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"Help me guarantee that our children can see the Monarch butterfly..."

Native American storyteller gives story-telling lecture on the Cherokee way of life and its significance to the modern world

Sue Edelberg

Issue date: 11/14/06 Section: Arts & Entertainment
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Freeman Owle, Cherokee historian, storyteller, and teacher, came to lecture at UNCG.
Media Credit: LOGAN YORK/THE CAROLINIAN
Freeman Owle, Cherokee historian, storyteller, and teacher, came to lecture at UNCG.

On Thursday, Nov. 9, Cherokee historian, storyteller, and teacher, Freeman Owle, came to UNCG to give one of his acclaimed story-telling lectures on the Cherokee way of life and its significance in the modern world.

Inspired by his heritage and the third and sixth graders he taught in Cherokee, Owle left elementary teaching in 1990 to become a different teacher of sorts, traveling the Southeast to share his knowledge via Cherokee storytelling and his experience as a teacher of youth.

Owle's speech was a mixture of traditional Cherokee stories explaining natural phenomena and life lessons, moral-laden personal anecdotes, and the real-life suffering of the native people and the earth. He drew lessons out of Cherokee stories and values to teach the audience about becoming connected with the world and each other.

He began with a few words on the demise of the American Indian: their present-day make up of seven-tenths of the total population, their death by biological warfare brought on by Europeans, and the Trail of Tears. His first story was how the water beetle found North America for them to live, and how it once was a "land of beauty, a land of safety," with the Cherokee country at one time spanning 57,000 miles. Owle commented on the beauty that still remains in some of the original Cherokee land, such as Boone, recently visited by Owle.

He spoke of the deep sadness brought on by the loss of pristine natural spaces from human's destructive onslaught on the earth. He talked about how they could once drink water out of a stream, though now the streams have been made unfit to drink. He spoke of the Monarch Butterfly, and this natural beauty's decline. And he spoke of entrepreneurs wanting to commoditize all that the plant-world gave them, not wanting to share but to rob them of their resources.

Crucial to the Cherokee way of life, he explained, is the youthful sense of wonder of children, and maintaining that in adult life. He emphasized not growing jaded with our daily lives.

"A new day is a new gift," said Owle. "You should be up in honor with respect for that new beginning. If you don't want to put your feet to the ground, there is something deeply wrong."
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