Bluetongue Lizard: Difference between revisions
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== See Also == |
== See Also == |
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* [[Australian Aboriginal |
* [[Australian Aboriginal mythology]] |
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* [[Warlpiri]] |
* [[Warlpiri]] |
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* [[Rainbow Serpent]] |
* [[Rainbow Serpent]] |
Revision as of 13:03, 15 June 2011
Bluetongue Lizard is an old man in Australian Aboriginal mythology. He is a trickster and a powerful sorcerer as well. He is responsible for the Warlpiri fire ceremonies because of a myth involving him. He is almost like a deity but not exactly.
Story
Bluetongue Lizard had two sons, and the three of them camped in the Place of Fire, which was known as Warlukurlangu. He pretended that he was blind so that his sons could go out and hunt for him. However, once they were gone, he would leave to hunt his own food, which he ate on the spot. The place he went hunting was Ngama, also known as the Cave of the Rainbow Snake. It was there he gained his sorcery skills. One day the two sons went hunting and killed a kangaroo, which they presented to their father to eat. The two sons did not know that this kangaroo was sacred and used to speak to Bluetongue Lizard, telling him secrets. Upon learning of the kangaroo, Bluetongue Lizard was filled with rage and summoned a magic fire, sending it after his sons. The fire followed them wherever they went. It would die down at night but start up again in the morning, driving Bluetongue Lizard's sons around all of the Jukurrpa. Finally the sons stopped at the Ngarra salt lake and drowned, too full of fatigue to go on.[1]
Effect
The Warlpiri people recapture the spirit of Bluetongue Lizard with dramatic fire ceremonies that involve a young male dancer emerging from total darkness into the glow of a ceremonial fire. He moves carefully and willingly and then kneels by the fire, shaking his shoulders. He takes brushes from the fire and proceeds to scatter the embers all over his back. The Warlpiri elders will walk by the youth to coach him in the correct procedure of the dance.[2] In addition, the Ngarra is one of the most sacred sites of the Warlpiri— so sacred that only men are permitted to go there.
See Also
References
- ^ Philip, Neil (2004). Mythology of the World. Kingfisher. p. 135.
- ^ Moreton, Romaine. "Blood Brothers - Jardiwarnpa".