Telling tribal tales
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Marisa O’Neil
Newport Coast Elementary School students danced with coyotes on
Friday.
Members of the Tongva Indian tribe, also known as the Gabrielinos,
visited the third- and fourth-grade classes to share their culture,
music and dance with the students. A special coyote dance proved the
biggest hit.
“The coyote represents the trickster,” explained Andrew Guiding
Young Cloud Morales. “He plays tricks on people. He is our clown.”
Dressed in tribal regalia, Morales put a full coyote skin over his
back and danced around the room as fellow tribe members Cynthia
Guthrie and Matthew Sky Eagle Sings from His Heart Lovio sang. As the
coyote hopped and spun around the room, the students giggled with
delight, especially when he teased them by lifting his leg a couple
times.
“I liked the coyote dance,” 9-year-old Will Lyle said after the
program. “That was cool.”
Students saw -- up close and personal -- rabbit skins, shells and
musical instruments the tribe members brought. Hunter Molnar, 10,
even got to give their drum a couple taps.
The Tongva visit came at a perfect time for third-grade teacher
Stacy Rickman’s class.
“We are just finishing up studying [the tribe] so this tied in
perfectly,” she said. “When they were dancing, the kids turned to me
and said: ‘This is so cool.’”
Tongva land used to spread from the San Bernardino Mountains to
the sea and from Malibu south through Newport Beach, Morales told the
students. Because they lived near the coast, their jewelry includes
necklaces made from seashells.
“Our ancestors were very lucky,” Lovio told them. “We had
beautiful land in the valley, the mountains and near the ocean.”
Lovio, Morales and Guthrie wore deerskins, rabbit fur and
turkey-feather headdresses.
“This is not a costume,” Lovio said. “This is what our ancestors
wore long ago. This was their three-piece suit.”
Members of their tribe have passed along their knowledge and
stories to younger generations, Morales said. They visit area schools
to teach students about their culture and ancestors.
“I thought some Indians living today would be more modern,”
9-year-old Crystal Ton-Nu said. “But its good that they’ve kept their
traditions.”
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