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Tributes for Emily Squires

Tributes for Emily Squires

   In the body she was an amazing presence and...

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Alan interviews Peter Davenport on the i…

Alan interviews Peter Davenport on the increase of UFOs Reports around the country

   Peter Davenport has run the National UFO Reporting Center...

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Alan Interviews Kevin Sachs on Shmanic I…

Alan Interviews Kevin Sachs on Shmanic Intiation and Transformation

Kevin Sachs, PhD supports people going through psycho-spiritual crisis.  

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Full article on FBI on UFOs: - The Smoki…

Full article on FBI on UFOs: - The Smoking Gun, Still Smoking by Alan Steinfeld

   Tricky Business of Disclosure: - Recently the FBI issued...

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Part 3 - Conclusion to FBI on UFOs: Disc…

Part 3 - Conclusion to FBI on UFOs: Disclosure has already Begun

  The Questions: So what’s the truth about UFOs and...

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Time Travel Panel at the Awake and Aware…

Time Travel Panel at the Awake and Aware Conference

Saturday Evening, April 6th, 2013 with: Alan Steinfeld, founder of...

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Alan Steinfeld & Jodi Serota present the…

Alan Steinfeld & Jodi Serota present the Myths for a Digial Age

The world is made of stories ot atoms that is...

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Alan Interviews the Makers of the film S…

Alan Interviews the Makers of the film Sirius: The Film

Part 1 - Interview with Director Amardeep Kaleka and Producer,...

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Alan interviews Anita Moorjani

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The FBI on UFOs part 2 by Alan Steinfeld

The FBI on UFOs part 2 by Alan Steinfeld

So what is happening here, if we read between the...

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Interview on The Art of Sex: Taoist Sacr…

Interview on The Art of Sex: Taoist Sacred Sexology

Alan Steinfeld talks to Tano Dicarlo and Sarah Barab about...

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Alan talks to 87 Year old Jerry Mattox …

Alan talks to  87 Year old Jerry Mattox talks about his discoveries for good health

Jerry with his granddaughter Johanne Mattox...Jerry Mattox researcher, rocket scientist,...

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Part 1 - FBI ON UFOs: Smoking Gun, Still…

Part 1 - FBI ON UFOs: Smoking Gun, Still Smoking by Alan Steinfeld

   Tricky Business of DisclosureRecently the FBI issued the statement:...

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Tobias Lars on Spiritual Awakenings

Tobias Lars on Spiritual Awakenings

Tobias Lars:  Soul counseling, Soul Activations, The Inner Body...

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Inna Segal returns to New Realities

Inna Segal returns to New Realities

   Inna goes further into her work about the psycho...

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Talking about the Kogi coming to Sedona

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kogi

Alan Steinfeld talks to Adam Yellowbird and Wachan Bajiyoperak of Peru about the message of the Kogis, the Elder Brothers; who maintain a spiritual integrity for the planet... They are also joined by spiritual teacher Catherine G. Lucas of the UK.



For Adam Yellowbird and more information go to:
http://www.indegineousnativeAmerican.com

For Wachan Bajiyoperak
go to:  http://www.Willkasara.com


Picture and article from the website:
http://www.sacredland.org/sierra-nevada-de-santa-marta
For the indigenous peoples living on the steep slopes of Colombia’s Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, sustaining the balance of the spiritual and ecological world is their sacred task. They call themselves the Elder Brothers, the guardians of the Earth, and the rest of modern civilization are the Younger Brothers, whose exploitative practices are destroying the mountain’s ecosystem and, by extension, the rest of the planet. The four indigenous groups of this region—the Kogi, Wiwa, Arhuaco and Kankuamo—believe the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta is the beating heart of the world: what happens here happens everywhere, and when its rivers run dry, its ice caps melt and its endemic species disappear, so do the rest of the world’s. They maintain their deep commitment to restoring equilibrium to the Earth through daily meditations, ritual practices and mental discipline, and they have continued this vigilance even as the Younger Brothers have encroached into the mountain with logging, mineral extraction, commercial plantations and drug-crop cultivation that placed them at the center of violence between warring factions in Colombia’s protracted civil war. Protecting the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta’s water resources is now their focus, as they protest projects that will dam two mountain rivers and a massive ocean port development that will export natural resources mined in the region while also blocking access to a sacred site by the sea. In 2007, the four tribes issued a joint statement condemning the projects: “From the beginning of these projects we have expressed in many ways our opposition … They negatively affect our way of life, they degrade the environment, and they violate every part of the Constitution that pertains to the fundamental rights of our people.”


The Land and Its People
The four existing indigenous tribes of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta are the remnants of a sophisticated pre-Hispanic civilization known as the Tayrona. When the first Spaniards set foot in Colombia in the 16th century, they found a civilization that practiced sustainable farming through crop rotation and vertical ecology, built terraced drainage systems that minimized erosion, and produced exceptional gold and pottery work. But the conquistadores drove the tribes high up into the mountain, where they tried to protect their culture through isolation. The Kogi were able to maintain the most traditional culture while the Wiwa and Arhuaco experienced different levels of acculturation. The Kankuamo, who had all but disappeared, are now working to recover their language and culture. Estimates for the total number of native people living in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta range between 35,000 and 51,000.

Though the tribes speak different languages, they have nevertheless retained a common spiritual tradition. According to this tradition, when the great Mother created the world, she spun a spindle, and the threads that unspooled crossed to form the four Tayrona peoples and the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta itself. Within the indigenous communities, every action and behavior is informed by what they call the “Law of Origin,” an ecological philosophy that governs their relationship to nature, animals, weather, bodies of water and the cycles of the planets and stars. The spiritual practices and ethical beliefs of the Tayrona revolve around their conception of aluna, which is the belief that all reality is created by thought, and that every object or being has both a physical reality and a spiritual essence, all originating in thought. The tribes’ highly trained ritual priests—the mamas—communicate in the aluna dimension through ritual and meditation. In their communion with the aluna world, the mamas focus on maintaining the ecological and spiritual equilibrium of the mountain.

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