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AN OGLALA SIOUX TEACHES HOW TO RECONNECT WITH AND HEAL OUR WOUNDED EARTH IN THIS COMPELLING INTRODUCTION TO NATIVE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY, HISTORY, AND RITES.
Ed McGaa, Eagle Man, is an Oglala Sioux lawyer, writer, and lecturer who has introduced thousands to Native American spirituality and rituals.
"A clear stream of practical knowledge with the mind change we need to save the life of our Mother Earth – and ourselves…This is a book for every person who loves this planet. Eagle Man shows us the joyful path home to our universal Mother."
CYNTHIA BEND, WATER SPIRIT WOMAN, coauthor of 'Birth of a Modern Shaman'
"Profound and insightful…'Mother Earth Spirituality' will be of great importance to those of us, both 'rainbow' and non-Indian people, who walk over land in search of a deeper spiritual life…For us, this book is an invaluable guide showing us how to do it."
FRED ALAN WOLF, PH.D., author of 'Taking the Quantum Leap'
"A rich panorama of our native heritage which allows the seeker access to the heart of the Path of Beauty. Ed McGaa has walked this path so that 'all' people may live in harmony."
JAMIE SAMS, HANCOKA OLOWANPI, author of 'Midnight Song: Quest for the Vanished Ones'
"Fascinating as well as inspiring reading. Ed McGaa makes an excellent spiritual guide and intellectual teacher…The information stimulates the mind, the drawings delight the eye, and the ideas soothe the spirit."
JACK WEATHERFORD, author of 'Indian Givers'
"Ed McGaa is one of the first persons who can write about Oglala religion in the first person because he has lived it. For years anthropologists have hoped a Native American would portray that society from the inside out. Ed Gaa has. It's about time"
WILLIAM K. POWERS, author of 'Oglala Religion'
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Enjoy the book! Also see The Rainbow Tribe by Ed McGaa, which details lessons and experiences from non Native American people following the Red Road.
Mitakuye Oyasin!
He then quotes the letter from Chief Seathl (Seattle) to the President of the United States of America in 1854 - one of the most unusual and eloquent letters that a President can have received. "How can we buy or sell the sky, the warmth of the land? The idea is strange to us. If we do not own the freshness of the air and the sparkle of the water, how can you buy them?" The truth is that we could really stop here, go into a quiet room and reflect on those three sentences and we will surely discover the root cause of many of our ills. We put a price on everything the Indians think has no value and we place no value on everything the Indians think is valuable. Sparkling water in a stream flowing through a wood has no value to us but it is the essence of life to the Indian. Having polluted our rivers and killed the fish we are at long last starting to ask ourselves those very questions that Chief Seattle asked of the President 150 years ago.
Another point made by Chief Seattle haunts me. "…to harm the earth is to heap contempt on the Creator. The Whites too shall pass; perhaps sooner than all other tribes. Continue to contaminate your bed, and you will one night suffocate in your own waste." How many of us today are saying somewhat similar things to our deaf leaders? But the heart and soul of the Indian way of life lies at the end of Seattle's letter, "So, if we sell our land, love it as we've loved it. Care for it as we've cared for it. Hold in your mind the memory of the land as it is when you take it. And with all your strength, with all your mind, with all your heart, preserve it for your children, and love it … as God loves us all. One thing we know. Our God is the same God. This earth is precious to Him. Even the white man cannot be exempt from the common destiny. We may be brothers after all. We shall see….." How many of us would claim that we have loved the land as the Indians loved the land, or cared for the land as the Indians cared for the land? If we answer 'no', then surely that means that we have something to learn from the Native Indians. I am sure that if Chief Seattle were here today he would cry to see what we have done to those lands the Indians held sacred. He would cry for the pain inflicted on the earth. He would cry for us who in our greed and selfishness have wrought such damage on ourselves and our children.
I agree with and applaud Ed McGaa. A spiritual fire that promotes a communal commitment to a worldwide environmental undertaking is needed. Native or primal ways will fuel that fire and give it great power. We should all learn something from this book. But not just read and think and speak. But act. This book is nothing if we do not act on it. This is what Stephen Covey was telling us in "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change" that first we have to change ourselves, and only then can we change others and the world.
Einstein told us that we need a higher level of thinking to get ourselves out of the mess than the thinking that got us into the mess. Stephen Covey tells us that in such situations as we are in today we need a quantum change that can only be brought about by a completely new paradigm. Our current way of living is the paradigm that got us into the mess. The Indian approach is probably the paradigm that will get us out of the mess. If we read this book with an open mind and without prejudice, I believe that the Native American paradigm should be at the top of the shortlist of new paradigms from which we should make our selection for building the world we want for our children.
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