4 cool things you probably didn’t know about Native American cultures

Pawnee is real, and its people are badass.

Not Available Lead
Complex Original

Image via Complex Original

Not Available Lead

Americans usually learn about the most well-known Native American tribes in school, but that doesn't mean we understand their cultures.

To hear about the Native American customs we weren't taught about in elementary school, EditorialComplex asked Reddit, "Native Americans and First Nations of Reddit, what's something cool about your tribe's traditions and culture that outsiders might not know about?"

The results may dispel some stereotypes you have and teach you a thing or two.

Here are some of the coolest Native American customs from the thread that you probably haven't heard before:

1. The Pawnee were astronomers

Not Available Interstitial

2. Native Hawaiians once had the territory's highest literacy rate

Not Available Interstitial

"Hawaiian here: Like many native cultures, we had no written language pre-contact," kkaallaaee said. "However, the value of language itself was highly regarded, and the intricacies and poetic nature of our language was of utmost importance to our people."

They went on to explain:


When English and the Roman alphabet was introduced to our people in the 18th and 19th centuries, we basically ate it up: to have another way to express one's language was a huge deal. So much so that throughout the 19th century, Hawaiians were literally the most literate (in English and Hawaiian) culture in the world with an adult literacy rate of over 90 percent.

The Routledge Handbook of Multilingualism confirms that native Hawaiians had the highest literacy rate on the Hawaiian islands when the U.S. annexed the territory in 1893.

According to the Hawaiian Cultural Center, Hawaii's King Liholiho led a literacy initiative in the 1820s that distributed books with the pīʻapā, the Hawaiian alphabet, throughout the islands. 

3. First Nations tribes have special etiquette around touching hair

Not Available Interstitial

4. A Comanche woman set the precedent for Brown v. Board of Education

Not Available Interstitial

"My great grandmother was Dorothy Sunrise Lorentino, the first Native American to attend a public school," Redditor JoyceCarolOatmeal of the Comanche tribe in Oklahoma wrote.

They continued:


Her father sued the local school district for not letting her attend, and after they won, her case was presented as precedent in several similar cases in the following decades and in Brown v. Board of Education, the SCOTUS decision that desegregated schools for black students.

According to The Oklahoman, Lorentino went on to earn a bachelor's and master's in education, and became a teacher. She was inducted into the National Teachers Hall of Fame in 1997. 

In the aftermath of colonization, much of the indigenous people's history has been erased. But as the surviving members of Native American tribes can teach us, their cultures gave the rest of the country so much more than we typically give them credit for. 

Latest in Life