A Gust of Wind:

A tale of creation by the Ojibway (Chippewa) Indians.

Before there was a man, two women, an old one, and her daughter, were the only humans on earth. The old woman had not needed a man in order to conceive. Ahki, the earth, also was like a woman -- female -- but not as she is now, because trees and many animals had not yet been made.

Well, the young woman, the daughter, took her basket out one day to go berrying. She had gathered enough and was returning home when a sudden gust of wind lifted her buckskin dress up high, baring her body. Geesis, the sun, shone on that spot for a short moment and entered the body of the young woman, though she hardly noticed it. She was aware of the guest of wind, but paid no attention.

Time passed. The young woman said to the old one: "I don't know what's wrong with me, but something is."

More time passed. The young woman's belly grew bigger, and she said: "Something is moving inside of me. What can it be?"

"When you were going berrying did you meet anyone?" The old woman asked.

"I met nobody. The only thing that happened was a big gust of windwhich lifted my buckskin dress. The sun was shining."

The old woman said: "I think you're going to have a child. Geesis, the sun, is the only one who could have done it, so you will be the mother of a sun child."

The young woman gave birth to two boys, both manitos, supernaturals. They were the first human males on this earth -- Geesis's sons, sons of the sun. The young mother made cradle boards and put the twins in these, hanging them up or carrying them on her back, but never letting the babies touch the earth. Why didn't she? Did the Old Woman tell her not to? Nobody knows.

If she had put the cradle boards on the ground, the babies would have walked upright from the moment of their birth, like deer babies. But because their mother would not let them touch earth for some months, it now takes human babies a year of so to walk. It was the young woman's fault.

One of the twins was Stone Boy, a rock. He said: "Put me in the fire and heat me up until I glow red hot." They did and he said: "Now pour cold water over me." THey did that also. That was the first sweat bath. The

other boy, named Wene-boozhoo, looked like all human boys. He became mighty and could do anything; he even talked to the animals, and he was the one who gave them all their names.

This is a story that was told to me when I was around 8 or so, and then I found it in a book.