Accessories
Velvet
Altar Cloths
Velvet
Bags
Velvet
Capes
Books
Contact
Crystal
Balls
Decks
Home
Jewelry
.Links
Music
Rubber
Stamps
Sale
Page
Shipping
Tarot
History
Tarot
Symbology |
NATIVE AMERICAN
TAROT
By Laura
Tuan - Sergio Tirtelli
This is a beautiful
deck...the artwork is very beautiful. Very Southwest plains influenced.
There are 5 languages
displayed on these cards: English, Italiano, Spanish, French and German
They say: When the
people of the prairie lost their prairies, when the people of the buffalo
lost their buffalo - and with them all of the battles - the prophesy of
the Kiowa tribe seemed final: The sacred circle of the history of the Native
Americans was interrupted. On the snow of Wounded Knee not only were hundreds
of warriors killed - an entire world along with its culture, rituals, and
faith were defeated. And yet, many years after that night, increasing interest
and respect for the Native American civilization leads to the thought that
the wound inflicted on the circle at that time is now slowly healing and
that Native American spirituality, on the other hand never assuaged, is
back on track.
Edward Goodbird,
warrior of the Hidatsa tribe, writes: "Everything in the world is living,
has its own spirit. The sky has a spirit, the clouds have a spirit, the
sun and the moon have their own spirits. The same is true for animals,
trees, grass, water, and stone. Everything. These spirits are our gods.
If we pray to them or make offerings to them, they help us when we are
in need." When the Algonquin turn to Manitou, the Sioux to Wakantanka,
the Hidatsu to Gsupa, and the Iroquois to Orenda, they turn to the power
of the marvelous and the exceptional present in man, in plants, in animals,
or in the buzzing of insects in which the wise person recognizes the voices
of the gods.
AT-2121N
$19.95
return
to decks page

|
|