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This book and fifty-card deck are inspired by the ancient Lakota sweat lodge ceremony. Through the timeless medium of divinatory symbols, powerful images rekindle the spirit of this ancient ceremony. A variety of card spreads directs our consciousness toward the sources of personal power, insight, and self-awakening.

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Produktbeschreibung
This book and fifty-card deck are inspired by the ancient Lakota sweat lodge ceremony. Through the timeless medium of divinatory symbols, powerful images rekindle the spirit of this ancient ceremony. A variety of card spreads directs our consciousness toward the sources of personal power, insight, and self-awakening.
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Autorenporträt
A Lakota Sioux holy man and the son of medicine man John Fire Lame Deer, Archie Fire Lame Deer is the author, with Richard Erdoes, of Gift of Power: The Life and Teachings of a Lakota Medicine Man. Archie Fire Lame Deer is a full-blooded Sioux, a medicine man and the son and grandson of medicine men. A lecturer on Sioux religion and culture, he travels around the world teaching the ways of Native American spirituality, often by performing healing ceremonies. He has been instrumental in bringing Native religion into jails and in reforming laws so that medicine men can go into prisons to conduct ceremonies. He has also been very active in recovery programs for Native Americans who are alcoholics. Archie has joined the ranks of other spiritual leaders, such as the Dalai Lama, in the quest for world peace, while always remaining a traditional Sioux medicine man. He is the kuwa kiyapi, or intercessor, for the yearly Lakota Sundance and is the official representative for the Sacred Buffalo Calf Pipe at Crow Dog Sundance. After many years of adventure and travel, Archie has returned to his native South Dakota to make his permanent home among the Sioux people with his wife, Sandy, and their three children, John, Josephine, and Sarah. He is bringing up John to be his successor as healer and teacher; already he runs sweats and has "pierced" in the Sundance. Thus, generations of Lame Deers have followed, and will continue to follow, the way of the Lakotas.