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"The great one above put life into our dirt bodies, which means that some time way back the body was made from dirt and the Great Spirit put the life into it. We call the Great Spirit "Amaayahaa." After man, a woman was made, the life was blown into them. The legend is that there have been times when there was a great teacher on the earth, and he lived (gave life to) things." Another story is told among the Kumeyaay people of how they first came to live in what is today San Diego, California. Many years ago all the peoples were united as one and together they traveled west out of the sunrise led by a chief whose wife had died and who had only one daughter. Among the assembled people, was a young boy who, during the migration west, fell in love with the chief's daughter. Before long the young boy and the chiefs daughter made love. When they reached what is today Borrego Springs, the final part of the desert, the boy climbed a mountain (called Hahpowugh) to hunt some deer. After killing a buck, he watched from a distance the birth of their child. What are the meanings of these stories? They are only two of hundreds about the origin of the first people in San Diego. They are part of an oral tradition that offers a different kind of history. Later Mexicans and Chicanos would also develop their own oral histories. Send us your interpretations? What do they mean? Can you tell us any stories you may have heard about the first people? Send them to rgriswol@mail.sdsu.edu ![]() |
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