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The "magic changes" chords are a set of chord progressions commonly used in popular music. These chord progressions can create a feeling of tension and release that adds depth and emotion to a song. The term "magic changes" refers to the way these chords can transform a simple melody into something more captivating and engaging. One of the most famous examples of these changes can be found in the song "I Got Rhythm" by George Gershwin. The song's chord progression follows a I-IV-V-I pattern, which is a common progression in many popular songs. The I chord represents the root or tonic of the key, the IV chord represents the fourth note in the scale, and the V chord represents the fifth note in the scale.



Diné Doctor History Books

This is a developing list of recommended books for the Diné Doctor History Syllabus.

Allison-Burbank, Joshua, Emily E. Haroz, Allison Ingalls, Crystal Kee, Lisa Martin, Kristin Masten, Tara Maudrie, and Victoria O’Keefe. Illustrated by Joelle Joyner. Our smallest warriors, our strongest medicine: Overcoming COVID-19. Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health, IASC, 2020.

Alvord, Lori and Elizabeth Cohen Van Pelt. The Scalpel and the Silver Bear: The First Navajo Woman Surgeon Combines Western Medicine and Traditional Healing. New York: Bantam Books, 2000.

Aronilth, Wilson, Jr. Diné Bi Bee Ohoo’aah Ba’Sila: An Introduction to Navajo
Philosophy. Many Farms, Arizona: Diné Community College Press, 1994.

Aronilth, Wilson, Jr. Foundation of Navajo Culture. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College, 1992.

Benally, Malcolm. Bitter Water: Diné Oral Histories of the Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2011.

Bighorse, Tiana, Nöel Bennett, and Barry Lopez. Bighorse the Warrior. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1994.

Bitsóí, Alastair Lee and Brooke Larsen, Des. New World Coming: Frontline Voices on Pandemics, Uprisings, and Climate Crisis. Salt Lake City: Torrey House Press, 2021.

Blue, Martha. The Witch Purge of 1878: Oral and Documentary History in the Early Navajo Reservation Years. Tsaile, Arizona: Navajo Community College Press, 1988.

Boyce, George Arthur. When Navajos Had Too Many Sheep: The 1940’s. San Francisco, California: The Indian Historian Press, 1974.

Brugge, Doug, Timothy Benally, and Esther Yazzie-Lewis. The Navajo People and Uranium Mining. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2007.

Chamberlain, Kathleen P. Under Sacred Ground: A History of Navajo Oil, 1922-1982. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2000.

Davies, Wade. Healing Ways: Navajo Health Care in the Twentieth Century. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2009.

DeJong, David H. “If You Knew the Conditions”: A Chronicle of the Indian Medical Service and American Indian Health Care, 1908-1955. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2008.

DeJong, David H. Plagues, Politics, and Policy: A Chronicle of the Indian Health Service, 1955-2008. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2011.

Denetdale, Jennifer. Reclaiming Diné History: The Legacies of Navajo Chief Manuelito and Juanita. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2007.

Deyhle, Donna. Reflections in Place: Connected Lives of Navajo Women. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2009.

Eichstaedt, Peter H. If You Poison Us: Uranium and Native Americans. Santa Fe, NM: Red Crane Books, 1994.

Elliott, Erica M. and Joan Borysenko. Medicine and Miracles in the High Desert: My Life Among the Navajo People. Bloomington, IN: Balboa Press, 2019.

Farella, John R. The Main Stalk: A Synthesis of Navajo Philosophy. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1984.

Fox, Sarah Alisabeth. Downwind: A People’s History of the Nuclear West. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2014.

Sarah Alisabeth Fox, “Stories from Downwind,” 2016

Frisbie, Charlotte J. Food Sovereignty the Navajo Way: Cooking with Tall Woman. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2018.

Gill, S.D. Sacred Words: A Study of Navajo Religion and Prayer: Contributions in Intercultural and Comparative Studies. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1981.

Hadley, Linda and Roger Hathale. Hózhǫ́ǫ́jí hane: Blessingway. Rough Rock, Arizona: Rough Rock Demonstration School, 1986.

Halpern, Katherine Spencer and Susan Brown McGreevy. Washington Matthews: Studies of Navajo Culture, 1880-1894. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1997.

Hartog, Cocia. Indian Mission Sketches: Descriptions and Views of Navajo Life in the Rehoboth Mission School and Stations, Tohatchi and Zuni. Gallup. New Mexico: Self-published, 1910-1911.

Holiday, John and Robert S. McPherson. A Navajo Legacy: The Life and Teachings of John Holiday. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2005.

Keeney, Bradford, ed. Walking Thunder: Diné Medicine Woman. Philadelphia, PA: Ringing Rocks Press, 2001.

Iverson, Peter. Diné: A History of the Navajos. Albuquerque, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press, 2002.

Iverson, Peter, ed. “For Our Navajo People”: Diné Letters, Speeches, and Petitions, 1900-1960. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico, 2002.

Joe, Jennie R. and Robert S. Young, eds. Diabetes as a Disease of Civilization: The Impact of Culture Change on Indigenous Peoples. New York: Mouton de Gruyter, 1993.

Kelly, Lawrence C. The Navajo Indians and Federal Indian Policy, 1900-1935. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1968.

Kelley, Klara and Harris Francis. A Diné History of Navajoland. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2019.

King, Farina. The Earth Memory Compass: Diné Landscapes and Education in the Twentieth Century. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2018.

Kristofic, Jim. Medicine Women: The Story of the First Native American Nursing School. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2019.

Kunitz, Stephen. Disease Change and the Role of Medicine: The Navajo Experience (Comparative Studies of Health Systems and Medical Care). Berkeley: University of California Press, 1983. First edition.

Lee, Lloyd L. Diné Identity in a Twenty-First-Century World. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2020.

Lee, Lloyd L., ed. Diné Perspectives: Revitalizing and Reclaiming Navajo Thought. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2014.

Lee, Lloyd L., ed. Navajo Sovereignty: Understandings and Visions of the Diné People. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2017.

Locke, Raymond Friday. The Book of the Navajo. New York: Holloway House
Publishing, 2001.

McCloskey, Joanne. Living Through the Generations: Continuity and Change in Navajo Women’s Lives. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2007.

McPherson, Robert S. Dinéjí Na’nitin: Navajo Traditional Teachings and History. University of Colorado Press, 2012.

McPherson, Robert S. Navajo Land, Navajo Culture: The Utah Experience in the Twentieth Century. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001.

McPherson, Robert S. Sacred Land, Sacred View: Navajo Perceptions of the Four Corners Region. Provo, Utah: Charles Redd Center for Western Studies, 1992.

Moss, Margaret P., ed. American Indian Health and Nursing. New York: Springer Publishing Company, 2015.

Niethammer, Carolyn. I’ll Go and Do More: Annie Dodge Wauneka, Navajo Leader and Activist. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2004.

Niethammer, Carolyn. Keeping the Rope Straight: Annie Dodge Wauneka’s Life of Service to the Navajo. Flagstaff, AZ: Salina Bookshelf, Inc., 2006.

O’Neill, Colleen. Working the Navajo Way: Labor and Culture in the Twentieth Century. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2005.

Oshley, N. and Robert S. McPherson. The Journey of Navajo Oshley: An Autobiography and Life History. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press, 2000.

Parman, Donald L. The Navajos and the New Deal. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 1976.

Pasternak, Judy. Yellow Dirt. New York: Free Press, 2010.

Powell, Dana E. Landscapes of Power: Politics of Energy in the Navajo Nation. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2018.

Rife, James P. and Alan J. Dellapenna. Caring and Curing: A History of the Indian Health Service. Terra Alta, West Virginia: PHS Commissioned Officers Foundation for the Advancement of Public Health, 2009.

Rhoades, Everett R., ed. American Indian Health Innovations in Health Care, Promotion, and Policy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000.

Roessel, Robert A. Dinétah: Navajo History Vol. II. Rough Rock, Arizona: Navajo Curriculum Center and Title IV-B Materials Development Project, Rough Rock Demonstration School, 1983.

Schwarz, Maureen Trudelle. Blood and Voice: Navajo Women Ceremonial Practitioners. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2003.

Schwarz, Maureen Trudelle. “I Choose Life”: Contemporary Medical and Religious Practices in the Navajo World. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2008.

Schwarz, Maureen Trudelle. Molded in the Image of Changing Woman: Navajo Views on the Human Body and Personhood. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1997.

Schwarz, Maureen Trudelle. Navajo Lifeways: Contemporary Issues, Ancient Knowledge. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2001.

Sherry, John William. Land, Wind, and Hard Words: A Story of Navajo Activism. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2002.

Trennert, Robert A. White Man’s Medicine: Government Doctors and the Navajo, 1863-1955. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1998.

Voyles, Traci Brynne. Wastelanding: Legacies of Uranium Mining in Navajo Country. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2015.

Weisiger, Marsha. Dreaming of Sheep in Navajo Country. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2009.

White, Richard. The Roots of Dependency: Subsistence, Environment, and Social Change among the Choctaws, Pawnees, and Navajos. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1988.

Witherspoon, Gary. Language and Art in the Navajo Universe. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1977.

Wyman, Leland Clifton and Bernard Haile. Blessingway. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1970.

Zah, Peterson and Peter Iverson. We Will Secure Our Future: Empowering the Navajo Nation. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2012.

Ancient Pathways

The Navajo Witch Purge Of 1878
By A. Lynn Allison
The words "Navajo Witch Purge" might at first call to mind the similar phrase "Salem Witch Hunt" and all the lurid imagery that goes with it. A bit of investigating, however, produces a cultural and historical picture of the Navajo and their tradition of witchcraft profoundly different from anything ever imagined by those early New England Puritans. As the Salem Witch trials in seventeenth-century Massachusetts may have evolved as a societal response to the religious thinking of the day, so the Navajo Witch Purge of 1878 evolved as a cultural response to the effects of colonialism on the Navajo way of life.
Witchcraft was always an accepted, if not widely acknowledged, part of Navajo culture, and the killing of "witches" was historically as much accepted among the Navajo as among the Europeans. The events of 1878 were a culmination of situation and circumstance that created the seemingly sensational out of what had been the cultural norm.
That witchcraft had been a traditional part of Navajo society is thoroughly documented in noted anthropologist Clyde Kluckhohn's monograph, Navajo Witchcraft. While Kluckhohn's work may seem somewhat dated to us—the book appeared in 1944—his information is, in this instance, more than forty-five years closer to direct sources than anything that might be gathered today. He discusses at length the four basic forms of Navajo witchcraft, "Witchery, Sorcery, Wizardry, and Frenzy Witchcraft" (22), and the purposes each served in Navajo society. Of the four, it was sorcery and wizardry that were most apparent during the events of the 1878 purge. Sorcery was the burying of victims' articles and excretions, and wizardry the injection of foreign things into the victim (cf. Blue, Trader, Chapter 4).
While William Haas Moore believes that witchcraft may have served simply to delineate good from evil (187), Kluckhohn allows that the suspicion or accusation of witchcraft served as an outlet for frustrations produced by those forces beyond a Navajo's perceived worldly control (118). He states that "[w]itchcraft channels the displacement of aggression, facilitating emotional adjustment with a minimum of disturbance of social relationships. Even direct aggression through witchcraft helps to maintain societal inhibitions consonant with the old native culture" (119).
In the year 1878, upwards of forty Navajo "witches" were killed or "purged" (Blue, Trader 58) in what apparently was a convergence of that very "old native culture" and a U.S. government-induced economic and social purgatory. That purgatory began in March, 1864, with "The Long Walk of the Navajos" to Fort Sumner, also known as Bosque Redondo (Locke 361). Hundreds were left dead or dying on the trails as thousands of defeated and surrendering Navajos walked the miles from Fort Wingate and Fort Canby to Bosque Redondo (Ibid., 361-63).
Conditions at Bosque Redondo were so poor that "there was never enough to eat and everyone was living in makeshift shelters. . . . ome families were living in holes they had dug in embankments. . .scratching in the alkali-permeated soil and [drinking] the bitter water from the Rio Pecos that made them ill." Locke continues, "They were convinced that their gods—even the benevolent Changing Woman—had deserted them" (365). In an echoing sentiment, Kluckhohn describes the years there as "a major trauma, the full calamity of which is difficult to convey to white readers" (114).
The tribe's eventual return to Dinehtah—Navajoland—in 1868 without adequate foresight and provision on the part of the United States government continued the pattern of destitution and near-starvation for the Navajo. In the following ten years, the success of a few from herding and farming set against the failure to thrive of the many (Locke, 420) served only to set the stage for a resurgence of accusations of witchcraft and the traditional remedies deemed necessary to alleviate its evil consequences.
In the summer of 1878, the mounting tension within Navajo society appeared to reach overwhelming proportions. Reduced to a poor and starving people, they had barely survived their years at Bosque Redondo. The freedom to return to their homeland had come at the expense of traditional Navajo ways of balancing social inequities and rationalizing inequalities of wealth and well-being. The Navajo had to promise not to steal and not to make war on anyone—even on each other. Characterized by one Navajo, it was as if "all our past behavior was taken from us" (Underhill, 145).
Stealing and warfare had always existed as traditional and legitimate methods of redistributing wealth within the Navajo culture. For instance, stealing better horses improved your own stock, and property gained or lost through warfare was often redistributed in further skirmishes. Without those means of legitimate redistribution of wealth, the rich simply got richer and the poor had no way to catch up. The indigenous cultural reality and the jealousy that the new rules caused, as well as unexplained sickness that killed both people and livestock, culminated in an age-old Navajo response: accusations of witchcraft (Underhill, 160).
Unexplained sickness or death of tribal members or of their livestock could arouse suspicion of witchcraft. So could an unexplained reversal of fortune—good or bad—for a family or individual. Evidence of the witchcraft would follow in the discovery of buried excretions, hair, or belongings of the stricken person or livestock. In one of the most often-documented "Purge" curses, White trader Charles Hubbell was asked to go to Ganado Lake and retrieve the curse items buried there, as the "good" Navajo could not do this themselves. According to the grandson of tribal member Hash keh yilnaya, an eyewitness, "the collection that these witches gathered was found wrapped in paper and this paper was I think the Treaty of 1868. . .buried in the belly of a dead person in a grave. . . ." (Blue, Witch, .
That the killing of witches was as traditionally accepted by the Navajo as was witchcraft itself may have been as misunderstood by the Whites and therefore seemed as shocking as any other "foreign" custom. While some witches were allowed to escape with their lives provided they permanently left the community, Kluckhohn asserts, "[Richard F.] Van Valkenburgh is undoubtedly right in considering witchcraft a crime for which the Navajo administered capital punishment" (Kluckhohn 49).
In a story often told, a witch was killed on the doorstep of the first Hubbell family trading post, prompting the move to the present location in Ganado. While it is unclear just who was killed, why, and on exactly whose doorstep the killing took place, most accounts generally agree with the story told by the elderly Yazzie T'iis Yazhi:
As I understand it someone [accused of witchcraft] was killed in front of the Trading Post, and in the doorway there was blood all over, so the people living around there told him [Hubbell] that he shouldn't live in a place where someone dies. Long time ago, people used to use Antiih [a form of witchcraft] to do away with [each] other, by blaming each other for their misfortunes, and that is how it happened, so he [Hubbell] moved out of there to the present Ganado. . . . (Blue, Witch, 8-9)
At a later date, T'iis Yazhi related a much more detailed story:
Hastiin Jieh Kaal/Digoli was first killed in the doorway of Hubbell's first trading post near the lake after he told about his companion killing young people. [H]is companion was Hastiin Biwosi and was in the vicinity performing a ceremony so some Navajos went there to kill Hastiin Biwosi. They killed him too. After that the trading post was relocated to the present site because Navajos were afraid of the trading post where Hastiin Jieh Kaal/Digoli was slain and considered the building haunted. (Ibid., 9)
Events such as that killing and stories of other such killings without much doubt bred the fear that led Charles Hubbell to write the frantic letters addressed to "W.B. Leonard, Ft. Defiance, Arizona Territory, Yavapai County" (Ibid, 5), all dated May 31, 1878. His initial letter "pleads that ammunition and his rifle be sent as 'there is a big row going on here, among the Indians. . .a big crowd just passed here and are going to fix themselves to go on to a fight at Canon De Chelle. . .and the Indians around here are expecting them from Canon De Chelle. . ." (Idem). Convinced that "our [Euro-Americans'] lives are in danger and also the store and contents" (Blue, Trader, 58), Hubbell writes later on the same day "that 'Ganie or Ganio' has come in and informed them that the Indians are arming in large numbers and that his life is in danger. . .and says to send soldiers immediately to protect themselves and family" (Blue, Witch, 6).
It is not known whether, at that writing, Charles Hubbell already knew of the killing of Hastiin Biwosi. If he did not, he would learn of it shortly, and it could only have increased his apprehension as well as that of others such as Ganado Mucho. The story of Hastiin Biwosi's death is reported by Hash keh yilnaya's grandson as another eyewitness rendition told to him by his grandfather:
. . .[P]eople gathered. . .from Ganado, and some from Greasewood, and others from Klagetoh. . .they prepared themselves. . .armed themselves with guns, arrows, clubs. . .there were many people riding horses. . .fifty. . .or hundred. . . 'We are here to get the man [Hastiin Biwosi]. We will kill him.' (Ibid., 9-10)
Arriving at the place where Hastiin Biwosi was to be found, the leaders of the group stated their business, and all of the inhabitants of the dwelling removed themselves but Hastiin Biwosi. In this account, someone named Totsohnii Hastiin—who may be the same as the Naataani (respected, informal leader) Ganado Mucho cited in other accounts—stopped them, stating that "he's my relative. . .my older brother" (Ibid., 11). Only after Hash keh yilnaya made an impassioned speech stating that Hastiin Biwosi "has cut off their chance for a good life. . ." did Totsohnii Hastiin relent: "Go ahead, now do what you want with him" (Idem). Biwosi was then dragged from his hiding place inside the dwelling, and with full participation of all present—including Ganado Mucho—shot and then stoned to death.
In the days following the death of Hastiin Biwosi, tensions ran high in Dinehtah. Ganado Mucho feared retaliation for his "serious transgression, the killing of a relative" (Moore, 189). Charles Hubbell and his trading post employees feared they would be implicated in the deaths of the two witches and could come to harm (Ibid., 190). Within just a few days, Manuelito—another naataani—arrived at Fort Wingate with a letter he had dictated to J. L. Hubbell—Charles' Brother—saying that "the Navajos had tied up six medicine men accused of witchcraft" and that he was convinced "many Navajos would start killing each other without military intervention" (Ibid., 192). Manuelito's own cousin had been killed earlier in the summer, and as an enemy of the witches, he himself had been threatened with death.
The plea for military intervention was heeded. At least ten "witches" were brought to council before Lieutenant D. D. Mitchell, and, possibly as a result of the serious speech he gave condemning the killing of "witches," all lived to tell the tale. While the killing of accused witches did continue in isolated areas and as isolated events, the intervention of the military and the contributions of naataani such as Manuelito and Ganado Mucho did much to end the witchcraft scare by the end of the summer of 1878.
No doubt a great many other particulars played into the events that came to be called the "Navajo Witch Purge of 1878." The recollection and study of some of those particulars may still be possible, though difficult, as the subject of Navajo "witches" is not one easily broached by or spoken of to outsiders.
Information is scattered among many disparate sources. The purge exists as a fragment of the collision between traditional Navajo history and culture and an inescapably changing world. Though little known, the summer of 1878 may stand as a watershed between the Navajos' ancient culture and their emergence into modernity.

Works Cited
Blue, Martha. Indian Trader: The Life and Times of J. L. Hubbell. Walnut, Ariz.: Kiva Publishing, Inc., 2000.
------. The Witch Purge of 1878. Tsaile, Ariz.: Navajo Community College Press, 1988.
Kluckhohn, Clyde. Navajo Witchcraft. Boston: Beacon Press, 1944.
Locke, Raymond Friday. The Book of the Navajo. Los Angeles: Mankind Publishing Co., 1976.
Moore, William Haas. Chiefs, Agents, and Soldiers. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1994.
Underhill, Ruth M. The Navajos. Norman, Okla.: University of Oklahoma Press, 1956.

May the fruit of our lives be bound and sealed to Thee,
O Mother, O Woman Eternal
who holdest the inmost life of each of Thy daughters
between the hands upon Her Heart

Hunt for the Skinwalker : Science Confronts the Unexplained at a Remote Ranch in Utah

The author of the controversial bestseller Brain Trust brings his scientific expertise to the chilling true story of unexplained phenomena on Utah's Skinwalker Ranch -- and challenges us with a new vision of reality.

For more than fifty years, the bizarre events at a remote Utah ranch have ranged from the perplexing to the wholly terrifying. Vanishing and mutilated cattle. Unidentified Flying Objects. The appearance of huge, otherworldly creatures. Invisible objects emitting magnetic fields with the power to spark a cattle stampede. Flying orbs of light with dazzling maneuverability and lethal consequences. For one family, life on the Skinwalker Ranch had become a life under siege by an unknown enemy or enemies. Nothing else could explain the horrors that surrounded them -- perhaps science could.

Leading a first-class team of research scientists on a disturbing odyssey into the unknown, Colm Kelleher spent hundreds of days and nights on the Skinwalker property and experienced firsthand many of its haunting mysteries. With investigative reporter George Knapp -- the only journalist allowed to witness and document the team's work -- Kelleher chronicles in superb detail the spectacular happenings the team observed personally, and the theories of modern physics behind the phenomena. Far from the coldly detached findings one might expect, their conclusions are utterly hair-raising in their implications. Opening a door to the unseen world around us, Hunt for the Skinwalker is a clarion call to expand our vision far beyond what we know.

The I chord represents the root or tonic of the key, the IV chord represents the fourth note in the scale, and the V chord represents the fifth note in the scale. The progression creates a sense of tension with the IV and V chords before resolving back to the I chord, providing a satisfying resolution. Another example of magic changes can be found in the song "Stand By Me" by Ben E.

Puzzle zimad

King. The progression in this song is I-vi-IV-V, which is another common progression in popular music. The vi chord represents the sixth note in the scale, and the IV and V chords create tension before resolving back to the I chord. This progression adds a sense of longing and anticipation to the song, enhancing its emotional impact. The magic changes chords are not limited to a specific genre or time period. They can be found in a wide range of musical styles, from classical compositions to contemporary pop hits. These chord progressions have become so widespread because they have a universal appeal and are capable of evoking a wide range of emotions. In conclusion, the magic changes chords are a fundamental element of many popular songs. These chord progressions have the power to transform a simple melody into something captivating and emotionally resonant. Whether used in a classical composition or a modern pop song, these chords bring a sense of tension and release that adds depth and richness to the music..

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puzzle zimad

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