Rock House: Why the Sun Follows the Moon A Southern Maidu Oral Narrative Re-told by Barbara Shining Woman Warren Flesch-Kincaid level 4.3 Goldbelt Heritage Foundation 3200 Hospital Drive Juneau, Alaska 99801 12
Copyright Permission was granted by Barbara Shining Woman Warren t to reprint this story solely for educational purposes connected to the unit published by Goldbelt Heritage Foundation. Photo Credits The following images are located on Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikipedia.org The authors of these images are in no way affiliated with Goldbelt Heritage Foundation. Use of the following files within this document does not qualify as an endorsement of GHF by the authors. Cover Image The Plane of Ecliptic. This image is the work of The Clementine Project, commissioned by NASA. This image in in the public domain. Page 6: Black-Tailed Jack Rabbit. This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work prepared by an officer or employee of the United States Government as part of that person s official duties under the terms of Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105 of the US Code. Page 7: Pocket Gopher, by LeonardoWeiss, January 29, 2011. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. Page 10: Map of Maidu Language. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic License. Page 10: Maidu Basket Justin Smith / Wikimedia Commons, CC-By- SA-3.0. This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. Page 11: Rock House. Courtesy of Barbara Shining Woman Warren. Rock House is the Southern Maidu name for Paines Peak. The twelve hundred foot high Paines Peak is a jagged out-cropping of volcanic rock. It is located within a circle of the foothill roads of Old Marysville, Fruitland, Loma Rica and Scott-Grant in northern Yuba County. Rock House In 2009 Barbara Shining Woman Warren was able to return this story to a descendant of the Edwards family still residing in Yuba County. Previously unaware of the story, this descendant is telling the story of "Rock House" once again. 2 11
Maidu territory The Maidu are a Northern-Central Valley tribe of California. Originally their territory Rock House: Why the Sun Follows the Moon A Southern Maidu Oral Narrative Re-told by Barbara Shining Woman Warren encompassed both sides of the Sacramento River. The Maidu are among the most gifted basket makers in the world. Maidu baskets 10 3
Barbara Shining Woman Warren About This Story This story was collected in Yuba County by Don May, a Cherokee, and told to Barbara Warren in 1990. Don originally heard this story in 1980 from his eighty year old Southern Maidu friend, Frazier Edwards. Frazier had lived in this area all his days; this was the home of his ancestors. 4 9
When they reached the top of the peak, Gopher began to dig quietly so Father Sun and Mother Moon would not be alarmed. As soon as Gopher backed out of the hole, Coyote and Rabbit shook the bags of fleas down the opening. Then they plugged up the hole and ran away feeling very pleased with themselves. Father Sun and Mother Moon lived inside the huge hollow rocks of Rock House. Their light did not shine from the sky, so the People and the Animals lived in darkness. The fleas soon covered Father Sun and Mother Moon. When Mother Moon could no longer stand the fleas, she flew out of Rock House and began to circle the Earth. Father Sun followed Mother Moon out of Rock House. They raced around the Earth trying to get rid of those fleas. That is why, to this day, the Sun follows the Moon across the sky. Now Coyote, who was always playing tricks, thought it would be great fun to dump some fleas on Father Sun and Mother Moon. So he began to gather the fleas and place them in bags. 8 5
On his way to Rock House he met Rabbit. When Coyote bragged about his bags of fleas, Rabbit would not believe him. They began to argue. Rabbit liked Coyote's idea of taking the fleas to Rock House. So together they trudged up the peak to Rock House carrying the bags of fleas. As they walked they tried to think of a plan to get the fleas inside of Rock House. Between them, Rabbit and Coyote began to tug on one of the bags. As Rabbit yanked it from Coyote's grasp, the bag opened and the fleas spilled out on the ground. And to this day, Rabbit and Coyote are always scratching fleas. Along the path they found Gopher digging a hole. They decided to include Gopher in their trick. Gopher could dig a hole down through the soil to Rock House. 6 7