Cherokee Law

The Cherokee system was based more on responsibility for wrongful
actions than on the notion of "justice" in the western sense of the
word. Rather than justice, the Cherokee system was ideal for keeping
balance and harmony in the spiritual and social worlds.

"One day, some Cherokee children were playing outside, when a
rattlesnake crawled out of the grass. They screamed and their mother
ran outside. Without thinking, she took a stick and killed it.

Her husband was hunting in the mountains. As he was returning home
that night, he heard a strange wailing sound. Looking around, he
found himself in the midst of a gathering of rattlesnakes, whose
mouths were open and crying.

"What is the matter," the man asked the snakes. The rattlesnakes
responded, "Your wife killed our chief, the Yellow Rattlesnake today.
We are preparing to send the Black Rattlesnake to take revenge."

The husband immediately accepted their claim and took responsibility
for the crime. The rattlesnakes said, "If you speak the truth, you
must be ready to make satisfaction." The price they demanded was the
life of his wife in sacrifice for that of their chief. Not knowing
what else might occur, the man consented.

The rattlesnakes told the man that the Black Rattlesnake would follow
him home and coil up outside his door. He was to ask his wife to
bring him a fresh drink of water from the spring. That was all.

When the man reached home, it was very dark. His wife had supper
waiting for him.

"Please bring me some water," he asked her. She brought him a gourd
from the jar, but he refused it.

"No," he said. "I would like some fresh water from the spring."

His wife took a bowl and stepped outside to get him some fresh water.
The man immediately heard her cry. He went outside and found the
Black Rattlesnake had bitten her and she was already dying. He stayed
with her until she was dead.

The Black Rattlesnake then crawled out of the grass. "My tribe is now
satisfied," he told the husband. He then taught the man a prayer
song. The Black Rattlesnake told him, "When you meet any of us
hereafter, sing this song and we will not hurt you. If by accident
one of us should bite you, sing this song over the person and he will
recover." And the Cherokee have kept this song to this day."

We had a strict liability law for any killing. The death created an
imbalance which required revenge to restore harmony. The clan of the
perpetrator of the homicide was to admit and accept responsibility
for the wrongful killing. Then the clan was expected to pay the cost.
Blood called for blood. Following this system, the husband sacrificed
his wife's life to restore harmony. He did so because that was the
law. In following the law, harmony was restored between the
rattlesnakes and the humans. To reward the man, the snakes gave the
humans a song to protect them and to remind the snakes of their duty
to the humans, as well.

The Cherokee religion drove the sense of balance, which created a
moral system for the human to follow. What drove the revenge system
was the sense of balance. When a delict was committed, it created
imbalance and tension on the jurisdictional unit. The acceptance of
responsibility and paying of the cost restored that balance. Once the
balance was restored, the relationship between the jurisdictional
units or clans continued as if nothing happened. There were to be no
hard feelings expressed between family members of the victim or
killer. Balance had been restored and any friction was to end with
the restoration of balance.

The creation of imbalance was tied to the Cherokee religion. It was
believed that the murdered "soul" or ghost would be forced to wander
the earth, unable to go to the next world. This created the
imbalance. The acceptance of responsibility and the death of the
killer or one of his clansmen restored balance by freeing the
innocent ghost, allowing him to go to the next world. That is why it
did not matter who paid the cost for the delict of the wrongful
killing. Any death from the responsible clan would suffice to free
the innocent man's ghost from this world. An enemy scalp might
suffice as well.

In international law, the Cherokee system worked much the same way.
If an international delict occurred, then anyone from the that
jurisdictional unit, in this case, the foreign nation, would suffice
to pay the cost. Taking responsibility for the international delict
and paying the cost were exercised in the face of swift vengeance.
There was no time for contrition. Thus, interloping settlers took
their chances by moving onto Cherokee territory, because they might
be called to pay the cost for someone else's actions or the actions
of their nation. Cherokees saw it as their responsibility, whether or
not the settlers saw it that way.




Kris

"All things share the same breath..the beast, the tree, the man; the air shares its spirit with all the life it supports."
Chief Seattle
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