| OCR Text |
Show Acomas strictly observed the Zunis' ownership of the area, 102 102. Other sources consulted in the description of the pilgrimage include the following! ° Stevenson, Matilda Coxe "Zuni Irrigation," MSS., National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution. Parsons, Elsie Clews "Hopi and Zuni Ceremonialism," Memoirs of the American Anthropological Association, Number 39 (1933), reprinted "BJl^auT Re>lnT~Co^ Millwood, New York, 1978, note 40 compares the place of emergence with Kolhu/walatwa. i9 1 . N a s h e b 0 0 » Nathaniel Interview by Richard Hart, transcript, June 4, 1973, pp. -LZ - i l ia 11. Seowtewa, Alex Interview by E. Richard Hart, April 1, 1980, transcript, p. ,u -Leignton, Dorothea C. and John Adair People of the Middle Placet A Study of the Zuni Indians, Human Relations Area Files, Inc.; New H^a^v^nTcHnl^trcuirigeel £ , J / CI,te Bunzel» ^y^g that children who have not been initiated do not go to Kolhu/walatwa. However, Zuni religious leaders emphatically say that all Zunis go to Kolhu/walatwa. Some travel to other places, some undergo T kind of transmigration to another animal life, but all Zunis go there first. The complexity of Zuni religion has led to understandable confusion on this and other fine points. - 70 - |