In which this story about the sky comes from our very own Swampland
Pushing Up the Sky (Snohomish)
Creator made the world. Creator started in the East, and traveled to the West, making new lands and new people.
To each group of people, Creator gave a new language.
When Creator got to the Puget Sound there was no more land to make, but there were still a lot of languages left in the basket.
Creator dumped out the basket of languages onto the people of the Salish Sea.
That’s why there are so many languages there.
The people there did not like the way Creator made the world.
The sky was too close to the ground. Tall people bumped their heads on it, and some of the wicked people would climb up trees to spy on the Sky World.
Finally, the wise people of all the tribes had a council to see what they could do about lifting the sky.
They agreed that all the people should work together to push it up higher.
“We can do it if we all work together,” they said.
“All of the people and all of the birds and animals will help, and we can push the sky up higher.
“But how will we know when to push? We live so far apart, and we speak different languages.”
At last one of
them suggested that they all use the same word to signal the time for pushing
up on the sky.
“When the time comes for us to push, when everything is ready, let someone shout ‘Ya-hoh!’ That will mean it is the time to lift together.”
The people of the council told all the people and birds and animals what to do. Everyone made long poles from fir trees to push.
The day for sky lifting came.
Everyone raised their poles up to the sky. Then, they shouted, “Ya-hoh!” and everyone pushed at the same time.
The sky lifted up a little bit.
“Ya-hoh!” they shouted again, and everyone pushed again.
The sky lifted a little bit higher.
They shouted “Ya-hoh!”
a third time, and up went the sky.
And finally when they shouted “Ya-hoh!” a fourth time, the sky lifted until it was as high as it is today.
Nobody ever bumped into it again, and nobody has ever climbed into the Sky World again.
When people work even now, it’s good to have a word to help the work.
When people say
“Ya-hoh!” together, it makes everyone stronger.


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