"In the absence of the sacred, nothing is sacred - everything
is for sale."- Oren Lyons, Onondaga
"Without a sacred center, no one knows right from wrong."-
Thomas Yellowtail, Crow
"You must speak straight so that your words may go as
sunlight into our hearts."
-- Cochise "Like Ironweed" Chiricahua Apache
What is The Red Road?
"The Red Road is a long winding road that began in
the stars, spilled onto the mountain tops, was carried in the snow to
the streams, to the rivers, to the ocean. It covers Canada, Alaska,
America, Mexico to Guatemala, and keeps winding around the Indigenous.
The Red Road is a circle of people standing hand in hand, people in
this world, people between people in the Spirit world, star people,
animal people, stone people, river people, tree people. The Sacred Hoop.
To walk the Red Road is to know sacrifice, suffering. It is to
understand humility. It is the ability to stand naked before the
Creator in all things for your wrong doings, for your lack of strength,
for your discompassionate way, for your arrogance - because to walk the
Red Road, you always know you can do better. And you know, when you do
good things, it is through the Creator, and you are grateful.
To walk the Red Road is to know you stand on equal ground with all
living things. It is to know that because you were born human, it gives
you superiority over nothing. It is to know that every creation carries
a Spirit, and the river knows more than you do, the mountains know more
than you do, the stone people know more than you do, the trees know
more than you do, the wind is wiser than you are, and animal people
carry wisdom.
You can learn from every one of them, because they have something you
don't. They are void of evil thoughts. They wish vengeance on no one,
they seek Justice.
To Walk the Red Road, you have given rights. You have the right to
pray, you have the right to dance, you have the right to think, you
have the right to protect, you have the right to know Mother Earth, you
have the right to dream, you have the right to vision, you have the
right to teach, you have the right to learn, you have a right to
grieve, you have a right to happiness, you have the right to fix the
wrongs, you have the right to truth, you have a right to the Spirit
World.
To Walk the Red Road is to know your Ancestors, to call to them for
assistance. It is to know that there is good medicine, and there is bad
medicine. It is to know that Evil exists, but is cowardly, as it is
often in disguise. It is to know there are evil spirits who are in
constant watch for a way to gain strength for themselves at the expense
of you.
To Walk the Red Road, you have less fear of being wrong, because you
know that life is a journey, a continuous circle, a sacred hoop.
Mistakes will be made, and mistakes can be corrected - if you will be
humble, for if you cannot be humble, you will never know when you have
made a mistake.
If you walk the Red Road, you know that every sorrow leads to a better
understanding, every horror cannot be explained, but can offer growth.
To Walk the Red Road is to look for beauty in all things.
To Walk the Red Road is to know you will one day cross to the Spirit
World,and you will not be afraid."
Author Unknown
This
section contains brief description of Native American Spirituality as
well as links to reading lists approved by various tribes, particularly
the Lakota and Cherokee. It is my belief that Native Spirituality
should be honored. It cannot be learned in a book, found on a website
nor taught in a correspondence course. Those peoples who hold
their rites and traditions as sacred have a right not only to do so but
to be supported and applauded.
The
original statement was passed on June 10, 1993 at the Lakota Summit V,
an international gathering of US and Canadian Lakota, Dakota and Nakota
Nations. I also understand that in recent years, non-natives have been
banned from the 7 Sacred Ceremonies due to a lack of respect.
"On
March 8 and 9, 2003, some bundle keepers and traditional spiritual
leaders from Arapaho, Cheyenne, Cree, Dakota, Lakota, and Nakota
Nations met and issued a proclamation that non-Natives would be banned
from sacred altars and the Seven Sacred Rites, including and especially
the Sun Dance, effective March 9, 2003 onward" - Wikipedia
I
had for most of my life been drawn to the sacred enclosures known as
earthworks. This page explains why I firmly believe I am adopted by the
spirits of those peoples and what impact it has had on my life.
WHAT WAS FOUND IN A
HOPEWELL
MOUND IN THE 1860s? I HAVE PERSONALLY WENT TO SEE THIS ARTIFACT AS WELL
AS THE NEW MEXICO MYSTERY ROCK AT LOS LUNAS.
READ ON ABOUT THE NEWARK HOLY STONE