The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians has lived peacefully with
Mother Earth for thousands of years, and the land they inhabited
has helped to shape their culture, traditions and present lives.
The people at the San Manuel reservation trace their ancestry to
the indigenous people of the San Bernardino highlands, passes, valleys,
and mountains who the Spaniards collectively called the Serrano,
a term meaning highlander. The Serrano looked to nature and the
land to provide the necessities of life including shelter, clothing,
food and plants used for medicine.
The Serrano people embraced the pine forests and flowing water of
the high country. Their creation story tells of the first people
who tended to their creator Kruktat as he laid ill and dying high
in the mountains. When the creator died, the people began to mourn
and in their grief turned into pine trees. The nuts and acorns these
trees scattered became food for the Serrano clans who would follow
these first people. Those Serrano who lived at Yuhaviat, an area
of pine trees near present day Big Bear Lake where the creator died,
were called the Yuhaviatam or the People of the Pines. Members of
the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians are descended from the Yuhaviatam
and like their ancestors they maintain a special connection to the
land.
Today many of the plants and trees traditionally used for food continue
to grow in the area surrounding the reservation. The region is home
to pine trees that provide an abundance of edible pinõn nuts;
the black oak tree from which the people made their traditional
food called Wiich; and the yucca plant whose blooms and stocks are
harvested annually.
The village played an important role in the Serrano clans, as members
would gather together to tell stories of creation, sing songs, and
dance. The Serrano clans constructed their homes with the resources
they gathered from the immediate environment. They used willow,
branches, and yucca fiber (or willow thongs) to build their dome-shaped
homes, called a Kiich, that measured approximately 12 feet to 14
feet across and were located in small villages near lakes, streams,
springs and other water sources.
The people of the San Manuel reservation are renowned basket weavers
and take great pride in the imaginative and creative patterns of
their basket weaving. These baskets continue to be made in the traditional
way using juncus plant, deergrass, and yucca fiber. Baskets can
be woven so tight they can carry water and are durable enough to
hold hot stones to cook Wiich, a staple made from the acorns of
the black oak. Acorns are still gathered by tribal members to prepare
Wiich. Families from the reservation make seasonal trips to the
mountains to gather acorns as well as pinõn nuts in annual
celebrations of renewal.
Singing has always played an integral role in the lives of the Serrano
people. Unlike other American Indian musicians, traditional Serrano
musicians do not use drums for rhythm but instead they fashion gourd
rattles with palm tree seeds inside to make percussive sounds. In
the past, songs of the Serrano people were used to prepare for hunting
the bighorn sheep roaming their ancestral land. These songs reminded
hunters that if the natural systems were in order, the sheep would
be there and they would not come home empty-handed. The San Manuel
Band of Mission Indians has been successful in preserving many of
these songs. To this day, songs are sung to describe social customs,
creation stories and history of the region's indigenous people.
In recent times, elders from the neighboring Cahuilla tribe have
taught bird songs to tribal members at the San Manuel reservation.
Bird songs are sung throughout the Southern California area as well
as the Mohave Desert and along the Colorado River. Bird songs are
not directly about birds; rather the songs derive their name from
the migration of birds that parallel the movement of people through
their territory, telling the story of the creation, animals seen
along the way, and sacred places.
Today, the San Manuel Cultural Awareness and Tribal Unity Program,
with a mission to "recapture our past to preserve it for the future,"
endeavors to pass on Serrano heritage to future generations. Each
year, the program holds classes on the Serrano language, basketry
and pottery, games, gourd making, and bird singing. Activities such
as the Yaamar'a spring celebration, yucca harvest, and California
Indian Cultural Awareness Conference, regularly bring together
the families of the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, members
from local tribes, and noted American Indian scholars to educate
people on and off the reservation about factual California Indian
culture.
Children, parents, and elders share in their culture through education
and demonstration of the Serrano way of life. Above all else, the
San Manuel Band of Mission Indians believes that the Serrano language
plays a central role in maintaining their culture. By introducing
the language early, tribal children develop a deeper understanding
of their living heritage. Today, the Serrano language is being preserved
on an interactive CD-ROM with native speakers pronouncing the words
in Serrano followed by lesson plans developed to teach carefully
chosen words including the names for plants, animals, and numbers.
In an effort to educate the greater community on factual California
Indian culture, the annual California
Indian Cultural Awareness Program, draws together tribal elders,
leaders, and academics to share their expertise and life experience
with area school children and teachers. Since 1999, the tribe has
partnered with the San Bernardino City Unified School District,
California State University, San Bernardino, and the San Bernardino
County Superintendent of Schools to conduct this highly successful
conference at California State University, San Bernardino. During
the weeklong event, students and teachers from area schools learn
about the histories, cultures, and governments of the California
Indian nations.
The San Manuel Band of Missions Indians believes the past is the
foundation for their future. With a community rich in culture and
tradition, the tribe continues to share its heritage with a firm
belief in the importance of utilizing natural resources. Each component
of nature: such as water, trees, and the protection of animals and
their habitat as well as the importance of the Serrano language,
song, and the Cahuilla bird songs, all play a defining role in their
unique culture. |