While stories told by
ybytoso differ from that from
Tomáraho in many respects, the "Big Myth" yshyr can be summarized as follows: On the occasion of traveling through the jungle, a group of yshyr women met the
ahnapzöro (or
anapsoro), powerful and terrible gods, strange-looking, that had no factions in their faces. Each of them had different unique characters, covered with feathers, hair, or strange colors. The ahnapsoro lived then with yshyr, and taught them to hunt, use tools, and initiated them in their ritual ceremonies. After a while the coexistence of men and gods became difficult, reaching a crisis with the death of some young people in the harsh initiation ceremonies. Then
Eshönewörta (or
Ashnuwerta), a leading ahnapzoro, showed the yshyr the vulnerability of the ahnapzoro, so they could kill them by beating them at the ankle, as that there they had there throat. In a short time all the ahnapzoro had been exterminated. only two survived the slaughter:
Eshönewörta and the fearsome
Nemur, who escaped. When Nemur felt the human drawing up on him, they were already in the place called
Karcha Balut he scooped up a snail from the soil or pulled it from his body's thick plumage (depending on the versions) and with an extravagant gesture produced a raging river that sprouted out of its shell. The man and the ahnapzoro, separated by the river known today as the
Paraguay River, "exchange words" for the last time. "
You can run, but your destiny is to remain forever alone", pronounces Syr, standing on the riverbank. "
Your people are numerous", replies Nemur from the opposite bank, "
but they will be forever obliged to follow the words. If they fail, sickness, hunger, and enemies will decimate then until the last Kytymaraha (name of the clan of Syr) is extinguished". There is another mythical institution that promotes the balanced use of natural resources: the figure of the
Master of the Animals. Every animal has its master its
balut,
spokesperson, who simultaneously facilitates hunting and severely sanctions its excess. ==Notes==