11/3/13

European Roots for Native Americans?


This is funny if one thinks about it?

I have been to hundreds of gatherings, powwows, pot lucks, and monthly meetings since age 6 until Grandfather Kiehtan takes me home that are put on by native American tribes not able to receive help from this government because they could not jump through enough hoops to qualify.

This foreigner comes to our country (New Mexico) stating that this one drop of DNA from a Siberian clan member shows that our people may or may not come from Eastern Siberian and may or may not come from West Siberian or Eastern Europe and he gets his name in the papers?

Just to be clear and that you understand and the DNA expert (Eske Willerslev, a University of Copenhagen) knows.

My ancestors never stated in their story telling anything about where our people came from before crossing the Bering Land Bridge.

Nor did they state that our decedents were also Vikings only the direction our ancestors came from, modern science placed the directions to and from.


An analysis of ancient DNA from a 24,000-year-old Siberian skeleton generates a new model for the original peopling of the Western Hemisphere.

Native Americans may not have descended from East Asians who crossed the Bering Land Bridge more than 15,000 years ago, according to a new genomic analysis of a millennia-old Siberian skeleton.

A portion of the nuclear DNA recovered from the upper arm bone of a 4-year-old boy that was buried near the Siberian village of Mal’ta about 24,000 years ago is shared by modern Native Americans and no other group.

But the boy appears to have been descended from people of European or western Asian origin.


One boy does not make for a super scientific discovery, at least it did not while I was in school?

While we are on this subject, Siberian people use Round Houses.

Our people use Round Houses?

There homes are anchored down with boulders’ because of their weather.
 

Ours are built started by using trees still growing in the ground?
 

I also believe but cannot prove that both the Siberian village and our people came from around Asia?

10/29/13

No show at a ceremony


Welcome to the visitor down a little south of me from the City of Deltona Florida http://www.ci.deltona.fl.us/Pages/index

To a few of my postings looking for information as to,

what happen if you do not show up for the native American naming ceremony?

If when you say 'you' it was me that did not show, I had better have a real good reason or I will be spending a lot more time on my knees for forgiveness. Losing a lot of Kinnick, Kinnick would also be taking place.

Thank you for this question and it looks like a prayer and a "I am truly sorry" is in order?

I personally have never had this problem, so my first question would have to be, who was it that did not show?

If the pre-naming ceremony was not held or a blessing from Kiehtan (along with Creators name for the person in question) was not received, go for another time.

If it was anyone other than the Spiritual Leader, the person expecting the name, the person or persons standing in and of course Kiehtan our Creator, the ceremony can continue if the group wish?

10/27/13

pequots occult


 
 
Welcome to the visitor from the city of Glenview Nas Illinois



To a number of my posting about Native Americans and the Occult.

To start with this is another oxymoron statement

'Pequot Occult'?

In fact Native American in the occult is also an oxymoron!

Because your city is northwest and the people that your question is about lived in the northeast, I need to go backwards to dig into our past to answer a question for this day.

My people now called the Mohegan's English word, came from the English name Pequot's or Pequins, came from the Mohiingans our true name and those ancestors came from around the Great Lakes area.

The Mohiingans were of a Matriarch society and believers of our Supreme Being we call Kiehtan the Creator of all creation.

The occult god was created by Kiehtan for many reasons, most known only to Kiehtan, I believe to keep the people in prayer to our Creator.

If one wishes to follow Kiehtan one could never be able to follow this creation.

Not if one is truly a follower of Kiehtan?

In today's world it is hard to believe that any Native American that puts greed and money before Kiehtan could truly not be worshipping the occult.

There is nothing wrong with money, money, like guns is not a bad thing.

A gun will sit on a shelf until it rots away to nothing or someone or something picks it up.

A gun will never hurt unless someone hits you with it or shoots you.

Money is a necessary way of life in the world today and can only corrupt if you place it up as your god?

Many of the so called tribes on the east side of the Mississippi river have become polluted from greed of this money so yes, some are now in worship of the occult god.
 
 
 
Some are no longer a true traditional tribe.

what does it mean to be sacred to Native Americans





 
Thank you to the City Phoenix Arizona
for your visit to one of my websites while looking for an answer to your question
what does mean to be sacred to Native American?
Circle
Good question and I am happy to answer however, please allow for me to give my little speech first?
 
Because your city/state is over in the south west and my people are over on the north east questions and their answers may or may not differ between tribes, that said one must believe Sacred is pretty universal?
Just in case, my words to you would have to be,
Sacred- a strong belief in a Supreme Being (in my case Kiehtan the Creator of all creation), so strong that you must place this being above all else long before you act or speak, making sure that your words and/or actions please you Supreme Being before you displease others?
A constant prayer (a conversation) with your Supreme Being daily well help you in your walk through life.
OK,
now that I have you totally confused, let's see some of our examples?
Sacred Naming ceremony, Sacred Crossing ceremony, Sacred, Burial ceremony, Sacred Marriage ceremony, Sacred Adoption ceremony and so on, each and every one of our ceremonies in our culture is a ceremony passed down from generation to generation and as always, started and completed with prayer and then blessing to and then from Kiehtan the Creator of all creation, without this blessing the ceremony is null and void!





 

10/25/13

Wearing Occult/Native American Symbols


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