Indigenous Religion

654 Words2 Pages

When the western empire spread around the world, the explorers found many different cultures with many different beliefs, very different from their own. Still to this day with globalization, some of these cultures and traditions still survive, and thrive. Although most indigenous cultures do not consider themselves “religious” in the western sense, there is no denying that they have a great concept of what is sacred. They connect with this sacred power through nature, and most of all through a sense of community, that they find with community rituals tales and “religious” beliefs.
Many Indigenous cultures around the world believe that “spirituality ideally pervades all moments,” (Pg. 35). Spirituality in this context meaning the beliefs and values of a person or people. Every moment in their …show more content…

Most of these religions turn to God because people feel isolated in the world and “The divine may be sought as a loving father, or mother, or as a friend.” (Pg 6 ch. 1). The reason that Western culture is so isolated, is because there is no emphasis on community or helping one another out. The majority of indigenous beliefs and “religions” do not put emphases on a deity, rather they put focus on relationships in the group itself as a higher priority. “Sacrificing oneself for the sake for the whole is highly valued in most indigenous traditions,” (pg 56). We can see this in different examples like the sun dance, and even in spiritual specialists. You went to the sun dance to pray for your people, not for yourself. Similarly Shamans in many indigenous peoples are there only to help the people. It is not a desired role by some of the people, “We never wanted to become dhamis, In fact, we tried hard to get the gods to leave us,” (Tsering, a Nepali Shaman pg 52). This self sacrifice of religion helps keep the indigenous cultures together, and to have a sense of

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