quote from creation story an iroqouis legend that supports The notion of "equality" was likely to exist among Indigenous Peoples because they believed in the concept of "gender fluidity." In the Iroquois legend of creation, it is evident that the female gender had a significant impact on the creation of the world. The woman in the legend thought she would create a being like herself, indicating that she saw her own qualities and abilities as valuable and worthy of replication. This suggests that the Indigenous Peoples recognized the inherent worth and capabilities of both genders, without assigning one gender a higher status than the other.

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"Then she began to think, 'If I am a female, there must be a male for me somewhere'; and she wished for a companion. Thinking thus, she created the fishes and igarista. . . Afterward, seeing nothing but water, she became lonesome and imagined a world to exist underneath the water where there was land. Then she wished --and the land appeared. The land was earth. Then, together with igarista, she wished many kinds of plants as well as animals, birds, and things into existence. Myths come alive when people make them real by acting them out with rituals. These rituals recreate the myth and its power. Creation is always happening, and myths tell us how. The Iroquois Creation Story fulfills its purpose by explaining how all things came into being." (Source: "Skywoman Falling: Myth of Iroquois Creation," by Sally Roesch Wagner)