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Sedna is the
story of the woman as a victim and her betrayal
by her father. But it also tells of the shamans
who travel through great hardships to reach
her and so save their people. Like the other
goddess Erishigal, she needs comfort and empathy.
Sedna from The Goddess
Oracle Copyright Hrana Janto, used by permission
of the artist.
www.goddessoracle.com
www.hranajanto.com |
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June
- Sedna, Inuit Goddess of the Sea
Beside the arctic ocean, there
once lived an old widower and his daughter, Sedna,
a woman so beautiful that all the Eskimo men sought
to live with her. But she found none to her liking
and refused all offers. One day, a seabird came to
her and promised her a soft life in a warm hut full
of bearskins and fish. Sedna flew away with him.
The bird had lied. Sedna found
her home a stinking nest. She sat, sadly regretting
her rejection of the handsome human men. And that
was what she told her father, when she listed her
complaints when he visited her a year later.
Anguta put his daughter in his
kayak to bring her back to the human world. Perhaps
he killed the bird husband first, perhaps he just
stole the bird's wife, but in either case the vengeance
of the bird people followed him. The rising sea threatened
the escaping humans with death. On they struggled,
until Anguta realized that flight was hopeless.
He shoved Sedna overboard to drown.
Desperate for life, she grabbed the kayak with a fierce
grip. Her father cut off her fingers. She flung her
mutilated arms over the skin boat's sides. Anguta
cut them off, shoving his oar into Sedna's eye before
she sank into the icy water.
At the bottom of the sea, she lived
thereafter as queen of the deep, mistress of death
and life, "old food dish," who provided
for the people. Her amputated fingers and arms became
the fish and marine mammals, and she alone decided
how many could be slaughtered for food.
She was willing to provide for
the people if they accepted her rules: for three days
after their death, the souls of her animals would
remain with their bodies, watching for violation of
Sedna's demands. Then they returned to the goddess,
bearing information about the conduct of her people.
Should her laws be broken, Sedna's
hand would begin to ache, and she would punish humans
with sickness, starvation, and storms. Only if a shaman
traveled to her country and assuaged her pains would
the sea mammals return to the hunters, which, if the
people acted righteously, they did willingly.
The dead lived in a region near
Sedna's home through which shamans had to pass to
reach the goddess. There was also an abyss, in which
an ice wheel turned slowly and perpetually; then a
caldron full of boiling seals blocked the way; finally,
the horrible dog stood before Sedna's door, guarding
the knife-thin passageway to her home.
Should the shaman pass all these
dangers and ease Sedna's aching hands, the goddess
permitted him to return, bearing the news that ld
Woman had forgiven her people, that the seals would
again seek the hunter, that the people would no longer
starve.
from 'Goddesses and Heroines' by
Patricia Monaghan (Used by permission. This text is
NOT included in the Goddess Oracle) www.patriciamonaghan.com
May Kuan
Yin Goddess of Compassion
July Persephone
Queen of Souls
September Yemaya Goddess
of surrender
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