Welcome to the City of Auburn
Hills Michigan
Needing information about
Occult Symbols
Native American and the Occult
To a few on my postings on the
occult and dream catchers
Native
American Occult
JE asks: “Would you consider
the presence of a Dream Catcher an open door to the occult?
I’ve never been comfortable
with their use for children.
Lets take J E's question
What’s Wrong with Wearing
Occult or Native American Symbols?
Wearing a symbol is only wrong
if the wearer believes it to be wrong?
If someone else thinks that it
is wrong and you do not, repeat after me,
"You don't like it"?
"Don't Look"!
As for Native American
Symbols, remember that our ancestors had no written word so they used symbols,
was this wrong?
No!
So, if you wear them on your
body it that wrong?
NO!
There is so much poor
information on this and so many other websites that it is hard to know where to
start.
I will not get into who was
the first tribe to receive the Dream Catcher story, this would be like guessing
which tribe was the first to enter Indian Country?
I personally never heard of
the words Dream Catcher until visits to other tribes west of Uncasvillage.
Word of mouth was handed down
to me from the ancestors about the story of our Teardrop.
Our story Teardrop, as with
many of our children stories, are for teaching.
The
story of the Teardrop
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