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Huichol
Indians
The
Huichol Indians of Western Central Mexico live in the Sierra
Madre Occidental. They call themselves the "Wixarica"
or "the people" in their native language, "Wixa"
(The "x" is a rolled "r"). Their
aboriginal religion consists of four principal deities,
Corn, Eagles, Deer and Peyote, all descended from their Sun
God, "Tau." These people have accepted small parts
of Catholicism. There are many evangelical Christian
churches forming in recent years after the Bible-translating
work of Americans, Joe and Barbara Grimes, which began in
the 1950s and followed up by later Evangelical Christian
missionaries. Most Huichols, however, retain traditional
beliefs and are resistant to change.
The
Huichol are originally from the State of San Luis Potosi to
the east of the parts of Durango, Jalisco, Zacatecas and
Nayarit in which the Sierra of the Huichol is found. It is
said that Wixa is a form of Chichimecha, common to the
Indians of San Luis Potosi. They refer to several entities
as family members, such as "Grandfather Fire,"
"Grandmother Growth" and "Great Grandfather
Deer-tail," the last of which was the shaman who
brought them to their part of the Sierra, probably to avoid
either the Aztecs or the Conquistadors.
The
Huichol are dirt farmers, gleaning a living from land that
is desert for half the year and jungle the other half. In
summer, when the rains come, they live on their ranchos
(farms) and make cheese from the milk from their cattle,
which they slaughter and eat usually only during fiestas
(religious gatherings). For the most part, their diet
consists of tortillas, made from the purple "Sacred
corn," beans, rice and pasta, with the occasional
chicken or pig, from which they make "Chicherones,"
chili peppers, all supplemented with goods provided by
nature, like "weizz," a legume gathered from
trees, or "ceruelas" wild plums and guiabas
(guavas).
The
craftsmanship of the Huichol includes embroidery, beadwork,
sombreros (hats), archery equipment, prayer arrows, and
weaving, as well as "cichuries," woven or
embroidered bags of great beauty and religious significance
which also serve great practical purpose. It is uncommon to
ever see a Huichol without his cichurie.
In
winter they gather around water holes ("ojos de agua")
in villages of adobe and burnt adobe houses interspersed
with "Caretons," houses on stilts made with wood,
cornstalks, lashing, and thatched roofs. Each settlement
will have a "riviki" (God's House) or "Caliwey"
(a temple), where religious ceremonies and fiestas take
place.
Often
a large settlement will have only a few extended families.
Inbreeding and the health problems associated with it have
become a problem. A very large percentage of Huichols are
born with congenital cleft lip or palate.
The
Huichol seek autonomy in their land, but have two
governments, one native to the Huichol and one answering to
the Mexican Government through "Municipal Agents"
in the larger settlements. Schools have been established in
the Huichol Zone during the last 40 years, both federal and
church, but also a private Junior High School, which has led
to some friction between "Town" and
"Gown" among members of the tribe. Friction also
exists between converts to Christianity and followers of the
old religion, which means the missions, are just barely
tolerated by some of the people.
With
the building of roads in the Huichol Zone in the last ten
years, new influences are impacting the social fabric of the
Huichol. Where mules, horses and burros used to be the main
forms of transport, trucks are becoming more prominent,
importing food, medicines and beer. New diseases that these
people do not have a natural immunity to are also entering
the society, so the length of time that traditional Huichol
society can endure is an open question.
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