When u are Cherokee there is something contained inside you triggered deep and proud . I still go to pow wows and other festivals they are a thing of great beauty. I wish all ethnicities were as blessed to keep their heritage alive and well
@@Unherd_Ofthat's awesome we use to go to powwows alot when my grandma was still living I want to start going to them again and taking my kids to learn about and see this stuff, but you are absolutely right they are a thing of great beauty and a lot of fun to attend, the culture deserves to be preserved and carried on
I believe so, eventually, s**t will hit the proverbial fan, and we will have to turn to the past, and the same things that we used to do, will become the norm once again.
I had a great grandmother or great great grandmother that was full blooded cherokee. There was a trait that lasted in every male from my dad’s side of the family until me. (The jet black hair)
My great grandfather (my namesake) was full blooded Cherokee. I have Scottish, English and French ancestry as well, but I hold the Cherokee closest to my heart.
This might not be as theatrical as the Maori haka but the thing that makes this better is those war cries would be right before you're dying on the ground. Any time of day.
Chris D oh yeah. I was teaching my friends this. I'm Cherokee. They would spread out in the woods and do this to confuse you. Scare you. Gorilla tactics.
Mandalorian Patriot I personally dont know any. Google should steer you the right way. Last of the mohicans was filmed here in NC though the mohican are from up north.
I read an account of a man that was captured along with 3 others by the Comanche. The Comanche’s did a war dance when they returned to camp, some of the warriors had a knife and tomahawk in each hand, 2 of the men were scalped, spoils of war, and then cut up with spears and knives and then later hacked to death and cut up. The other 2 men were released 2 years later. This war dance is on point.
Three part cadence, repeated twice. I think this is the origin of the Thomas Alexander "rebel yell.". The lengths and pitches are the same. The the Cherokee order is 1-2-3, then Thomas Alexander did it 3-1-2
Interesting observation, that was the first thing that crossed my mind, the "Rebel yell",You probably know how they digitally experimented with some original recordings, to truly reproduce how it must have sounded when a hundred or more Johnny Reb's were giving it. And it truly is blood curling, one of the most frightening unearthly things I ever heard, it even runs you like icy fingers down the spine when you listen to it from the comfort of your own living room. To keep your calm hearing this as a seventeen year old during Civil War in your first encounter with the Greycoats or as a white man, hunting alone out in the woods at the Indian frontier, knowing those red devils will take you apart limb by limb if they catch you alive, as a punishment for entering their hunting grounds I guess even John Wayne would get a little bit nervous, while feeling that classic "tickling of the scalp" If you hear this, you know one thing without a doubt, these guys are not fooling around, they 've come for serious business, they will kill me, me, who is loved by everyone, how is this possible, I've done nothing to them, how did I even get here, oGodoGodoGod, shit! No sir, I got no problem being "just an armchair general"/"keyboard warrior" far away from "the real thing" (wife comes in with a cold beer, guess she wants a kiss or something, kids are asleep, gotta leave ya now, boys.)
Haha, well that's because over 10,000 Native Americans faught alongside the rebels who were promised that their inherent rights would be respected and that the confederation wouldn't trespass on their lands. Funny thing is the U.S. also promised the same thing and had 20,000 warriors on their side. The sad part is that both sides new their promises were empty and basically lured the last remaining warriors of America into Americas bloodiest conflict that secured the freedom of slaves and ensured the demise of the Indian tribes who helped. In the end they were weakend by the war, then hunted down by the army that promised them peace.
My late bio-grandfather was full blooded Cherokee, he actually for most of his youth had a deep hatred for white people. When he met my grandmother and had my dad that began to change and when I was born he apparently joked saying "oh no, he's white." I never really met him, everything I know is what I've been told, he apparently asked my dad to teach me or make sure I learn about, Cherokee culture. But seriously? That's his reaction to my birth? "Oh no, he's white?" Lol Edit: upon learning more about the man, I don't not miss him specifically
Are you Eastern or Western band my great grandfather as well Eastern band. That is so cool I was just wondering about myself as I hear that,It makes me feel better to hear someone feeling the same way.
Sounds like my dad, my mother always teased him my sister and I were born white to teach him a lesson. Eastern Band through my mother, Father was Crow.
Last year I went fishing on the river alone. No one else around. Just me and the animals. Down stream I hear what sounded like drums and Indians. The war cry was so loud it shook my soul. I went looking for what I thought was people Reenacting a ceremony. To my surprise no one was there. Went up and down the river side for a mile and no one was there. Yes I was sober. Lol I'll never forget what I heard and stays with me to this day. The power of our ancestors are unexplained and come when needed. I've been back to the same spot and never heard it again. The river is Tuolumne river
At 1:54 the singer seems to be singing the next note a quarter-tone down. Half a semitone. Had anyone else heard quarter-tone intervals in Native music? I attended a folk festival where Natives shared an ancient and sacred pantomine of the hunting/dressing of a deer, and the performer sang in a Native language (not vocables). The scales and intervals were unlike any I had heard before, even at Pow Pows I had attended (I am not Native American). Those of us who witnessed this performance were spellbound by the sheer art of it, and the reverence for nature conveyed by it. Perhaps because we had been respectful of their other musical performances, they saw fit to share this with us. I think we all felt honored to have been given just a glimpse of Native culture generally reserved only for those directly a part of their society.
Ric heard something in it and was like the nature boy feels this Im gonna slightly modify it too wooo vs yooo but damn man just heard this for the first time through my bluetooths at max volume as a major thunder storm is coming this way and didn’t know that first yoooo was coming at all Yooooooooooooo
I had the most terrifying dream. Imagine walking by yourself in an uncharted area with no protection. You look in the trees just to see countless faces staring at you. By that time you run for dear life but they are faster. The last thing you hear before you are killed is blood curdling screams and hollers. That's what happened.
Have Cherokee blood on grandmothers side. Very proud of the heritage. My ancestors hid in the mountains, did not go on forced drive to Oklahoma, thanks be to God. Cherokee only believed in one God, unlike other tribes who had many gods. Cherokee are wise people. Were and still are.
I always used cries like this to scare kids larger than me back in school when we played fighting games or wrestled about in the corners of the school yard. Kid just comes running at me and all you hear is "AAAAAAAEEEEEEEEEEEEE"
I got Cherokee ancestry on both sides of my family, and during the civil war, they fought for the confederacy along with my white confederate ancestors. The Cherokee Indians, who sided with the Confederates, taught the southern soldiers what is known as the “rebel yell”.
This morning I found out I was native american, and I suddenly started yelling. I was trying to figure out why. Thanks for the help. Happy to be part of the community.
If you heard that 3 cadence war scream at the start, then odds are, you weren't in the line for healing. When large numbers of people do it simultaneously (instead of just one or two), it is very dissonant and un-nerving. Side note: the Yah Yaaayyy Yeww - or Yippie Ka Yay -- was picked up by Europeans in the South and became the confederate rebel yell from Virginia to Texas. The "Last of the Mohicans battle" and "What the rebel yell sounded like" are quite nerve wracking
So this is a dance where they act out sneaking up on someone, screaming to startle them, shanking them with a big knife, and then immediately chopping them to bits with a hatchet. Why have I never seen this until now
The war cry start with a roller coaster ride, with lots of excited shouting. Then comes a smooth beat while they look for that contact lens they dropped. They find the contact lens and exclaim go WOOO, then they find out dinners ready and go WOO again. After dinner they get a new high score on beat saber and go WOO once more.
I wish I had any Native American ancestors. Irish American blood; but I have always been extremely fascinated in many native cultures. To me, the chief is higher than any kind in the world.
My great grandfather was cherokee he was half though even though I might have a little bit of cherokee in me I still want to respect my heritage and culture
I am native Hawaiian love this u are my family too all indigenous native Americans we all share the same thing the colonizers took our lands it's time to fight now stand strong my Brothers and sisters it's time to fight
How can I connect with you brothers from ALL North America? A sister from the Mayan, Olmec in the Americas, is trying to connect.... I'm an artist in the ew acuarian age.... A message to all Brothers and Sisters! Noth, Central, South..... My birth name is America and I'm from Mexico living in the USA. Looking forward to connect. Love and Peace Wisdom Conciousness Truth to all
The Eastern Band of Cherokees back in the homelands, I’m guessing. From this Oklahoma Cherokee, wado for keeping the culture alive. Or as you say out in North Carolina, sgi.
Walrus , coyotes did not live in the east at that time. Only after all US rivers were bridged. I grew up in VA in the 50s and we had no coyotes there yet.
www.cherokee.org/About-The-Nation/Cherokee-Language/Dikaneisdi-Word-List is one source. www.manataka.org/page122.html might be another. o-s-dv a-ni-no-ha-li-do-hv u-lv. (my grammar is probably terrible. Good hunting, sister.)
One of our family’s friends are native and our uncle went hunting with him and they said he could step on leafs and twigs without making the slightest sound
Doesn't matter about your percentage, but all about the culture and creed you represent. You know of the Cherokee culture, and the myths. You know stories, and educate yourself of the past culture and how the earth was made etc. Then you will be educated and then you will see where you are. Cherokees are brought in by maternal heritage, if your father was Cherokee your Cherokee ancestry doesn't matter much traditionally as all Cherokee were to stay away from marrying their own clan members. Try to find who your ancestors came from and then make sure you get a name that resembles the meaning of your English name, for instance (I'm male) and my name is Andrew, that is Hebrew for masculinity or manly, so in Cherokee syllabry it's Asgaya which means man. Wa do :)
And that's literally the last thing you hear before they shank you with that big knife in one hand, and immediately chop your torso to bits with that hatchet in the other hand. Holy hell what a scary way to die.
Jesus Christ I can't imagine the fear the US soldiers must had felt at night time hearing something like this... or the fear at day time... any time really..m
I did digging on my family history and I have so many Cherokee chiefs as my great grandfathers. I even found out Pocahontas is my 14th great grand aunt. I wish I could meet them.
The Eastern Cherokee people that resides in North Carolina still have some land that is reservation, it's not all gone! This is in North Carolina by the way.
It's the Europeans who murdered them and helped keep the Cherokee at bay, but not all Europeans today are bad. :) I'm 1/32 Cherokee and 1/2 Irish so I wish for some kindness in heart. I used to really hate being mostly European, but that's life and I can't go much else. Thankfully my Cherokee heritage is from my mother as well but all roots to the clan are lost sadly. ;(
I remember one of my counselors at a summer camp was a Cherokee WWII vet. His war cry was ridiculously loud. Struck the fear of death into my heart
You know he scared some Germans
@@cccp319801spetsnaz Some random German guy got scalped by a Native American
He makes the Japanese War Cry (Tenno heika banzai) seem tame. Thus, even the Japanese feared him.
When u are Cherokee there is something contained inside you triggered deep and proud . I still go to pow wows and other festivals they are a thing of great beauty. I wish all ethnicities were as blessed to keep their heritage alive and well
@@Unherd_Ofthat's awesome we use to go to powwows alot when my grandma was still living I want to start going to them again and taking my kids to learn about and see this stuff, but you are absolutely right they are a thing of great beauty and a lot of fun to attend, the culture deserves to be preserved and carried on
a total respect for this ancient and beautiful tradition the roots will be our future.
Quite possibly
I believe so, eventually, s**t will hit the proverbial fan, and we will have to turn to the past, and the same things that we used to do, will become the norm once again.
It shouldn't happen anymore if we learn from past
Lmao “ancient”
@@sickowhale6861 as a Cherokee I agree war is not needed for our people.
My great grandmother Ne Maw was full blooded Cherokee. I'm thankful everyday even a small part of that blood and Heritage runs thru me.
I had a great grandmother or great great grandmother that was full blooded cherokee.
There was a trait that lasted in every male from my dad’s side of the family until me. (The jet black hair)
The fact alot of my family the further back were very not white (native American, Celtic, etc) and here I am an obese white kid
Same I have about 25-45 percent in me and am very grateful for it
Fuckin same
My great grandfather (my namesake) was full blooded Cherokee. I have Scottish, English and French ancestry as well, but I hold the Cherokee closest to my heart.
This might not be as theatrical as the Maori haka but the thing that makes this better is those war cries would be right before you're dying on the ground. Any time of day.
Chris D oh yeah. I was teaching my friends this. I'm Cherokee. They would spread out in the woods and do this to confuse you. Scare you. Gorilla tactics.
Plus the Maori were more effective warriors.
@Mandalorian Patriot look up Gate Pah, the Maori were the only indigenous force to defeat the British army
Mandalorian Patriot I personally dont know any. Google should steer you the right way. Last of the mohicans was filmed here in NC though the mohican are from up north.
Guerilla
my late great-grandfather was pure cherokee, even if i'm a small percent.. i feel a deep closeness with this. :)
My great grandmother was Cherokee so I don't know all about my dad's side of his family
Blood is thicker than water, their legacy will live on with you. Keep their memories alive and remember their history.
I’m sort of Native American and it’s the same fir me I want to defend my land from other tribes now
12.5% is no joke nowadays. Youre more cherokee that 99.9 percent of living people. God bless
I read an account of a man that was captured along with 3 others by the Comanche. The Comanche’s did a war dance when they returned to camp, some of the warriors had a knife and tomahawk in each hand, 2 of the men were scalped, spoils of war, and then cut up with spears and knives and then later hacked to death and cut up. The other 2 men were released 2 years later. This war dance is on point.
Osiyo from Marietta GA...PROUD to be Cherokee, the Son of a Full Cherokee Mother.
Wado!
Imagine the enemy saying. "is that Ric flair on the other side of the river?" 0:23
Hahahaha this comment deserves more love
XD dude
no, this is warrior cry not a stunt man on a tv show ...
Three part cadence, repeated twice. I think this is the origin of the Thomas Alexander "rebel yell.". The lengths and pitches are the same. The the Cherokee order is 1-2-3, then Thomas Alexander did it 3-1-2
The rebel yell was heavily influenced by Cherokee and Creek tribes!!
Interesting observation, that was the first thing that crossed my mind, the "Rebel yell",You probably know how they digitally experimented with some original recordings, to truly reproduce how it must have sounded when a hundred or more Johnny Reb's were giving it. And it truly is blood curling, one of the most frightening unearthly things I ever heard, it even runs you like icy fingers down the spine when you listen to it from the comfort of your own living room. To keep your calm hearing this as a seventeen year old during Civil War in your first encounter with the Greycoats or as a white man, hunting alone out in the woods at the Indian frontier, knowing those red devils will take you apart limb by limb if they catch you alive, as a punishment for entering their hunting grounds I guess even John Wayne would get a little bit nervous, while feeling that classic "tickling of the scalp"
If you hear this, you know one thing without a doubt, these guys are not fooling around, they 've come for serious business, they will kill me, me, who is loved by everyone, how is this possible, I've done nothing to them, how did I even get here, oGodoGodoGod, shit!
No sir, I got no problem being "just an armchair general"/"keyboard warrior" far away from "the real thing" (wife comes in with a cold beer, guess she wants a kiss or something, kids are asleep, gotta leave ya now, boys.)
Haha, well that's because over 10,000 Native Americans faught alongside the rebels who were promised that their inherent rights would be respected and that the confederation wouldn't trespass on their lands. Funny thing is the U.S. also promised the same thing and had 20,000 warriors on their side. The sad part is that both sides new their promises were empty and basically lured the last remaining warriors of America into Americas bloodiest conflict that secured the freedom of slaves and ensured the demise of the Indian tribes who helped. In the end they were weakend by the war, then hunted down by the army that promised them peace.
@@peshwaypeshlakai8478 lol the Confederates kept their promises and didnt keep slaves. Learn real history yankee
@@malissahanson6422
"The Confederates didn't keep slaves" lol. Do you have any more bedtime stories for us?
My late bio-grandfather was full blooded Cherokee, he actually for most of his youth had a deep hatred for white people. When he met my grandmother and had my dad that began to change and when I was born he apparently joked saying "oh no, he's white." I never really met him, everything I know is what I've been told, he apparently asked my dad to teach me or make sure I learn about, Cherokee culture.
But seriously? That's his reaction to my birth? "Oh no, he's white?" Lol
Edit: upon learning more about the man, I don't not miss him specifically
Are you Eastern or Western band my great grandfather as well Eastern band. That is so cool I was just wondering about myself as I hear that,It makes me feel better to hear someone feeling the same way.
Sounds like my dad, my mother always teased him my sister and I were born white to teach him a lesson. Eastern Band through my mother, Father was Crow.
Unfortunate for him. Mating with the enemy.
Id hate white people if I was native american as well
Crazy how they are from different sides of the world yet can still have babies together and then get mad about skin color
Last year I went fishing on the river alone. No one else around. Just me and the animals. Down stream I hear what sounded like drums and Indians. The war cry was so loud it shook my soul. I went looking for what I thought was people Reenacting a ceremony. To my surprise no one was there. Went up and down the river side for a mile and no one was there. Yes I was sober. Lol
I'll never forget what I heard and stays with me to this day. The power of our ancestors are unexplained and come when needed. I've been back to the same spot and never heard it again. The river is Tuolumne river
Wow lucky 😍
I’m telling ya man it was the little people
At 1:54 the singer seems to be singing the next note a quarter-tone down. Half a semitone. Had anyone else heard quarter-tone intervals in Native music?
I attended a folk festival where Natives shared an ancient and sacred pantomine of the hunting/dressing of a deer, and the performer sang in a Native language (not vocables). The scales and intervals were unlike any I had heard before, even at Pow Pows I had attended (I am not Native American).
Those of us who witnessed this performance were spellbound by the sheer art of it, and the reverence for nature conveyed by it. Perhaps because we had been respectful of their other musical performances, they saw fit to share this with us.
I think we all felt honored to have been given just a glimpse of Native culture generally reserved only for those directly a part of their society.
Cherokee is a "stand alone" language. i cant remember what american native clan the "code talkers" were.. but i believe a clan from Cherokee..
I live right next door to Cherokee, it’s a beautiful little town.
Picked that first one is from the great Chief Ric Flaire
Dallas Porter 😂
Ric heard something in it and was like the nature boy feels this Im gonna slightly modify it too wooo vs yooo but damn man just heard this for the first time through my bluetooths at max volume as a major thunder storm is coming this way and didn’t know that first yoooo was coming at all
Yooooooooooooo
Thank you for keeping us alive.
The sound is so memorizing yet so terrifying to hear.
Being half Cherokee and half Irish American I'm very happy and proud of my roots on both sides of my family
One of the best cultures on earth ✌🏽️
Both of my great grandmother's on my mom's side. Full Cherokee. My dad's side one of mine was. Proud
I had the most terrifying dream. Imagine walking by yourself in an uncharted area with no protection. You look in the trees just to see countless faces staring at you. By that time you run for dear life but they are faster. The last thing you hear before you are killed is blood curdling screams and hollers. That's what happened.
Lay off the dank
Colonizer POV
F M lmao
Just say “Won’ you be my neighbor ?” Like Mr. Rogers😂👌
Acab
Have Cherokee blood on grandmothers side. Very proud of the heritage. My ancestors hid in the mountains, did not go on forced drive to Oklahoma, thanks be to God. Cherokee only believed in one God, unlike other tribes who had many gods. Cherokee are wise people. Were and still are.
I have a bit of Cherokee blood. I don't know what percentage but it's there. Truly amazing to hear the war cry of my ancestors.
In the Army we use Apache and Native war cry tactics...
Zach Haus really? That’s pretty cool
In the American Army, no. If you are speaking of a different army then you may be right I have no idea what other armies may or may not do.
@@Caboose7 maybe not in your squad but in theirs do .... It's not uncommon for squads to develop their own battle tactics...
I do not believe you, can you speak on some of the tactics you used?
I always used cries like this to scare kids larger than me back in school when we played fighting games or wrestled about in the corners of the school yard. Kid just comes running at me and all you hear is "AAAAAAAEEEEEEEEEEEEE"
I got Cherokee ancestry on both sides of my family, and during the civil war, they fought for the confederacy along with my white confederate ancestors. The Cherokee Indians, who sided with the Confederates, taught the southern soldiers what is known as the “rebel yell”.
i am also part chippewa cherokee and cree im proud of my native blood
Zach Debold You should be proud my family came to the U.S. in the 1630s and you're 10x more american than me.
Blacksáber Predator lol
Blacksáber Predator Well then you’d be met with Hernán Cortés.
Chippewa is just Ojibwe bro
Cherokee Irish here.. John Ross in my blood. Praise the Great Spirit💖 So Love This
I'm Cherokee and Irish how beautiful it is to be Cherokee and Irish
Bigfoot researchers: "I got a call, I got vocalizations!!"
That WAR cry!
My spirit felt that.
I joined you in the CRY.
My neighbors must be tripping.
Love you cousin's!
One Team
👊😎
I AM trippin. Stf up over there! I’m tryna sleep
lmao
This morning I found out I was native american, and I suddenly started yelling. I was trying to figure out why. Thanks for the help. Happy to be part of the community.
Keep those roots strong and do not dilute your blood my Cherokee friends
Thank you for the video. I really felt my Native American blood rise to the music. ❤
Im from fiji,and we have our own warrior war cry called TEIVOVO,back in the days before the tribesmen went to war they used to perform war cry dance
Very interesting. I'm a choreographer who was looking for some Indian healing and I felt the healing begin here.
If you heard that 3 cadence war scream at the start, then odds are, you weren't in the line for healing.
When large numbers of people do it simultaneously (instead of just one or two), it is very dissonant and un-nerving.
Side note: the Yah Yaaayyy Yeww - or Yippie Ka Yay -- was picked up by Europeans in the South and became the confederate rebel yell from Virginia to Texas.
The "Last of the Mohicans battle" and "What the rebel yell sounded like" are quite nerve wracking
Me and my friends when we are playing hide and seek
TO BE THE MAN YOU GOTTA BEAT THE MAN
That was great 👍 thank you!! The problem with society is that nobody drinks from the skulls of thier enemy anymore.
Don't muzzle the ox that treads out the corn.
Understanding and genuine compassion for the supper table.
I wish Indian culture was more prevalent in today's society. It is beautiful and full of power.
NATIVE AMERICAN ...Indians are in Asia .... get that shit straight
TheSupradvr exactly what I came here to say. Indian is such a disrespectful word.
@@Angie-et5gq Its just a word haha
@@arumba7345 calling an indigenous person “indian” is like calling a black person the hard R
I am part Cherokee, and I've never seen this... awesome
So this is a dance where they act out sneaking up on someone, screaming to startle them, shanking them with a big knife, and then immediately chopping them to bits with a hatchet. Why have I never seen this until now
Those aren't hatchets, they're war clubs.
@@nachtwaya8721 correction 2 war clubs 1 tomahawk
Its a tomahawk on a hatchet 👍🏼
@@Keoma.1 Yes, thank you for correcting my error.
The war cry start with a roller coaster ride, with lots of excited shouting. Then comes a smooth beat while they look for that contact lens they dropped. They find the contact lens and exclaim go WOOO, then they find out dinners ready and go WOO again. After dinner they get a new high score on beat saber and go WOO once more.
Don't worry, I'm kidding.
I wish I had any Native American ancestors. Irish American blood; but I have always been extremely fascinated in many native cultures. To me, the chief is higher than any kind in the world.
Howl I am mix Cherokee and Italian much respect here
My great grandfather was cherokee he was half though even though I might have a little bit of cherokee in me I still want to respect my heritage and culture
I love my people only wish I was full blooded and lived back when our people were free
I am native Hawaiian love this u are my family too all indigenous native Americans we all share the same thing the colonizers took our lands it's time to fight now stand strong my Brothers and sisters it's time to fight
I LOVE I LOVE!!!!!!! Hail to THE GREAT SPIRIT!
I had ancestors who were both colonial soldiers and native warriors. They may have hated each other but at least they respected each other as warriors
They arent ordinary dancers.on my eyes all are patriots of their nations
**Turns up the volume to max**
_"Ah now i can hear it!"_
**Wakes up the whole house into thinking there's a ghost inside:**
Wonderful! Respect 🪶🦅🦬🐎
The war cry scared the shit and piss out of me.
the cree had a war cry as well its scary
@Mac11 true
It's so makes my heart rejoice in a sad way
How can I connect with you brothers from ALL North America? A sister from the Mayan, Olmec in the Americas, is trying to connect.... I'm an artist in the ew acuarian age.... A message to all Brothers and Sisters! Noth, Central, South..... My birth name is America and I'm from Mexico living in the USA. Looking forward to connect. Love and Peace Wisdom Conciousness Truth to all
Never let me forget them.
I love Indians and I love to see how they live
native americans*
JOhn Dough Oh god, it's just a simple mistake...
Credin Animations he respectively corrected them.
Awwww your a big sweetheart 😊
@@credinzel6996 It’s essentially a slur for non natives to call natives Indian bro
Lol the dude talking sounds like a Marine, semper fi brotha
ummm Yeka ho ... WE are "dogmen" through "infinity" ... that was our war cry before "marine"rs attacked us ...
How much of this is preserved culture? How much of it is for the tourists?
Part of my Blood showing that traditions are still being shown respect!!!!!!!
The Eastern Band of Cherokees back in the homelands, I’m guessing. From this Oklahoma Cherokee, wado for keeping the culture alive. Or as you say out in North Carolina, sgi.
Cherokee tribe in Dallas not enough of us around a lot of native and sacred lands here.
This is so beautiful. I’m so proud that I have Cherokee blood running through my veins
Coraline “I’m one-fifteenth cheriokee”
I’m of mi'kmaq descent 😊
@@schoob4822 you took the words off my keyboard
I love this
Andy Bee 4.0 Me too!!! Does something wonderful to the inner spirit!! Blessings!! 💟💜💓💕💗💝
I'm half cherokee looking for others like me
75% Cherokee
I actually searched for this. How many of you didn't?
Origin of the “Rebel yell”?
I think the rebel yell is from the sound of coyotes
Walrus , coyotes did not live in the east at that time. Only after all US rivers were bridged. I grew up in VA in the 50s and we had no coyotes there yet.
Where can I find lyrics?
Sister Flandre you can't to be honest. Native language is actual hard to right you have to memorize the words and try to look for the meaning of it.
true, but i cant even do that ;_;. I don't know what they say (like kogaso,sagoso,sago so, etc)
Sister Flandre yah it's hard to memorize them but practice makes perfect.
www.cherokee.org/About-The-Nation/Cherokee-Language/Dikaneisdi-Word-List is one source.
www.manataka.org/page122.html might be another. o-s-dv a-ni-no-ha-li-do-hv u-lv. (my grammar is probably terrible. Good hunting, sister.)
One of our family’s friends are native and our uncle went hunting with him and they said he could step on leafs and twigs without making the slightest sound
Bless you my bretheran
i love this and im part Cherokee
As am i.
+soul71000 Awesome
Same Brother!
same here, I'm 2 to 4 percent
Doesn't matter about your percentage, but all about the culture and creed you represent. You know of the Cherokee culture, and the myths. You know stories, and educate yourself of the past culture and how the earth was made etc. Then you will be educated and then you will see where you are. Cherokees are brought in by maternal heritage, if your father was Cherokee your Cherokee ancestry doesn't matter much traditionally as all Cherokee were to stay away from marrying their own clan members. Try to find who your ancestors came from and then make sure you get a name that resembles the meaning of your English name, for instance (I'm male) and my name is Andrew, that is Hebrew for masculinity or manly, so in Cherokee syllabry it's Asgaya which means man. Wa do :)
Elisabeth warrens body guards
as someone with cherokee blood ill say chief spreading bull is on her own there buddy
Is this at wolf creek
Yes sir!
+Andres Gutierrez I knew it lmao
WOOOO 😂
I was trying to look for the
AYAYAYAYAYAYA, but this works ig
And that's literally the last thing you hear before they shank you with that big knife in one hand, and immediately chop your torso to bits with that hatchet in the other hand. Holy hell what a scary way to die.
thats just my mating call
Jesus Christ I can't imagine the fear the US soldiers must had felt at night time hearing something like this... or the fear at day time... any time really..m
Did he say Atohi in the beginning like Woods/Forrest?
Interesting...my tribe leans more toward the Aztec. Your guys tribe is pretty cool too!
amazing
Just treat people right.
Don't act like you don't know what that is.
Just treat people right.
my Ancestors were the Coahulitecan Native Americans of South Texas
Sticking resemblance to the rebel yell
Who needs pants? When your wearing warpaint and boots with a bottle of Jack....
Two of them are wearing pants the other is wearing what’s essentially half chaps and a loin cloth
Found out my great great grandfather was full blood guess im 1/16 does it count tho?
Thank you
My grand mother crazy squeal and grant grand mother windshield brighter was with me now walk before me
That is how i sound when i have to get my point across to my man.
Cherokees look intimidating idk why, and Comanches.
Cherokee war cry vs Maori Haka ?
Ani Waya Tsalagi Wado
I have been watching Indians a lot I’m interested in them
Being blood kin to two cherokee I love there culture
Hmmmm. I think I know where the Rebel Yell originated from
I did digging on my family history and I have so many Cherokee chiefs as my great grandfathers. I even found out Pocahontas is my 14th great grand aunt. I wish I could meet them.
I’m about 85 percent Cherokee, then 5 percent Irish, and 10 percent some other Indian tribe don’t ask me how it’s possible
MissionRebel how?
ツGhostツ like I said idk how 😂
ツGhostツ the Irish comes from my dads side and the Cherokee comes from my moms side and ig my dads mom was some sort of Native American as well
Respect bro
wish Cherokee's land still there :( thanks English people! :(
I'm part of Cherokee too. it is still in my vein!!!!
The Eastern Cherokee people that resides in North Carolina still have some land that is reservation, it's not all gone! This is in North Carolina by the way.
It's the Europeans who murdered them and helped keep the Cherokee at bay, but not all Europeans today are bad. :) I'm 1/32 Cherokee and 1/2 Irish so I wish for some kindness in heart. I used to really hate being mostly European, but that's life and I can't go much else. Thankfully my Cherokee heritage is from my mother as well but all roots to the clan are lost sadly. ;(
wolf creek indian village in virginia
White Hyde Yeah right..
Me too! It runs through are veins like nothing else
Imagine hearing this
Rick flair would be proud
fk fake ass actors that wrestle and pretend to be "warriors" .. get a fkn grip
I will not cry for you leaving as you never were a freeman!