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This book is available in the share section.
It represents a study of handwritten spellbooks kept by Cherokee medicine priests for the purpose of practical magic circa 1920s.
This covers a lot of territory, and if you were ever interested in non-ceremonial aspects of Native spiritual teachings, this is a great set of examples. I would compare it to the PGM in terms of scope and influence of the practices described. If you are familiar with Hoodoo, you will see parallels in the formulae.
This is Native American occultism, not their religion. Most of this is something not well understood even among their people, as it is constructed in part by each practitioner and works outside the main body of their religious beliefs.
It represents a study of handwritten spellbooks kept by Cherokee medicine priests for the purpose of practical magic circa 1920s.
This covers a lot of territory, and if you were ever interested in non-ceremonial aspects of Native spiritual teachings, this is a great set of examples. I would compare it to the PGM in terms of scope and influence of the practices described. If you are familiar with Hoodoo, you will see parallels in the formulae.
This is Native American occultism, not their religion. Most of this is something not well understood even among their people, as it is constructed in part by each practitioner and works outside the main body of their religious beliefs.