Anonymous ID: 7d967a July 10, 2020, 3:01 a.m. No.9913603   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Native American Indian Medicine Men (Shamans): Black Magic, Ritual Sacrifice, Secret Societies...

>Y heads/Cabal have nothing to do with an American indian medicine man.

>>9913095 (pb)

Child sacrifice in North America, with a note on suttee. (1931)

TAENSA: “Among this tribe...The mothers of infants handed their babes to the high priest; he strangled them and threw them into the fire.”

NATCHES: “If they fell ill, infants were usually immolated to please the spirits”

POTOMACS: “once a year they sacrifice 2 or 3 children to their god”

SUSQUEHANNOCKS: “once in four years they sacrifice a child to the devil”

See link for more.

https://www.persee.fr/doc/jsa_0037-9174_1931_num_23_1_1088

 

Immolation is what happens when something is killed or offered as a sacrifice. In some ancient societies immolation of animals was a common ritual used to gain favor with the gods.

https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/immolation

 

INDIAN SECRET SOCIETIES

Conjurers, name translated as Great Snake, sacrifices carried off by huge serpant

[13] esoteric societies at Zuni (Pueblo)

A Shaman “Skill”: destroy their enemies by means of diseases

“The most important part of these societies were the ones inspired by the cannibal spirit”

http://www.snowwowl.com/swolfAIHsecretsocieties.html

 

elaborate ritual roles of masked clown societies among such groups as the American Indians that have attracted most attention. The most famous of these are the Koyemshi, the dancing clowns of the Pueblo Indians. Their obscene and sacrilegious actions punctuate the most important religious ceremonies and serve as a sign of the presence of the powerful primordial beings and as a means of social control by their satire of the antisocial behaviour of particular individuals.

https://www.britannica.com/topic/sacred-clown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_clown

 

Within the NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN culture, some healers also had the ability to induce visions. These people were known as shamans. The most skilled of all healers, the tribal [SHAMAN] was able to enter a deep trance that connected them to the [UNDERWORLD] in search of healing.

https://www.originalbotanica.com/blog/native-american-rituals-prayers/

 

By Frederick Webb Hodge, 1906

 

The Shaman is explained variously as a Persian word meaning “pagan” or, with more likelihood, as the Tungus (nomadic Mongoloid people of East Siberia) equivalent for “medicineman”, and was originally applied to the medicine men or exorcists in Siberian tribes, from which it was extended to similar individuals among the Indian tribes of America.

 

Some sources say that there was a high priest in every Creek town. These were persons of consequence and exercised great influence in the state, particularly in military affairs. They would foretell rain or drought and pretend to bring rain at pleasure, cure diseases, exorcise witchcraft, [INVOKE] or expel [EVIL SPIRITS], and even assume the power of directing thunder and lightning.

https://www.legendsofamerica.com/na-shaman/

 

American Indian Swastika style-->NAVAHO SAND PAINTING

https://www.sacred-texts.com/eso/sta/img/19300.jpg