The Huron accepted that Aataentsic, despite the fact that "the mother
of humanity" in their creation story, was a divinity who brought
mischief to individuals.
As indicated by the Huron, Aataentsic had initially
abided in the sky with her better half, where spirits lived in
a forested land much like earth. One day she tumbled to earth
through a gap in the sky. As she fell toward the sea that
secured the world, the tortoise saw her falling. He told the
other water creatures to plunge and raise earth. As they
returned, they heaped the earth on his back, framing the land.
Aataentsic fell securely on this land. Not long after her fall, she gave
birth to twin children, Iouskeha and Tawiscaron. Iouskeha looked for
to support people. He brought great climate, made the
lakes and waterways, and told people the best way to chase. He
likewise instructed individuals to utilize fire and develop corn. His sibling
Tawiscaron was not positively arranged to people, and when
the siblings grew up they battled, and Iouskeha drove him
away. His blood, which fell on the ground as he fled, turned
into stone. After this time, Iouskeha and Aataentsic lived
together in a bark house a long way from Huron nation.
Aataentsic, who might be distinguished either as Iouskeha's
mother or his maternal grandma, attempted to fix his
acts of kindness and to hurt individuals. She sent infection,
made individuals kick the bucket, and controlled the spirits of the dead. On the off chance that
a voyaging Huron discovered her lodge, she would attempt to hurt
him, however her child would attempt to support the disastrous explorer.
She showed up as an elderly person, however she could make
herself youthful again however she wanted. Iouskeha developed old like
any individual, yet when he ended up old could restore
himself and become youthful once more.
The anthropologist Bruce Trigger recommended that the
story of Aataentsic and Iouskeha worked to redress
the two people for the constraints in their jobs in
every day life. Men, who slaughtered creatures in the chase and other
people in war, were aggressors in every day life. The male
god Iouskeha, then again, was a real existence bearer who
gave people corn and fire and attempted to support them. In
Huron society, ladies raised harvests and thought about youngsters,
in any case, through the account of Aataentsic they were "complimented by
being magically invested with risky and forceful
characteristics." The possibility that Aataentsic and her child, however
altogether different in character, lived respectively in a bark lodge
may have accentuated the reciprocal jobs men and
ladies played in day by day life.