810-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 7, 2002 Kids , Korner Talking Turkey: Myth And Truth About The All-American Bird WOOSTER. Ohio Today, most of us think of turkeys only as a delicious Thanksgiving meal. But there was a time when the snooded-and-wattled creatures soared above the dinner table to play the role of deities. Long before becoming an in dispensable part of the Thanks giving tradition and the holiday’s most recognizable symbol, tur keys had amassed a popularity and significance of mythological proportions among the many and diverse original cultures of North and Central America. In fact, the Mayas of southern Mexico and northern Central America were the first to domes ticate the colorful bird some 1,800 years before the Pilgrims had a taste of it at Plymouth. Turkeys were served to the Mayan elite and were also used in ceremonies for healing, plant ing and praying for rain. The Aztecs of central Mexico also raised turkeys. The bird was held in such high esteem that a religious festival in its honor took place every two hundred days. On the day of the celebration, people arose before dawn to pave the streets with the collected shells of turkey chicks that had hatched during that period of time. Turkey (huaxolotl in the Na hualt language) was also a hot buy at the markets of Tenochtit lan, capital of the Aztec Empire. Franciscan missionary Toribio de Benavente Motolina, in his Histo ry of the Indians of New Spain, tells us that in the suburban mar ket of Tepeyacac alone, over 8,000 turkeys were sold every five days. The royalty also appreciat ed the turkey’s succulent meat —one hundred turkeys were sent daily to the court of the poet-king Nezahualcoyotl of Texcoco, a nearby metropolis. In the early 16th century, along with tomatoes, peppers, po tatoes, chocolate and com, tur keys were loaded onto Spanish galleons and carried back to Eu rope. The king of Spain decreed that every returning ship was to bring back 10 turkeys, five male and five female. In what may have been the fastest-rising gas tronomical popularity of all New World products, turkey quickly replaced the stringy European peacock on banquet tables. Much like the Thanksgiving account, the history and mythol ogy of the turkey are full of fasci nating tales and plenty of confu sion. Here’s a platterfull: What’s in a name is not what’s on the plate The turkey (Meleagris gallopa vo) bears names, both common and scientific, that have nothing to do with its American origin. Turkeys didn’t come from Turkey. Nonetheless, they were given the name of this Eurasian country because they were at first confused with the guinea fowl, once believed to have originated in Turkish territory. Some sources claim that Columbus de cided to call the birds tuka, which was the word for peacock in the language of India. Still, others say that the name turkey came from Native Americans who called the birds firkee, which sounds like turkey, or from tha The turkey is a respectable bird, a true original native of America, Ben Franklin once wrote to his daughter. “He is besides, though a little vain and silly, a bird of courage, and would not hesitate to attack a Grenadier of the British Guards who should presume to invade his farmyard with a red coat on.” Photo by Michele Kunjappu, staff writer. sound turkeys make when they are afraid —‘turk, turk, turk.” The scientists who named the turkey didn’t get it right, either, but added some more mythology into the stuffing mix. The genus name, Meleagris, comes from a Latin word for guinea fowl and from the Greek name Meleager, hero of the Caledonian boar hunt in Greek mythology. The species name, gallopavo, is made up of the Latin words for a cock (gal lus) and a peafowl (pavo), mean ing a chicken-like peafowl or guinea fowl. Pavo is the “official” name of turkey in Spanish-speaking coun tries, but most folks still prefer indigenous names such as guajo lote, totole, chompipe and chun to. Another type of turkey, the ocellated turkey (Agriocharis ocellata), still roams wild in the Yucatan Peninsula and Guate mala. The Mayas used to call it cutz. Blessed bird of abundance Among Native North Ameri cans, the turkey has a long histo ry of association with spirituality and the honoring of the Earth Mother. It’s a symbol of all the blessings that the Earth contains, along with the ability to use them to their greatest advantage. Turkeys have an intricate my thology among the early inhabit ants of the United States and Canada. Among other things, they helped create the world and showed humans how to raise corn and fight off evil spirits. The gobbler is shown outsmarting the owl (a common representation of death and the underworld) and challenging the powerful eagle in combat. Some stories tell how Indian shamans would turn themselves into turkeys and prowl around other villages. In Hopi creation myths, a male turkey was the first bird to try to raise the sun in the sky —that’s how he burnt his head, which remained bald for posterity. There is also the popular Zuni tale of the Turkey Girl. In it, a ragged turkey herder hears that a Dance of the Sacred Bird is to be held in a nearby village. Her avian friends use their magic to turn her clothes into splendid garments, hawk up silver and jewelry they had collected in their crops for years, and send her off —charging her to return before sunset or prove herself “mean of spirit.” As an animal totem, the turkey is called the “giveaway eagle” or the “life giver.” Thus, it is associ ated with shared blessings, har vest, fertility, grounding and self sacrifice. Mesoamerican god of grace Among the ancient cultures of Mesoamerica —which comprises modern-day Mexico and most of Central America— the turkey oc cupied a place of honor. It was, first of all, the most common embodiment of the Aztec god Tezcatlipoca —a pow erful warrior, magician and di viner who saw prophetic visions in his mirror of obsidian, from which his name (which means “smoking mirror 1 ) was derived. Tezcatlipoca is typically re garded as a dark and sinister god. However, when the deity manifested himself as Chalchiuh totolin (‘the jeweled turkey 1 ), he conferred good fortune upon peo ple. In Christian terms, Chal chiutotolin’s powers can be seen as a type of grace. Although Tez catlipoca could tempt humans into self-destruction, when he as sumed his turkey form he could also cleanse them of contami nation, absolve them of guilt, and mitigate their otherwise inexor able calender-based fate. No other god could perform this last function. To the Aztecs, the deified bird also resided over ritual self-mor tification. The ornament he wore over the beak was emblematic of blood sacrifice and the head and neck skin suggested evisceration. The turkey was a walking sacri fice, whose rituals could be cop ied by humans. The turkey was also a repre sentation of the Sun God, which takes on different disguises as he travels daily from the east to the west. It has been observed that the color of a turkey’s wattle darkens from morning till noon, then lightens as the sun sinks to ward the western horizon. Just like in North America, turkeys were associated with fer tility among the Mesoamericans. When describing the animal in his General History of the Things of New Spain, Spanish mission ary Bernardino de Sahagn re ports that “those people who wish harm on others give them to eat or drink that beak of flesh (snood) the bird has over its beak, which makes them unable to use the virile member.” The Mayas also revered the turkey. In the Temple of Inscrip tions of the ancient city of Pale nque (Guatemala), there’s an image of a sacred turkey, or “Emerald Fowl,” to which offer ings of maize paste were made. Eagle out, turkey in It’ true that the turkey became the chosen bird of one of the United States’ most significant holidays. However, it’s also true that it lost the race to becoming the country’s national symbol of pride —an honor that went to th« magnificent bald eagle. In the late 17705, Benjamin Franklin suggested that the tur key should be the symbol for the fledgling United States. He ar gued that the bald eagle was no better than a pirate and a fish eater. ‘The turkey is in comparison a much more respectable bird, and withal a true original native of America,” Franklin wrote in a letter to his daughter. ‘He is be sides, though a little vain and silly, a bird of courage, and would not hesitate to attack a Grenadier of the British Guards who should presume to invade his farm yard with a red coat on.” In the end, the turkey lost to the bald eagle by a single con gressional vote.