain. Through our dances we celebrate the renewal of our life pattern, ancient migrations, and a spiritual connection with our ancestral sites. This, together with our farming tradition, ties us both physically and ceremonially to our ancestral land, the sun and the cycle of the seasons.

Ceremonies are held throughout the year, with the location and date determined according to custom and tradition. Our ceremonial calendar consists of katsina dances from February to July and social or other non-katsina ceremonies for the rest of the year."

From the official Hopi Tribal website

Other Excellent Resources:

"The complex cycle of interrelated responsibilities and concepts that is the Hopi religious system is all the more complicated because each of the twelve Hopi villages possesses the autonomy to carry out Hopi religious practices independently. The timing of ceremonies, the underlying concepts may vary among the Hopi villages. Nevertheless, throughout the land of the Hopi, the religious mission is the same: to promote and achieve a "unity" of everything in the universe.

Alph H. Secakuku
Following the Sun and Moon,
The Hopi Kachina Tradition


"To grow crops, particularly corn, in their semiarid land the Hopis believe it is absolutely essential to have the supernaturals on their side. However, the Hopis do not approach their supernaturals as we do. The Hopis feel that their supernaturals have certain powers which they do not have, and that they in turn possess things which their supernaturals desire. thus quite often Hopi rituals are mutual gift-giving ceremonies. the supernaturals desire prayer feathers, corn pollen and various rituals, and the Hopis like rain, so this mutual exchange works out very well for both parties .s
While the Hopis' greatest ritual effort is devoted to securing favorable weather for good harvests, this is by no means all of the Hopi religion, a subject so extremely complex that volumes have been written about it."

Barton Wright
Kachinas,
A Hopi Artist's Documentary


"The Hopi year, marked by the sun, the planets, and the stars, is a ceremonial year as well, a continuum of sacred and mostly secret rituals in underground chambers called kivas. most such rituals end in a public ceremony which takes place in the plazas of the villages. There, from January to July, spirit messengers called kachinas dance while the Hopi audience watches and meditates."

Susanne and Jake Page,
Hopi


"If surviving myths and legends are listened to with care they may tell us that these restless ancestors were searching for places of spiritual harmony with nature. For throughout the myths and myth-legends are references to flights from imperfections and evil, and to long journeys in fulfillment of moral prophecy."

Harold Courlander
The Fourth world of the Hopis,
The epic Story of the Hopi Indians as Preserved in their Legends and Traditions

 

 

 

"..their voices rising out of the depths of an archaic America we have never known, out of immeasurable time, form a fathomless unconscious who archetypes are as mysterious and incomprehensible to us as the symbols found eng ravened on the cliff walls of ancient ruins.
What they tell is the story of their Creation and their Emergences from previous worlds, their migrations over this continent, and the meaning of their ceremonies. It is a world-view of life, deeply religious in nature, whose esoteric meaning they have kept inviolate for generations uncounted. Their existence always has been patterned upon the universal plan of world creation and maintenance, and their progress on the evolutionary Road of Life depends upon the unbroken observance of its laws. In turn, the purpose of their religious ceremonialism is to help maintain the harmony of the universe. It is a mytho-religious system of year-long ceremonies, rituals, dances, songs, recitations, and prayers as complex, abstract and esoteric as any in the world.

They remind us we must attune ourselves to the need for inner change if we are to avert a cataclysmic rupture between our own minds and hearts."

Frank Waters
Book of the Hopi

 

 

 

 


"Katsinam are Hopi spirit messengers who send prayers for rain, bountiful harvests and a prosperous, healthy life for humankind. They are our friends and visitors who bring gifts and food, as well as messages to teach appropriate behavior and the consequences of unacceptable behavior. Katsinam, of which there are over two hundred and fifty different types, represent various beings, from animals to clouds.

During their stay at Hopi, the katsinam appear among Hopi people in physical form, singing and dancing in ceremonies. On Third Mesa the katsinam arrive in December while at the First and Second Mesa they arrive in February at the Bean Dance Ceremony. Night dances are held until the end of March, followed by day dances from May to July. Virtually no weekend goes by during this period without a katsina dance in at least one Hopi village. Most dances start shortly after sunrise (mostly on Saturday and/or Sundays) and continue intermittently throughout the day, with breaks for lunch and rest periods. The ceremonies usually end at dusk. Several of the villages often hold dances on the same day, giving visitors the opportunity to witness parts of several dances by spending a few hours in different villages.

Niman (Home Dance), which takes place in July, is the last katsina dance of the cycle. At the end of this day-long ceremony the katsinam return to their spiritual home at the San Francisco Peaks, Kisiau and Waynemai.
The Katsinam who carry out the religious dances are sacred to us and require specific codes of conduct in their presence. Misinformation about these customs and lack of knowledge about the physical conditions of Hopi plazas were the core of conflicts in the past. While we believe that the Katsinam perform public ceremonies for all people, plants, animals and spirit life, modern conditions make it next to impossible to accommodate all outside visitors. First, there is limited space in the plazas and our rooftops were not constructed to support the weight of hundreds of spectators. Second, sanitation facilities, food, water and emergency services are not designed to serve large crowds. Finally, spectators were originally Hopi villagers and invited guests who were fully aware of the purpose of the ceremonies and how to behave appropriately while attending.

In view of the communities' difficulties in resolving the issue of restricting attendance at public ceremonies, visitors are asked to be respectful and help monitor the activities of other guests. Through this we can reach mutual respect and understanding. Your participation in establishing harmony will be consistent with the primary purpose of the dances and will be most appreciated by your hosts."

From the official Hopi Tribal website

 

The Soyal Kachina who appears in December

 

 

Kachinas on the rooftop of a Kiva entering for the Night Dances
Painting by Valentino Anton, 1st Mesa

 

 

Hemis Kachina and Kachina Mana
which appear at the Home Dance

 

Edward Curtis historic photo of Hopi snake dancer

November
WUWUCHIM is the first of the three great winter ceremonials portraying the three phases of Creation. This first phase is a supplication for germination of all forms of life on earth, plant, animal and man. The patterns and movements of the stars guide this ceremony.

In the Men's Societies, the initiated men celebrate this the Fourth World of creation. The fire of life is lit commemorating emergence from he underworld. This is a sacred time of purification and preparation of the prayer feathers and initiation of men as adults into their societies.

December
December is a time of quiet and storytelling which draw lessons from the past to maintain high standards of Hopi life.

The Hopi katsinam (popularly known as Kachinas) are the benevolent spirit beings who live among the Hopi for about half of the year beginning around the time of Winter Solstice with the Soyal ceremony. Kachinas are the inner forms, the spirit forms, of outer life, invoked to assist mankind on their never-ending journey.

The SOYAL CEREMONY is the second great ceremonial and symbolizes the second phase of Creation at the dawn of life. It accepts and confirms the pattern of life development for the coming year. It is often called Soyalangwul, Establishing Life Anew for All the World. This ceremony helps to turn the sun back toward its summer path and implements the life plan for the year. Activities take place in the kiva and include reverent silence, fasting and humility and eating os sacred foods to achieve spiritual focus. Prayer feathers are prepared by the men for every purpose and placed in homes, villages and around the ancestral homeland in shrine sites.

January
The moisture moon comes in January. Social dance(non-kachina dance) such as the Buffalo Dance are performed representing the animals that roam in mountains now covered by snow. the dances are a prayer for snow, for nourishment.

February
POWAMU, the Bean Dance is the most complex of all ceremonies. This is the third of the ceremonies of Creation where life manifests in its full physical forms and growth is consecrated. Manyu of these ceremonies are not open to the public.

In anticipation of the coming growing season to promote fertility and germination, the initiated males grow beans in the kivas. Kachinas appear in the villages carrying the bean sprouts and bringing gifts for the children. Young children are initiated at this time into their societies and receive gifts to honor their good behavior. Historical and mythological events are given as dramatic presentations. The ogres, guards, whippers appear as disciplinarians, reminders to follow the Hopi way of life.

March
KACHINA NIGHT DANCES are performed in the underground kivas. These are NOT open to the public

April
The Racer Kachinas appear to bless the people and encourage fitness for short and long distance running. Fields are prepared and the first crop of corn is planted.

May
Planting time.

June - July
When the weather warms, KACHINA DANCES are held in village plazas (kisonovis). Many of these are NOT open to the public.

They may be Mixed Kachina Dances with many different types of kachinas or they may be a dance where all are the same. Feasts are held and neighbors visit one another. There are often clowns to entertain the audience between dances. They bring howls of laughter as they misbehave and show all how not to act.

Kachina plaza dances ending with the Home Dance or NIMAN CEREMONY when the spiritual beings who have been on earth in their physical form return to their spiritual home in the San Francisco Peaks. Brides of the year are presented their robes by their husbands in this last kachina ceremony of the year.

This ceremony acknowledges the powerful forces appealed to during the Soyal and Powamu: germination, heat, moisture and magnetic forces of the air. The first harvest of corn and heaps of food and gifts for the children are all given by the kachinas. These gifts represent bounty of harvest, and great virtues of life for all mankind.

The day after the Nimankatsina dance, eagles that have been collected in May and adopted into families must also be sent home bearing prayers and the observations of events.

August
SNAKE-ANTELOPE CEREMONY OR FLUTE CEREMONY are performed in alternate years in two of the Hopi villages to bring the last summer rains to ensure the maturation of the crops. This is the last of major ceremonies of summer. This dance is NOT open to non-Indians.

The flute ceremony is an enactment of emergence into this Fourth World. The snake is a symbol of mother earth and human sexuality from which all life is born. The antelope symbolizes fruitful reproduction and its horns the connection to the higher spiritual powers. Hence the union of the two is symbolic of the creation of life. Antelope and Snake races are held on separate days symbolizing the pathway of this union. In the final phase, the snake priests dance with snakes in their mouth consummating this union.


BUTTERFLY AND OTHER SOCIAL DANCES such as dances honoring other tribes (Navajo, Havasupai) are also performed. They are joyful non-Kachina celebrations primarily performed by young men and women. They are also a thanksgiving for the blessings of the season.

September
The ceremonial year ends with the three women's ceremonies celebrating maturity and fruition and sets the stage to begin again with germination.

MARAW Women's Ceremonials consecrate the harvest season. Initiated adult women participate in the fall ceremonials in the kivas and with public dances.

October
LAKON and OWAQLT--the Women's Basket Dances are prayers for healthy fertility.


Day trips to Hopi Indian Lands

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posted Dec. 9, 2002
updated March 3, 2008

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