The Book Marketing Network

For book/ebook authors, publishers, & self-publishers

   

SHAMAN”

       

By

Gregory V. Boulware

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1545662-shaman-fairmount

/*

The medicine men and priests among the Indians were usually merely those men who thought more deeply and strenuously than the average men in the tribe. These thinkers tended to live among the more successful tribes. To think, one needed at least some time free from the chore of procuring food.

Native American tribes did not call their medicine people "shamans." This is a New Age term often misapplied to Native American Spiritual Leaders by people of European descent, self-professed "medicine" people and their followers.


Native Americans, New Agers, and charlatans alike have radically augmented and revised the tenets of traditional Native American religions. "Crystal skull caretakers" sit beside Native American medicine men and medicine women, shamans and priests, and "Star Beings," rather than buffalo, are pondered. Outraged Native Americans have entered this fray, castigating those they see exploiting traditional Native American spirituality.

These medicine men or spiritual leaders were in a different class than the other men of their tribe. This special status was not dependent on their hunting and fishing. Contact with other tribes enabled thinkers to build and expand their belief frameworks, so medicine men or spiritual leaders were more prevalent in tribes that were accessible to outsiders.

As contemporary Native American religious flowerings are best understood by first examining the origins of Native American Spirituality, all of the contemporary sects are best comprehended in light of the traditional religions. As these differ from their New Age and Christian versions, each group is also unique compared to other traditional sects. These traditional sects are best understood as a conglomerate by investigating a few individual traditional Native American religions.

Indian medicine men, spiritual leaders, priests and shamans

http://www.aaanativearts.com/medicine_men.htm

 

Chief Gerald Glenn, the Medicine Man, was second only to the chief in importance and standing within his tribal group. His duties involved both religious interpretations and pharmacology. A good medicine man became adept at both and as a result, he was often thought of as one who possessed magical powers. Before William Penn’s holy experiment, human impact in the Pocono Mountains by Native Americans and European settlers was minimal.

 

The Pennsylvania Mountains was one of the last colonies to be settled in the northern region of the state. The region remained wilderness until pressure from European settlers caused and influx of Native Americans from Maryland and the Carolinas’. Glenn, a direct descendent of the Lenape Chieftain of the Penn and Lenape Peace Treaty, 1682, Chief Tammany who died in 1718, was his great-great-grandfather.  His wife, a Huron Princess, reared sons who took over as Chief of Nations along the Delaware Water Gap. They lived in peace with the residents of Stroudsburg, founded by Jacob Stroud in 1799.

 

The villages of the mountains raised buckwheat and rye, a big crop with potatoes, maze, oats, cattle, sheep, and hogs. Chief of his village as well as Chief of the Northeastern regional Forestry and Parks Services, Ranger Captain Glenn; like his, people are also members of the Northwestern Indian Confederacy in the Mountains of Pennsylvania, New York, and Canada. The tribal members are The Cree, The Creek, The Ottawa, The Seminole, The Huron, The Cherokee, The Algonquian, The Ojibwa, The Shawnee, and The Lenape Nations. Glenn continues his leadership in the protection of his people, their land, their tribal beliefs, and their heritage. Glenn’s mother was of Creek/Seminole descent while his father was the Tribal Chief of The Shawnee-Lenape (Munsee-Minisink) of Ontario Canada and the Poconos. 

 

Willice Samuel’s family arrived up North from Georgia by way of Winnsboro, South Carolina. The family settled in Coatesville Pennsylvania, in or about April 1911. Willice’s Great-Great Grandfather talked about a lynching and burned at the stake murder of a Black Man by a mob of white men who wore masks. He said the Black Man; named Zachariah Walker was accused of shooting to death a white cop; named Edgar Rice. He was supposed to have been a special police officer in Coatesville. He went on to say, “The Colored Man was chased and treed in the woods in or near the Robert Faddis Woods near Youngsburg.

 

The Black Man tried to shoot himself in the head, but failed. They took the Black Man to the hospital were his injuries were treated. A gang of white men broke the window in the main hallway, corralled the police officer guarding him and dragged the Black Man from his sick bed to the Sarah Jane Newland Farm just to the right of the road and almost directly opposite the farmhouse. In a grass field about fifty feet from the road, they gathered dried Chestnut Rails and old fencing to build a fire. It took all of three minutes to get the fire up to a height of ten feet or more. They asked him if he had any last words…he didn’t. He was then thrown into the fire. The flames burned his clothes and seared his flesh – he managed to leap from the fire-pile and jump over a fence. They caught him and tied a rope around his neck and dragged him back onto the burning fire. Walker tried two more times to get out of the bonfire.  He tried to get out of the seething furnace of hell. But he was beaten and pulled him back on the burning pile with each try.”

 

Great-Great-Grandpa continued on with the graphic details. “The sickening smell of burning flesh permeated the air. Folks came from all around to see and take pictures of the burning Black Man. They laughed and drank liquor. Their children had fun too. This all happened on or around Saturday April 12, 1911…we packed and moved to Philadelphia.” The Willice’s are descendants of America’s lucrative Industry of Black Slavery

“FAIRMOUNT”

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18466439-fairmount-terror-in-the-park

https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/23367249-gregory-v-boulware

 

"Amazon"

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=sr_gnr_fkmr0?rh=i%3Astripbooks%2Cn%3A283155%2Ck3AGregory+V.+Boulware&keywords=Gregory+V.+Boulware&ie=UTF8&qid=1324957155

 

“Pinterest”

http://www.pinterest.com/writerauthor6bk/pins/

http://blackauthorsconnect.com/cgi-bin/blog.cgi?blog_id=257973&...

 

“Article Posting Sites”
http://www.blogger.com/profile/10910946197037982583
http://www.BoulwareEnterprises.wordpress.com 
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/gregory-boulware/10/435/44b

http://ezinearticles.com/?expert_bio=Gregory_V._Boulware
http://www.BoulwareEnterprises.com

http://thebookmarketingnetwork.com/profile/GregoryVBoulware

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7237172.Gregory_V_Boulware/blog

*/

Views: 44

Comment

You need to be a member of The Book Marketing Network to add comments!

Join The Book Marketing Network

Comment by Gregory V. Boulware on November 2, 2013 at 5:49pm

Comment by Jeanie Mitchell • On Pinterest.com

Native American dancer

http://www.pinterest.com/writerauthor6bk/native-american-dancer/

http://www.pinterest.com/pin/419257046532108486/

Gregory V. • 20 hours ago 

 >

/*

If a Breakfast Cereal Company can remember and recognize the harvester of Maize (6,000 yrs. worth), then what is the significance of Columbus? We were here first!

YOU cannot deny it!

*/

http://www.pinterest.com/writerauthor6bk/pins/

Jeanie Mitchell • 16 hours ago 

Gregory V., who said anything about Columbus? I don't know anyone who denies that Columbus discovered there was another already occupied continent that the Europeans wanted. European history is full of the idea of taking over land that doesn't belong to them. My ancestors are mostly Irish, and believe me, my people were treated much the same way - even to the point of having their land stolen and their culture and language almost obliterated because they were considered "savages".

 >

Gregory V. • just now

/*

As history records, you may recall this from home and school, the credit of discovering America (while people where already living here) was given to this particular European - and continues to be celebrated. That's who said something about Columbus! No individual European was singled out in my comment. My sojourn is Pride In Truth. Many different groups of usurpers were mistreated by other groups of people who were also not of this land. But none as much as Black and Red People! That's what makes the survival of Our People so Great! This beautiful dancer is one symbol of such a Proud People (who were considered savages)... Now, I'm sure that you understand who said that, yes? By the way, I know and know of plenty of people who do not deny that this invader did discover America and are staunch supporters of this creed as well. This is one of the reasons that information of this sort is posted - to counter such lies and covert operations and suppression of the truth as history has recorded it.

Peace and Love, Greg.

http://colouroftheoldwest.blogspot.com/  

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1545662-shaman-fairmount   

*/

© 2024   Created by John Kremer.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service