Water Throughout
Time and Culture
Humans cannot survive very long without a source of fresh water. Since the start of civilization, individuals have settled near water to help them survive and thrive. Many of these sites have grown into major cities that are still large population centers today. Damascus is arguably the oldest continually inhabited city in the world. It is clear that water determined the site and character of the place.1
When we look to early myths and creation stories, there is a clear commonality—namely, that all things are created from water. What follows are tales and magical usages from many different traditions and religions to illustrate how important water is to life itself.
Ancient Sumerians
In ancient Sumeria there is a myth dating back to approximately 3,000 BCE that tells of the goddess Nammu, embodying the primal oceans, who gives birth to earth and heaven. The Enuma Elish is the creation myth of ancient Mesopotamia that tells of the birth of the gods and goddesses and earth itself. While its exact date is unknown, scholars place the text around the ninth century BCE or earlier.2 It tells of the beginnings of the world, where all there was on earth was a swirl of water. This water consisted of fresh water, represented as the god Apsu, and bitter, salty water, represented by the goddess Tiamat. They separate and then come back together to create both land and life.
Muslims
In the Islamic tradition water is seen as the source and origin of all life on earth. The Quran talks of blessed water raining down to fertilize and sustain crops, and even how water is seen as a symbol of Allah’s power and majesty.
Hindus
The Hindu creation hymn featured in the Rig Veda mentions that in the beginning all was water. Water is both blessing and cleansing in the tradition.3
Indigenous Americans
There are also many indigenous American legends that situate the beginnings of the world in and around water.
Iroquois People
The Iroquois people are comprised of six tribes that have inhabited the land for over 4,000 years in western New York and Ontario in North America. The creation story of the Iroquois begins with humans living way up high in the sky, for at this time land did not exist. It came to pass that the daughter of one of the chiefs fell ill. They had no idea how to cure her until one day they received advice from an elder in the community. The elder told them that they needed to dig up the roots of a particular sacred tree to find a solution. The people dug together until they had made a big hole. However, right after they had done this, both the tree and the chief’s daughter fell into the hole and down into the space below.
In that space was a giant sea inhabited by two swans. As the girl and the tree hit the water, a loud clap of thunder sounded out. Curious, the swans swam over to investigate. They tried to rescue the girl, but they did not know how. They turned to the great turtle to find out what to do. The turtle, the wisest of all things, explained that these gifts falling from the sky were a good sign. He explained to all who could listen that they needed to find the tree, its roots, and the dirt that was attached. Turtle told them that with this dirt they could make an island for the chief’s daughter to live on. The creatures of the world began looking, and the only one who was successful was the toad. The toad searched the depths of the ocean until she finally found the tree. She swallowed a mouthful of the soil and returned to the surface. When she got there, she spit out the dirt and then proceeded to die. The soil then began to spread, for it was magical. Soon there was a giant piece of earth for the girl to inhabit.
Unfortunately, everything in this land was very dark. The great turtle had a solution for this, too. He asked all the digging animals —the gophers, the squirrels, and the rest—to begin digging holes in the sky to let down the light. The chief’s daughter went on to become the mother of all things in this new land. Some say she became pregnant when she fell down from the sky into the waters.
Quechan People
The Quechan people, also called Yuma, are an indigenous North American people who inhabit the Colorado River Valley. The creation tale of the Quechan people begins in darkness and water, for in the beginning, that was all there was. The water was rough, and it created a foam that reached up and created the sky. Out of the water emerged the Creator, twin spirits named Bakotahl and Kokomaht. Bakotahl was said to be evil, and Kokomaht was known to be good. During the journey to the surface, Kokomaht had kept his eyes shut. As Bakotahl was rising up from the water, he yelled out to his twin, trying to discover if he had kept his eyes open or shut during the trip to the surface. Kokomaht knew that his twin was evil, so he replied that he had kept his eyes open. The other twin took this advice, but keeping his eyes open upon emerging left him blind. Bakotahl’s name translates to mean “the blind one.”4
Then the twins set about making the sacred directions. Kokomaht took four steps out on the water in each direction and created north, south, east, and west. Next, Bakotahl wanted his turn at creating and started to make human beings. He began to create people out of clay, but they were seriously challenged, lacking any feet or fingers. Kokomaht laughed at these creations and decided he would do the job himself. He soon made a perfectly complete man and woman. This angered his twin, who sent storms. Kokomaht was angry, too, and stomped his feet. Depending on which version of the story one adheres to, the stomping caused the earth to shake, either sending Bakotahl’s creations into the ocean, where they turned into waterfowl, or simply put an end to the storms. In any case, the storms left behind sickness and disease. Kokomaht’s humans soon began to multiply and fill the land, making all the tribes of the world. Within the new world there was a frog. The frog became jealous and hateful towards Kokomaht and soon plotted his demise. The frog dug the ground out from beneath Kokomaht’s feet, and as he sank, the frog stole his breath. Kokomaht died, his final act teaching people about the transformation of death.
Navaho People
The Navaho are one of the largest groups of indigenous people in North America. They have traditionally inhabited the land in the Southwestern United States. According to the Navaho people, the world humans inhabit today is called the fifth world. The first world contained only a man, a woman, and coyote. This world was quite dark and very tiny, so they quickly climbed into the second, where there was light from both the sun and the moon. It is said that in this world the sun tried to mate with the first woman. She refused, and coyote suggested they travel up to the third world, which was said to be beautiful and wondrous. When they arrived in that world, they were met by the mountain people. They warned them about the great water serpent (in some stories it is an otter) Tieholtsodi. Warning coyote about something was a sure way to get him to do it, for that is his nature. Coyote went and stole the children of Tieholtsodi. Tieholtsodi was furious and sent great floods across the land. The water in the east was black, the water in the south was blue, the water in the west was yellow, and the water in the north was white. All of these many-colored waters began to rise.
The people came to the first man and first woman and asked them what they should do about these floods. They responded by trying to grow mountains and planting reeds to climb up onto in the hopes of escaping the water. The man, woman, and all the other people and animals climbed up into the reeds until they grew so high that they reached the fourth world. The first to arrive in the fourth world was the locust. When he arrived he saw four birds colored black, blue, yellow, and white. They asked locust what he was doing there. They posed several tests so that if locust passed them, they would allow him to stay. The last was an axe-swinging contest during which they hit the locust in the face and flew away. The water began to recede except for that which was located in the south. The first man and the first woman were left to inhabit a small island. They reproduced, and soon there were many men and women.
However, coyote still had the children of Tieholtsodi with him, and because of that the flood waters now continued to rise up, flooding this fourth world. Again they piled up the mountains and planted reeds; this time the beaver climbed up to survey the fifth world. He said it was wet, and the people followed, again taking up residence on a small island in the middle of a huge sea. They begged coyote to return the children of Tieholtsodi, and he did. Now they could all begin their life in this fifth world. The first thing they did was set about removing the excess water; it is said they called on the dark spirit to drain these waters, and their pleas were answered. The water was drained, and in the process the Colorado River was formed.5
Cree-Nachez People
The Cree people are one of the largest indigenous tribes in North America. Their land included an area from east of Hudson and James Bays to as far west as Alberta and Great Slave Lake in Canada.
There are many myths about great floods. This one comes from the Cree people. A man heard that a great flood was to come, so he began to build a raft. He started just as the waters were rising. He quickly climbed on board the raft with his dog. The waters lifted the raft high up into the trees. It was then that the dog told his master he must throw him overboard if he wanted to survive. The man loved his dog and did not want to do this, but the dog pleaded that it was the only way and said again that his master must throw him into the water and then remain on the raft for seven days until the water was gone. As difficult as it was, the man threw the dog overboard.
After seven days the water began to disappear. Just as it was almost gone, the man saw dozens of wet people looking for help. As he got closer to them, he saw that they were the spirits of the dead who had perished in the water.
West Africans
For creation tales that come from Benin, Nigeria, and other parts of West Africa, it is relatively clear that according to most of the world, the earth and its inhabitants began in water.
In the Yoruba tradition of Nigeria, there are many different variations of sacred tales and stories. In part this is because for over a thousand years it has been an oral tradition where knowledge is passed down from teacher to student or from parent to child. The same holds true for their creation tales. The following is one version of the Yoruba origin story describing the start of the world.
At the beginning the earth was formless and watery. It was neither sea nor land. A supreme being named Olorun lived above all this in the sky. Olorun asked the orisha Nla to help with the creation of the earth. Nla began with a snail shell filled with dirt, a hen, and a pigeon. Nla placed the dirt in a small patch and the birds began to scratch until the land and sea were formed. Chameleon inspected the job and reported back to Olorun that Nla was progressing well. The first place made was called Ilé Ifé.6
Haitians
This story comes from the ancient religion of Haitian Vodou, which has become quite popular in recent years. In Haitian Vodou the creator serpent Damballa Wedo and his wife, Ayida Wedo, are deeply connected to water. In their most well-known story, the ancient spiritual teachings from Africa are brought to the Americas. Damballa Wedo is said to have traveled beneath the oceans with the knowledge, while Ayida Wedo slid across the rainbow. They met on the other side, intermingled, and spread the sacred knowledge throughout the land.
Japanese
The following is based on the Kojiki, the “Records of Ancient Matters,” written in approximately 712 CE. In the beginning there was a great sea of chaos, with all of the elements mixed together. The three divine beings called kami decided to create a world. To start they created many gods and goddesses; two of these were named Izanami and Izanagi. Izanagi was given a magic spear to help create the world. He dipped the spear into the chaos and began to stir it up. When he pulled it out, it was dripping. Some of these drops fell and became an island.
Soon after Izanagi and Izanami came together and began to birth things into the world. They created islands, the first being Foam Island. Then they created the islands of Japan, mountains, waterfalls, and many other things.
Izanami, whose name means “she who invites,” next gave birth to a fiery spirit that unfortunately burned her and made her very sick. During her illness she was vomiting, and her vomit transformed into the deity Metal Mountain Prince. She was also sick with other things coming out of her body: her feces turned into mud and her urine became the fresh water. However, her health continued to get worse and worse. Eventually she sunk into the Land of Night. Izanagi followed her and begged her to return. She told him she could not leave as she had eaten the food there and was trapped. When Izanagi finally saw her, he realized she had started to decay. Terrified, he ran away. As he was running, he threw away the combs that had been in his hair. The combs turned into grapes and bamboo as they hit the ground. The night spirit who had been chasing him stopped to eat these things, and Izanagi escaped.
Izanami loved him so and still wished for him to return. She sent eight thunder spirits along with the warriors of the Land of Night in the hope of retrieving him. However, he outran them, stopping briefly to take rest in a peach orchard. When his tormentors approached, he threw peaches at them (peaches are said to drive away evil and negativity). They left quickly, but Izanami persisted. She sent word to Izanagi that if he did not come back, she would kill a thousand people a day. His response was that if that was the case, he would birth a thousand babies a day. This is said to explain why people are born and why they die. Izanagi then sealed up Izanami in the Land of the Night, where she still remains.
After this ordeal Izanagi was said to have refreshed himself by bathing in the water. When he rinsed off his left eye, Amaterasu Omikami, the sun goddess, was born. When he washed his right eye, Tsukiyomi-no-Mikoto, the moon, was born. Lastly, when he rinsed out his nose, Susano-O, the god of storms, was born.7
Jewish People
The following is a truncated version of the creation story that comes from the Talmud. God had decided to create a world. The first word that came from his mouth was baruch, which means “blessed.” On day one he made the heavens and the earth, light and dark, and day and night. God threw a rock into the void and it became the earth. On day two he created the angels. On day three he made the plants and trees, and he made iron with which to forge tools to cut and manage these plants. He also created Eden, a paradise for Adam and Eve. On the fourth day he made the sun, the moon, and the stars. On day five he made the creatures of the sea, including the leviathan, and those of the air. On the sixth day he made the beasts of the land and also human beings. A number of the angels were upset that God would make other beings and became jealous. God pointed at these angels and they were engulfed in flames.
God then sent the angel Gabriel to obtain soil from the corners of the earth from which to form his humans. Gabriel soon began to doubt his task, for the earth let him know that eventually humans would be the destruction of the beauty that God had created, so God gathered up some dirt and clay himself and molded the first man, Adam. As God prepared to give his new life a soul, the angels, led by Samael (Satan), again began to voice their complaints. God cast them out of heaven, sending them to hell. God then breathed life into his new creation.
It is said that Adam saw the males and females of the other species and asked God to make him a companion. God then created Lilith out of the dust. When Adam tried to make love to her, she refused to lie beneath him. She told him they were both made of dust and she would not submit in this way. In her anger she spoke the unspeakable name of God and then vanished. It is said she went to live among the demons. God then fashioned another woman for Adam, named Eve.
Christians
The Christian creation stories also place a strong dependence on water. Arguably the most famous is the story of Noah and the flood. Flood stories can be found in the mythology of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Greece, Syria, Europe, India, East Asia, New Guinea, Central America, North America, Melanesia, Micronesia, Australia, and South America.8 The King James Version of the Bible says that God brought
a flood of waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is the breath of life from under heaven, and everything that is in the earth shall die…And the raine was upon the earth, fortie dayes, and fortie nights.9
Despite this watery destruction, the tale is also one of hope. Noah is allowed to build an ark and fill it with two of each animal to ensure the continuation of both humans and animals on the earth.
The concept of sacred waters is as old as time. Early societies clearly saw the vital importance of water as a reason to treat it as a manifestation of the divine. Over time this water began to be seen specifically as a Christian blessing. To start with, Christianity established shrines and sacred spaces around springs and other bodies of water that already carried a mystical significance. As early as the fourth century CE there are reports of clergy pouring blessed water on the insane and commanding the removal of evil from the individual.
Traditionally, when one thinks of holy water, it is water that has been blessed and consecrated by a Catholic priest. However, the efficacy of holy water isn’t just confined to the Christian church. Many may wonder how or why a Catholic mainstay like holy water found its way into traditional Hoodoo and Witchcraft. Well, magic is resourceful; its practices have survived and thrived despite years of prejudice and oppression. Most spells exist today because of their power. Simply put, why would anyone keep doing a spell if it wasn’t successful?
Christians use holy water for baptism, a rite which inducts devotees into the faith. It hearkens back to Jesus’s own baptism into the religion by John the Baptist in the Jordan River. Over time holy water began to be used not only on people but on places as well. Pope Gregory I in 601 CE advised converting sacred pagan sites such as wells this way, recommending “[pouring] holy water upon said temples…that they might be converted from the worship of demons to the worship of the true God.” Over a hundred temples were said to have been transformed in this way. This soon gave way to people using holy water to purify their homes, animals, cars, boats, etc., in a practice that is still carried out today. The Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, a Catholic organization, has several outreach programs to work for water justice and equality, and states on its website that “water is its own reality, a dimension of planet Earth, ancient and life-giving. It claims its own ‘right to be’ by the very fact that it is!” They then go on to state that water is a common good and “public water management is accountable to the people and where the common good of the entire community, human and other-than-human, is served.”10
Scientific Theory
It is no wonder that many of the world’s cultures place the origins of life as directly connected to water. Many scientific theories also situate the origins of life on earth in the water. These theories point to hot springs and tide pools as possible locations for the beginning of life as it is known on earth. One specific hypothesis is that life began near a deep-sea hydrothermal vent, with chemical reactions and early life forms thriving there.11 This occurred approximately 600 million years ago, with actual life forms moving from the ocean to the land roughly 500 million years ago.12
The great thinker Leonardo da Vinci was known to be fascinated with water. He believed water to be the true “vehicle of nature,” the blood of the world. In this fascinating substance he also observed its paradoxical nature, writing that
water is sometimes sharp and sometimes strong, sometimes acid and sometimes bitter, sometimes sweet and sometimes thick or thin, sometimes it is seen bringing hurt or pestilence, sometime health-giving, sometimes poisonous. It suffers change into as many natures as are the different places through which it passes. And as the mirror changes with the color of its subject, so it alters with the nature of the place, becoming noisome, laxative, astringent, sulfurous, salty, incarnadined, mournful, raging, angry, red, yellow, green, black, blue, greasy, fat or slim. Sometimes it starts a conflagration, sometimes it extinguishes one; is warm and is cold, carries away or sets down, hollows out or builds up, tears or establishes, fills or empties, raises itself or burrows down, speeds or is still; is the cause at times of life or death, or increase or privation, nourishes at times and at others does the contrary; at times has a tang, at times is without savor, sometimes submerging the valleys with great floods. In time and with water, everything changes.13
He shows us quite clearly that water is a real paradox.
Modern Occult Themes
There are many modern occult practices that have their basis in ancient practices and beliefs. Just like the lore and themes from the past, these focus heavily on the element of water. This can be water used in a multitude of ways, including healing, divination, or in ritual.
Mesmer and Blavatsky
While religion and science have been focused on water for a very long time, the same is also true of magic. German doctor Franz Mesmer (1734–1815) is credited with the practice of mesmerism, which is known to be a forerunner of modern hypnosis. Much of Mesmer’s work was focused on flow, in both the universe and directly on individuals. Towards the end of his career, Mesmer began using magnetized water as a healing remedy for his patients. He created this by using a large magnet or even just a simple wave of his hand.14
Famous psychic Madame Blavatsky (1831–1891), also known as Helena Blavatsky, was also very interested in water, specifically primeval water or “the water of space,” as she called it. She thought it to be representative of the feminine or universal mother energy. There is one amusing story about when she was in India and filled a bottle up with water by simply putting it under her skirts. In the tradition of Theosophy, of which she was one of the founders, water is said to manifest on three different levels: primordial, cosmic, and chemical.15
Thelemites and Water
The ritual usage of the element of water within the Thelemic path might not be as pronounced as one would imagine. But it is no less important to the everyday Thelemite, many of whom are practicing magicians either in a solitary or group capacity and participate in its rituals and ceremonies. In the Thelemic pantheon, the deity most closely related to the element of water is the goddess Nuit. In the ancient Egyptian religion, which Thelema heavily relies on, Nuit is the goddess of the sky, the stars, the cosmos, mothers, astronomy, and the entire universe.
The goddess Tefnut (deity of moisture, moist air, dew, and rain) mated with the god Shu (deity of air, wind, peace, and lions) and gave birth to the sky as the deity Nuit. She is often depicted as a nude star-covered woman arching over the earth and is described as having the image of a water pot above her head. Nuit is often portrayed within the inside lid of a sarcophagus in order to protect the dead. The vaults of the tombs were often painted dark blue as a representation of the star goddess.
In The Book of the Dead, it is written:
Hail, thou Sycamore tree of the goddess Nut! Give me of the water and of the air which is in thee. I embrace that throne which is in Unu, and I keep guard over the Egg of Nekek-ur. It flourisheth, and I flourish; it liveth, and I live; it snuffeth the air, and I snuff the air, I the Osiris Ani, whose word is truth, in peace.16
Though the goddess Nuit does not have a direct attribution to the element of water, it is inferred by the attributes passed on from her parents. Nuit is also said to have given birth to the deity Nephthys, who is seen as the goddess of water and of rivers.
On a more day-to-day practice, the magician performs daily rituals of the pentagram and hexagram. The rituals of the pentagram in Western mysticism are fundamental training practices that relate to the microcosmic world, which also encompasses elemental energies. The pentagram itself represents each of the five elements. During the performance of the Greater Ritual of the Pentagram, the practitioner is required to invoke the specific pentagram representing its corresponding element. In the case of water, the practitioner stands in the west and starts drawing the pentagram of water at the point of the pentagram representing air, next drawing a line across to the point of the pentagram representing water, then down to the point of earth.
To banish the pentagram of water, the practitioner would start at the point of the pentagram representing water, draw a line across to the point of air, then down to the point of fire. The hexagram rituals are related to the macrocosm of the wider world. The hexagram represents a true union of opposites and of manifestation. The hexagram is represented by two triangles; in its classic form, there is the red triangle that has its apex pointing upright and represents the element of fire, and the blue triangle that has its apex pointing downward represents the element of water. Regardless of Thelema not having specific rituals or practices that solely encompass the element of water, the element itself is vital as a component and attribute of many for the rituals and ceremonies that a Thelemite would customarily perform.
The following essay about the element of water in Taino culture is from guest contributor Miguel Sague. Miguel A. Sague Jr. (Sobaoko Koromo “Black Ribs,”) was born in 1951 in Santiago, Cuba, in the eastern region of the island that is famous for its history of Taino indigenous presence. At the age of ten, he immigrated with his family to the United States, and they settled in the northeastern city of Erie, Pennsylvania. At the age of nineteen, while beginning his art college career, he began to practice the shamanic tradition of his indigenous ancestors. In 1977 Miguel collaborated with local young Native Americans to campaign for the establishment of a Native American Day in Erie. With his newlywed wife, later that year he moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to become an employee of the Council of Three Rivers American Indian Center, where he worked to develop a Native American–themed educational curriculum. He collaborated with other Pittsburgh Tainos in 1981 to found the Caney Indigenous Spiritual Circle, a shamanic community that promoted ancient Taino spirituality. By 2015 he wrote his book Canoa: Taino Indigenous Dream River Journey.
My people, the Taino indigenous natives of the ancient Caribbean island region, have always believed in a female divinity that is identified very closely with both the earth and with earthly waters. The name of this divinity is Atabey, and she represents the supreme female element of the Taino pantheon. Atabey is typically represented as a maternal personality, the mother of the supreme male divinity Yokahu (the spirit of life and energy). She is also identified as the source of all creation, from whose womb emerges all that exists through terrestrial caves. She manifests in several forms and one of these forms is an entity called Itiba Cahubaba. The term itiba is derived from Arawak, the ancestral South American tropical rainforest regional language from which the Taino speech is descended. That word suggests bodies of water such as lakes.
As the mother of all the waters, Atabey not only represents the surface waters such as lakes, but in a different manifestation called Guabancex she is identified with violent and destructive natural phenomena such as hurricanes. In that manifestation she commands two male companions; one is Guatauba and the other is Coatriskie. Guatauba is associated with thunder, and Coatriskie represents the forces that gather torrential rain and allow it to manifest in the form of catastrophic flooding.
Caves are identified in Taino cosmology as the source place of all creation, the conduit to the divine womb. Taino belief recognizes an intimate relationship between the interior of caves and the access to the sacred underworld from which everything originates. The sacred underworld is not only the maternal uterine source place, but also the divine recycling place where all that dies returns to be reformed and then sent back out into existence. This divine recycling center is envisioned as an underground watery realm that in many ways suggests a primordial ocean where the souls of dead people can exist in a variety of forms, including fish as well as cave-dwelling bats. The divine underworld is called Coaibai, and it is perceived as a realm inhabited by the revered departed ancestors. The essence of those ancestors have the capacity to be reborn as new people within a kind of reincarnation paradigm, and yet their presence in Coaibai in their original identity still remains there forever. The flooded underworld has always manifested itself in the Caribbean indigenous consciousness within the imagery of huge sinkholes that exist on a number of locations across the Caribbean. In Kiskeya (Dominican Republic) there is a particularly significant site called Manantial de la Aleta. It contains an enormous sinkhole with a deep pool of water at the bottom. The place was used by my Taino ancestors as a site of ceremony and reverence. They came there to offer gifts to the ancient forbears, tossing valuable wooden sculptures, baskets filled with offerings, and beautifully incised gourds into the water far below. These objects have been discovered and studied by modern researchers who have explored the site in diving suits. The site suggests a vision of Taino cosmology, the vertical shaft of the sinkhole representing the cosmic central axis tree with its roots deep in the watery underworld, its branches high in the sky and its trunk rising through the earth plane where we live.
Another way in which the identity of the primordial cave is associated with water is the fact that the spirit of gentle regenerative showers, a deity called Boinayel, dwells in a legendary cave. Boinayel is identified with the vital rainwaters that begin to fall predictably during the opening of the wet season in the springtime, bringing fertility to the earth and the ability to start cultivating the life-giving food plants in the village gardens. This cave in which Boinayel is said to exist has an interesting name: Iguanaboina. The name contains an obvious linguistic reference to reptilian morphology (iguana) and has been identified with the Arawak language term “the brown serpent.” The ancient Taino are known to have recognized a connection between the great All Mother, Atabey, and serpents. Our Taino ancestors inherited the reverence for snakes and the identification between snakes and the supreme maternal deity from their South American rainforest forebears who originally migrated from the Orinoco River region of Venezuela and Guyana into the Caribbean Island region thousands of years ago.
The South American anaconda snake, a gigantic constrictor whose habitat includes lakes and streams, is considered a kind of divinity by some of the indigenous people of the Orinoco River Basin. In the legends of at least two Orinoco region tribes, the primordial anaconda snake is identified with a maternal entity within whose body the germinal version of humanity is conceived and brought to earth. In the creation narrative of those two tribes, the ancestral people actually journey along the waterways of the Orinoco River rainforest region within the maternal womb of the divine snake until they are finally released into the earthly realm. In the case of one legend, they are deposited upon the riverbank in the form of fish eggs before finally hatching into the first humans. It should be remembered that this South American mainland Orinoco River region is the origin place from where the ancestors of the Taino first emigrated in canoes out to the Caribbean islands. In the creation narrative of my island-dwelling Taino ancestors, there is a reference to an emergence of all humanity from a great cave called Casibahagua. This story suggests the concept of a birth from the womb of the All Mother via her subterranean birth canal and an appearance into the world out from the flooded, watery underworld of Coaibay.
Water is perceived in our Taino ancestral tradition as the fundamental element that supports all life. In that regard the ancient indigenous perception of water very closely reflects modern-day scientific views on the nature of this fundamental liquid substance.
Miguel Sague
Water finds its way into the creation stories and myths of almost every culture on earth. In some it is there in the beginning, and in others it is warned that it will be there in the end. These tales tell of water’s power, beauty, and supreme potential. They illustrate the important lessons that are present in the watery depths. In their cultural commonality, the universal magic of water becomes clear.
1. Nasser O. Rabbat, “Damascus,” Encyclopedia Brittanica, last modified November 28, 2019, https://www.britannica.com/place/Damascus.
2. King, Enuma Elish, LXXII.
3. Webster, Cowell, and Wilson, Rig-Veda-Sanhitá, 44.
4. Bierlein, Parallel Myths, ebook location 1134.
5. Bierlein, Parallel Myths, ebook location 1891.
6. Bierlein, Parallel Myths, ebook location 893.
7. De Veer, “Myth Sequences from the ‘Kojiki.’”
8. Finkel, The Ark Before the Flood, 84.
9. The Holy Bible (King James Version), Genesis 6–7.
10. “Water and the Community of Life,” Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns, first accessed September 1, 2019, https://maryknollogc.org/statements/water-and-community-life.
11. Martin, Baross, et al., “Hydrothermal Vents and the Origin of Life.”
12. Douglas, DNA Nanoscience, 339.
13. Bedau and Cleland, The Nature of Life, 331.
14. Amao, Healing Without Medicine, 1.
15. Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine, 68.
16. Budge, The Book of the Dead, 109.