Sipapu
Sipapu is a Hopi word which refers to a small hole or indentation in the floor of a kiva. Kivas were used by the Ancestral Puebloans and continue to be used by modern-day Puebloans. The sipapu symbolizes the portal through which their ancient ancestors first emerged to enter the present world.[1]
Moreover, The Hopi Sacred Stories explain that this is the hole in which the first peoples of this world entered. As "They" stepped outside of the "Sipapu", they morphed from lizard-like beings into homo sapiens, or human form (See Waters, 1963, and later reprints; Courlander, 1971). It is from this point that the "First Peoples" of the Earth began to divide and separate, creating differing tribes along the first journeys of the first humans.
See also
- Sipapu (ski area)
References
- ↑ Wenger, Gilbert R. (1991) [1980]. The Story of Mesa Verde National Park. Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado: Mesa Verde Museum Association. ISBN 0-937062-15-4.
- Waters, F. (1963). "Book of the Hopis". New York: Penguin Group.
- Courlander, H. (1971). "The Fourth World of the Hopis." Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press.
sando,joe s,(1982). "the pueblo indians". san francisco; the Indian historian press.