Zuni is a small village in the Southwestern part of New Mexico. For
a thousand years, it has been the most important part of the region.
The language of the Zuni people (A:shiwi ) is a linguistic isolate--there
being no other language which bears any resemblance. This suggests
that the time in which the Zunis separated from a parent group lies
at a considerably distance and it implies a cultural conservativeness
such that no other language has been allowed to take root. Just as
Zunis will say that their religion is the glue which holds their culture
together so others are beginning to understand that Zuni is the glue
which holds southwestern New Mexico together.
Idiwanna is the name the Zunis give
to the place where theyl ive. Idiwanna in the Zuni language means
The Center Place.
Zuni is a cultural and religious and political
center which shares in a cultural envelope extending back and in
four directions for more than a thousand years. The present Zuni
exists as a nation, as the political and cultural center of that
ongoing tradition of Pueblo culture which originated in the desert
southwest. The present Zuni, is the same place that it was a thousand
years ago, it is still Idiwanna, The Center Place.
Fetishes have been found at sites ancestral to Zuni dated as early
as 650 AD. There is reason to think that the use of fetishes at Zuni
is a lot older than that One way to understand the use of fetishes
in a Pueblo society (like Zuni) may be as a holdover of pre-Pueblo
beliefs such as shamanism wherein an individual seeks a personal
relationship to animal helpers.
At Zuni, rain and prosperity are brought
about because of the kachina dances and the Pueblo's prayers to the
ancestors, but an individuals health and success may depend more
on the intercession of his or her animal helpers. Not unlike, perhaps,
when one of the astronauts took a fetish in orbit--training and coordination
of the mission depended on NASA and science but personal safety was
sought through a fetish.
Zuni is a place of order, regularity,
tradition and "fit"--the older tradition of animal helpers
has been fit into the Pueblo's religious societies, thus, at Zuni
fetishes are blessed by the Medicine society. At specific intervals
all the fetishes of a society are brought together and certain office
holders are charged with their custody.
The most significant (though difficult
to read) discussion of Zuni use of fetishes was written for the Second
Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology by Frank Hamilton
Cushing and originally published in 1883. Cushing collected fetishes
for the Smithsonian which are now housed in its collection in Washington
D.C.
Zunis are very well known for their fetish
carvings. Probably because Zuni has been on a major trade route for
the last thousand years it has developed into a relatively more open
society, not afraid to share what is appropriate with outsiders.
(There has been a long trade, for example, in providing fetishes
to Navajos for protection of their sheep and cattle. Similarly, it
is not uncommon for Zunis to consult Navajo crystal gazers to locate
things that are missing.) Fetish carvings are expressions of what
Zunis find beautiful and if they bring pleasure of the beautiful
and "luck" to others then so much the better.
As Lena Boone, a noted carver, explained
in a Wall Street Journal article (April 28, 1993), "In our tradition,
fetishes are used for healing, protection, spiritual guidance, good
luck and longevity. I believe in that. A lot of my customers believe
in that. But in my work I don't guarantee it."
For contemporary carvers one finds two
styles: an older more abstract style wherein features are only suggested
and a realistic style where exacting details are rendered. Both styles
are well represented at Zuni. In general, older carvers prefer the
more abstract style, and younger carvers the more detailed. |