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  2. Navajo song ceremonial complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navajo_song_ceremonial_complex

    The rites and prayers in the Blessing Way are concerned with healing, creation, harmony and peace. The song cycles recount the elaborate Navajo creation story ( Diné Bahaneʼ ). One of the most important Blessing Way rites is the Kinaaldá ceremony, in which a young girl makes the transition to womanhood upon her menarche . [ 1 ]

  3. Recognition of Native American sacred sites in the United ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recognition_of_Native...

    Protest at Glen Cove sacred burial site. The Recognition of Native American sacred sites in the United States could be described as "specific, discrete, narrowly delineated location on Federal land that is identified by an Indian tribe, or Indian individual determined to be an appropriately authoritative representative of an Indian religion, as sacred by virtue of its established religious ...

  4. Praying Indians of Natick and Ponkapoag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Praying_Indians_of_Natick...

    Rosita Andrews is a public speaker, who goes by the name Chief Caring Hands. [5] She spoke to the Natick School Committee to retire their Native American mascot. [6] Andrews also officiated the wedding of her son StrongMedicine Bear and WarriorWoman at the historic Eliot Church in Natick, Massachusetts, in 2015.

  5. Cherokee spiritual beliefs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_spiritual_beliefs

    ᏗᎵᏍᏙᏗ "dilsdohdi" [1] the "water spider" is said to have first brought fire to the inhabitants of the earth in the basket on her back. [2]Cherokee spiritual beliefs are held in common among the Cherokee people – Native American peoples who are Indigenous to the Southeastern Woodlands, and today live primarily in communities in North Carolina (the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians ...

  6. Lakota religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lakota_religion

    The religion's practices have therefore attracted attention and been adopted by many non-Lakota, whether Native American or non-Native, the latter including many New Agers. [425] Various Native critics have spoken against those promoting Native-derived practices to non-Native audiences, with Sun Bear and Lynn Andrews being particularly targeted ...

  7. Praying Indians of Natick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Praying_Indians_of_Natick

    In the era following King Philip's War (1675–1678), Native American communities were often names by the locations in which they lived. [3] While this community primarily included Massachusett people, it also members of neighboring Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands, who collectively were called Natick Indians.

  8. Praying Indian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Praying_Indian

    Indigenous peoples of the Americas including Praying Indians were trafficked through Atlantic trade routes. The 1677 work The Doings and Sufferings of the Christian Indians, for example, documents English colonial prisoners of war (not, in fact, opposing combatants, but imprisoned members of allied Praying Indian) being enslaved and sent to Caribbean destinations.

  9. Trail trees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trail_trees

    Rare living Trail Marker Tree in White County, Indiana, known as 'Grandfather' Trail trees, trail marker trees, crooked trees, prayer trees, thong trees, or culturally modified trees are hardwood trees throughout North America that Native Americans intentionally shaped with distinctive characteristics that convey that the tree was shaped by human activity rather than deformed by nature or ...