Tell Me A STory - Part 6 - The Legend of the Cherokee Rose (Rosa laevigata)
By healerwitch
15 comments
In the latter half of 1838, Cherokee People who had not voluntarily moved west earlier were forced to leave their homes in the East.
(painting by Robert Lindneux)
The trail to the West was long and treacherous and many were dying along the way. The People’s hearts were heavy with sadness and their tears mingled with the dust of the trail.
The Elders knew that the survival of the children depended upon the strength of the women. One evening around the campfire, the Elders called upon Heaven Dweller, ga lv la di e hi. They told Him of the People’s suffering and tears. They were afraid the children would not survive to rebuild the Cherokee Nation.
Gal v la di e hi spoke to them, “To let you know how much I care, I will give you a sign. In the morning, tell the women to look back along the trail. Where their tears have fallen, I will cause to grow a plant that will have seven leaves for the seven clans of the Cherokee. Amidst the plant will be a delicate white rose with five petals. In the center of the blossom will be a pile of gold to remind the Cherokee of the white man’s greed for the gold found on the Cherokee homeland. This plant will be sturdy and strong with stickers on all the stems. It will defy anything which tries to destroy it.”
The next morning the Elders told the women to look back down the trail. A plant was growing fast and covering the trail where they had walked. As the women watched, blossoms formed and slowly opened. They forgot their sadness. Like the plant the women began to feel strong and beautiful. As the plant protected its blossoms, they knew they would have the courage and determination to protect their children who would begin a new Nation in the West.
Retold by Barbara Shining Woman Warren
“We are now about to take our leave and kind farewell to our native land, the country that the Great Spirit gave our Fathers, we are on the eve of leaving that country that gave us birth…it is with sorrow we are forced by the white man to quit the scenes of our childhood… we bid farewell to it and all we hold dear.”
Charles Hicks, Tsalagi (Cherokee) Vice Chief on the Trail of Tears, November 4, 1838
(Image from WhiteFeather’sWebLodge http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~farmeranderwinfamilies/cherokeetrail.html)
When gold was found in Georgia, the government forgot its treaties and drove the Cherokees to Oklahoma. One fourth of them died on the journey west. When the Trail of Tears started in 1838, the mothers of the Cherokee were grieving and crying so much, they were unable to help their children survive the journey. The elders prayed for a sign that would lift the mother’s spirits to give them strength. God, looking down from heaven, decided to commemorate the brave Cherokees and so, as the blood of the braves and the tears of the maidens dropped to the ground, he turned them into stone in the shape of a Cherokee Rose. The next day a beautiful rose began to grow where each of the mother’s tears fell. The rose is white for their tears; a gold center represents the gold taken from Cherokee lands, and seven leaves on each stem for the seven Cherokee clans. No better symbol exists of the pain and suffering of the “Trail Where They Cried” than the Cherokee Rose The wild Cherokee Rose grows along the route of the Trail of Tears into eastern Oklahoma today.
- 5 Jan, 2010
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Comments
Great and sad story...Thanks, Healerwitch for sharing with us...
5 Jan, 2010
Another story...beautifully told.....
5 Jan, 2010
So moving - there was so much cruelty to the indigenous people in those days.
5 Jan, 2010
How sad and very moving one more great story it is a lovely rose.
5 Jan, 2010
Yet another case of Mans inhumanity to his fellow Man.A very moving and touching story.Thank you for sharing with us.
5 Jan, 2010
Thanks all....not my telling tho, I did not write this up, just shared it... :o))
5 Jan, 2010
Does nt matter Healerwitch it was lovely and kind for you to share such knowledge of history, which I have watched on tv with the red indians and are still like it to them in a round about way.
6 Jan, 2010
Thank you for telling this wonderful story. It's a pitty people today do not learn from the sufferings of the past.
6 Jan, 2010
Oh thank you for this history lesson I will get this rose for my yard this year thank you thank you I love the Indian nation and the storyies of the brave men and women who held on thank you once again I love this story we too have a legicy to teach all we know and give to everyone who enters our homes thanks. I love this.
6 Jan, 2010
Enjoyed reading your story about the past.
6 Jan, 2010
You are all quite welcome! :o))
6 Jan, 2010
Thank you HW. These stories are great!
6 Jan, 2010
I have just joined the site and read this sad but inspiring story. As a child in England we were exposed to lots of American films on TV,a lot of them Westerns. So you will not be surprised to hear that children played out what they saw, namely Cowboys and Indians. Even at such a young age I knew what injustice was and so always identified with the American Indians plight.
I hope your proud traditions are not lost. And I look forward to more stories!
16 Mar, 2010
Primnproper...ty...Here in the states children did the same for the same reasons! Many of our people have not lost the traditions, but those of us not raised on a reservation have lost much. It was after all the governments plan to assimilate the 'red' race.
Life goes on and we all learn, we all strive for more and wish something of the past were still here...It is human nature, we survive!
18 Mar, 2010
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What a wonderful history but sad such a lovely rose too.
5 Jan, 2010