THE IROQUOIS DREAM EXPERIENCE
and SPIRITUALITY
part one of four
part two   part three   part four
copyright 1998 by Tika Yupanqui
(Tracy Marks)

 
 
 

IROQUOIS FALSE FACE
MASKS, copyrighted, 
posted with permission of
Agawah Indian Crafts and
The Canadian Carver
http://www.pancakebay.com

from top to bottom:
First Mask: 
FALSE FACE
A variation of the Broken Nose/ 
Twisted Face False Face mask
carved by John Elliot. 
pancakebay.com

Second Mask: 
BLOWER
One of the features of a False 
Face curing ceremony is the 
blowing of medicine-charged 
wood ashes upon the patient's 
head, arms, hands and, on 
occasion, the specific 
problem area. This hand- 
carved Face memorializes 
this aspect of their behaviour. 
pancakebay.com

Third mask: 
PROTRUDING TONGUE
(Tongue moves). Often, this 
False Face mask is combined 
with features of the Broken 
nose mask. The tongue may 
be carved into the side or 
center of the mouth, or be 
separate and free-swinging. 
This is the type of the first 
Iroquois False Face collected 
by ethnologist L.H Morgan. 
pancakebay.com

PLEASE NOTE: All mask images above were posted with permission from the mask creator or owner.



IROQUOIS FALSE FACE
MASKS, copyrighted, 
posted with permission of
pancakebay.com

from top to bottom
First mask: 
FALSE FACE
A variation of the Broken Nose/ 
Twisted False Face mask,  
carved by John Elliot. 
pancakebay.com

Second mask: 
BLOWER
One of the features of a False 
Face curing ceremony is the 
blowing of medicine-charged 
wood ashes upon the patient's 
head, arms, hands and, on 
occasion, the specific 
problem area. This hand- 
carved Face memorializes 
this aspect of their behaviour. 
pancakebay.com

Third mask: 
PROTRUDING TONGUE
(Tongue moves). Often, this 
False Face mask is combined 
with features of the Broken 
Nose mask. The tongue may 
be carved into the side or 
center of the mouth, or be 
separate and free-swinging. 
This is the type of the first 
Iroquois False Face collected 
by ethnologist L.H Morgan. 
pancakebay.com

PLEASE NOTE: All mask images above were posted with permission from the mask creator or owner.

Introduction
In past centuries, the Iroquois indians of the Great Lakes considered dreams to be a guide to their lives, to dictate their choices in regard to fishing, hunting, war, dancing, marriage and other significant life events. The Iroquois especially listened carefully to dreams their people had prior to war and hunting - a war party would even turn back if one of its members dreamed of failure immediately before or during the hunt. 

In The Shaman's Doorway, Stephen Larsen quotes the French missionary Ragueneau's Jesuit Relations, (and material by Ragueneau originally appearing in the American Anthropologist, April 1958) who carefully documented the Iroquois approach to dreams: 

"The Iroquois believe that our souls have other desires, which are, as it were, inborn and concealed. These, they say, come from the depths of the soul, not through any knowledge.... They have no divinity but the dream. They submit themselves to it and follow its order with the utmost exactness. Whatever they see themselves doing in dreams they believe they are absolutely obliged to execute at the earliest possible moment. Iroquois would think themselves guilty of a great crime if they failed to obey a single dream."
 

Chief Cornplanter's Dream
Lewis Henry Morgan, in his League of The Iroquois, tells a story of Chief Cornplanter of the Seneca Iroquois who late in his life in 1819 dreamed that she should give up his office of chief, and resigned the position. According to Morgan, Cornplanter first walked for three days from house to house telling his dream to the people of his dream and seeking their interpretations until he found the one that he felt was right. One Iroquois told him that his dream indicated that his name was now Onono, the Iroquois word for cold, associated with winter and endings. This meant therefore that his chieftainship should end, and a new successor should take his place. He was also guided to remove all possessions of white man from his home in order to retain the good will of the Great Spirit. 

Cornplanter felt this interpretation and guidance was correct, and he burned up the gifts he had received from Washington, Adams and Jefferson. He then chose an old friend as his successor, and sent him a tomahawk and a belt of wantum to announce his resignation and to honor the new chief. He was at peace with his decision, and content to follow the dictates of his dreams and make choices which brought him into further harmony with the Great Spirit and his tribe. 
 

Dream Prophecy and Ely Parker
Ely Parker, Iroquois chief and Union leader who drafted the terms of surrender that ended the Civil War, was the "one real American" according to General Lee. The history.net web site tells the following story: 

In 1828, four months before his birth at the Tonawanda Seneca reservation in Indian Falls, N.Y., Parker's mother had an unsettling dream in which she beheld a broken rainbow reaching from the home of Indian agent Erastus Granger, in Buffalo, to the reservation. Troubled, Elizabeth Johnson ...visited a Seneca dream interpreter in an attempt to better understand what she had seen. His translation of her vision was nothing less than spectacular.

The dream interpreter told Parker: "A son will be born to you who will be distinguished among his nation as a peacemaker; he will become a white man as well as an Indian, with great learning; he will be a warrior for the palefaces; he will be a wise white man, but will never desert his Indian people or 'lay down his horns as a great Iroquois chief'; his name will reach from the East to the West--the North to the South, as great among his Indian family and the palefaces. His sun will rise on Indian land and set on the white man's land. Yet the land of his ancestors will fold him in death." As it happened, the prophecy came true.
 

Dream Prophecy and  Deganawida
The well-known story of Deganawida  and the Iroquois League of Nation, posted as De-Ka-Na-Wi-Da and Hiawatha online, also reflects the fulfillment of an Iroquois dream prophecy: 

About 1390, an Iroquois mother living near the Bay of Quinte had a very special dream: A messenger came to her and revealed that her maiden daughter, who lived at home, would soon give birth to a son. She would call him De-ka-nah-wi-da (De-kah-a-wee-da). When a grown man, he would bring to all people the good Tidings of Peace and Power from the Chief of the Sky Spirits.  De-ka-nah-wi-da was born, as the dream foretold.

Years later, Deganawida became the founder of the Iroquois League of Nations, also known as "The Great Peace", and his teachings were considered to be "The Great Law." In several books, most notably, The Forgotten Founders: How the American Indian Shaped Democracy  by Bruce E. Johansen, historians point out the both Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson had considerable contact with the Iroquois, that they studied and respected the political unity of the Iroquois federation, and that they patterned the United States constitution and system of government after the Iroquois system. 

Again from  De-Ka-Na-Wi-Da and Hiawatha:
De-ka-nah-wi-da  asked all the chiefs and their chief warriors and assistants to meet on the shores of Lake Onondaga for a Council... The Messenger stood before the Council and explained a plan for the Constitution of the Iroquois League of Peace..."Each Chief shall organize his own tribe in the same way for the peace, happiness, and contentment of all his people. Each Chief shall sit at the head of his own Council and matters shall be referred to him for final decision."

"In the future, your Annual Confederacy Council Fire shall be held here at the Onondaga village.... It will be your Seat of Government. New Chiefs shall be confirmed by the Confederacy Council .... When other nations wish to accept the good Tidings of Peace and Power, they shall be seated within the Confederacy Council."

"...Let the good Tidings of Peace and Power and righteousness be your guide in all your Council Fires.....I now proclaim the formation of the League of the Five Iroquois Nations completed. I leave in your hands these principles I have received from the Chief of the Sky Spirits. In the future you will have the power to add any necessary rules for the safety and well-being of the Confederacy....My mission is now fulfilled." 
 

The Meaning of Dreams
According to the Iroquois, to ignore dreams was to court illness, madness and disaster by opposing the messages of the god within. Dreams could help to cure disease, as well as disorders of the mind which were believed to result from unconscious desires revealed in dream - often resentments and unmet needs and desires. These desires were believed not only to stem from the personality, but also from the secret longings of the soul, which might at times be at odds with or unrelated to conscious intentions. Through dreaming and sharing dreams, the Iroquois believed - and believe to this day - that they contacted the sacred power, ORENDA. 

Often in their dreams, the Iroquois looked for overt or hidden instructions, and religiously followed the guidance they heard or experienced. Following such dictates exactly was extremely important; failure to do so could cause misfortune. A past issue of Parabola  magazine includes an article by Joseph Bruchach, in which he quotes an Iroquois story about following the direct guidance of a dream. The story begins: 

One night Hanjanoh had a dream. In the dream his spirit protector, a great water bird, flew down. ``Beware the eyes of false friends," said the spirit protector. Then it was gone.  The next morning Hahjanoh woke before dawn. He went out to the village and hid behind a large stone. Soon he saw a strange sight. From the village came the children who had been acting strangely toward him.

Often, the Iroquois believed that a dream called for enactment - acting out the dream story with the witness or involvement of other members of the community. Dreamsharing was often a communal experience; tensions experienced in the dream were expressed and released through community sharing and interpretation. 
 

Dream Quests
Men in the Iroquois society ritually did dream quests as part of their initiation, in order to awaken both visions and dreams that would guide them. One such Iroquois dream quest is told online in How Fire Came to the Six Nations

How Fire Came to the Six Nations

Three Arrows prayed to the Great Spirit. He begged that soon his clan spirit would appear in a dream and tell him what his guardian animal or bird was to be. When he knew this, he would adopt a bird or animal as his special guardian for the rest of his life. When the dream came he would be free to return to his people, his dream fast successfully achieve.

For five suns Three Arrows spent his days and nights on the rocky plateau, only climbing down to the little spring for water after each sunset. His heart was filled with a dark cloud because that morning his father had sadly warned him that the next day, the sixth sun, he must return to his village even if no dream had come to him in the night. This meant returning to his people in disgrace without the chance of taking another dream fast.
 

Communal Dream Sharing
Most of the time, in Iroquois society, dreamsharing was a communal activiity. The primary communal expressions of Iroquois dreamwork were the activities of the False Face Society, and the Midwinter Dream Festival, one of the most sacred festivals in Iroquois society. 

The False Face Society were a select group of Iroquois who wore masks (see Iroquois masks at left) in order to invoke the spirits and befriend them, in order to combat illness, diseases of the mind, and misfortune. In healing tribal members, the False Faces used ritual and curative dances. People healed by the False Faces often asked for renewal through repetition of the dances during tribal ceremonies. The False Faces led the communal dream interpretation and rituals during major ceremonies throughout the year, and especially the Midwinter Dream Festival (see part two to follow in the next issue). 

The dreamwork of the Iroquois was not only an early precursor of the dreamwork and analysis of Freud and Jung; it is very  similar to the approach to dream interpretation used today by many psychologists trained in Freudian, Jungian and gestalt dream techniques. Consider the following quotations from authors of contemporary books on dreamwork, and compare these to the Iroquois approach to dreamwork: 
 

James Hall: "A dream is a piece of reality...whose meaning is pregnant but uncertain, and whose fate in the world of the waking-ego lies in our own hands. If we treat it with respect, it serves us. There is never any doubt as to its underlying concern for our ultimate welfare."

Sam Keen: "Hatred, cruelty, confusion, despair, and madness must be admitted into consciousness before they can be integrated. I have to reverence my anger and fear before they become civilized." 

Tracy Marks: As Perseus killed Medusa by encountering her image in a mirror ( direct confrontation was too potent an experience), so we may be best able to access and integrate the potent energy of our primitive and transpersonal selves through our inner images....Many conflicts between people and wars between nations result from lack of personal integration, from projecting the disowned facets of ourselves onto others and battling them externally. Within ourselves, in our dreamwork, we can begin to accomplish what couples, families, groups and nations in conflict may fail to accomplish, thereby contributing to our community.


NEXT - Part Two
Iroquois Dreamwork in the Midwinter Festival
 



ADDITIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHY:

Fenton, William, The False Faces of the Iroquois, U of Oklahoma Press, 1991.

Houston, Jean and Margaret Rubin, Manual for the Peacemaker: An Iroquois Legend to Heal Self and Society, Quest, 1995.

Johansen, Bruce, E., The Forgotten Founders: How the American Indian Shaped Democracy, 1987.

Larsen, Stephen and Joan Halifax, Shaman's Doorway, Station Hill Press, Barrytown, New York, 1976, 1988. Also Inner Traditions, 1998. 

Morgan, Lewis Henry, League of the Iroquois, Citadel Press, Seacaucus, New Jersey, 1962, (Sage and Brothers, 1951)

Tooker, Elisabeth, editor, Native American Spirituality of the Eastern Woodlands Paulist Press, Mahwah, NJ, 1979, 1988.

Iroquois False Face Masks at left from Agawah Crafts Online and the Canadian Carver:
http://www.pancakebay.com
 
 

Next: PART II: Midwinter Ceremony
PART III: Iroquois Myths
Part IV: Iroquois Music
 

Go to Part Two      Go to Part Three     Go to Part Four
Go to Tika Yupanqui's index 
Site last updated January 14, 2001