WR assignment - Ecology
Topic 5 
Write a paper that explores indigenous religions. After an introduction with a clear and focused thesis statement, set up a three-column chart: one column for the basic elements of religion; one for indigenous religions, and one for the Eastern religion of your choice (there are at least three that have indigenous aspects or roots). Identify five or more of the basic aspects of a religion, then determine if they can be found in indigenous or Eastern religions. Summarize your results in a concluding paragraph and address these questions: Based on the terms and definitions of Chapter 1 are indigenous religions really religions? Using the information from Chapter 2, did you find any indigenous religious elements in Eastern religions?
RELIGIOUS RESPONSES  1
C H A P T E R  1
RELIGIOUS 
RESPONSES
“By calling myself spiritual but not religious, 
I can still acknowledge my belief that there may 
be higher powers of a divine nature without 
necessarily accepting just one belief system of an 
organized religious institution.” Ivy DeWitt1
1.1 Explain what is meant by spirituality
1.2 Identify three perspectives used to explain the existence 
of religion
1.3 Differentiate between monotheistic, polytheistic, and 
nontheistic
1.4 Explain the significance of rituals, symbols, and myths 
in religions
1.5 Contrast absolutist with liberal interpretations of a 
religious tradition
1.6 Discuss the major positions that have emerged in 
the dialogue between science and religion since the 
nineteenth century
1.7 Describe how women are challenging the patriarchal 
nature of many institutionalized religions
1.8 Identify the factors that contribute to the negative 
aspects of organized religions
1.9 Summarize the different “lenses” used by scholars to 
study religion
Before sunrise, members of a Muslim family rise in Malaysia, perform their 
purifying ablutions, spread their prayer rugs facing Mecca, and begin their pros-
trations and prayers to Allah. In a French cathedral, worshipers line up for their 
turn to have a priest place a wafer on their tongue, murmuring, “This is the body 
of Christ, given for you.” In a South Indian village, a group of women reverently 
anoint a cylindrical stone with milk and fragrant sandalwood paste and place 
{Insert chapter symbol}
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2  RELIGIOUS RESPONSES
around it offerings of flowers. The monks of a Japanese Zen Buddhist monastery 
sit cross-legged and upright in utter silence, which is broken occasionally by the 
noise of the kyosaku bat falling on their shoulders. On a mountain in Mexico, 
men, women, and children who have been dancing without food or water for 
days greet an eagle flying overhead with a burst of whistling from the small 
wooden flutes they wear around their necks. In Jerusalem, Jews tuck scraps 
of paper containing their personal prayers between the stones of the ancient 
Western Wall, which once supported their sacred Temple, while above that wall 
only Muslims are allowed to enter the Dome of the Rock to pray.
These and countless other moments in the lives of people around the world 
are threads of the tapestry we call religion. The word is probably derived from 
the Latin, meaning “to tie back,” “to tie again.” All of religion shares the goal 
of tying people back to something behind the surface of life—a greater reality, 
which lies beyond, or invisibly infuses, the world that we can perceive with our 
five senses.
Attempts to connect with or comprehend this greater reality have taken 
many forms. Many of them are organized institutions, such as Buddhism or 
Christianity. These institutions are complexes of such elements as leaders, 
beliefs, rituals, symbols, myths, scriptures, ethics, spiritual practices, cultural 
components, historical traditions, and management structures. Moreover, they 
are not fixed and distinct categories, as simple labels such as “Buddhism” and 
“Christianity” suggest. Each of these labels is an abstraction that is used in the 
attempt to bring some kind of order to the study of religious patterns that are in 
fact complex, diverse, ever-changing, and overlapping.
Attempts to define religion
What are the inner dimensions of religion?
The labels “Buddhism,” “Hinduism,” “Daoism,” “Zoroastrianism,” and 
“Confucianism” did not exist until the nineteenth century, though the many 
patterns to which they refer had existed for thousands of years. Professor Willard 
G. Oxtoby (1933–2003), founding director of the Centre for Religious Studies at 
the University of Toronto, observed that when Western Christian scholars began 
studying other religions, they applied assumptions based on the Christian model 
Jewish women praying at the 
Western Wall. Many scraps of 
paper with personal prayers are 
tucked into the cracks between 
the ancient stones.
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RELIGIOUS RESPONSES  3
to other paths, looking for specific creedal statements 
of belief (a rarity in indigenous lifeways), a dichotomy 
between what is secular and what is sacred (not helpful 
in looking at the teachings of Confucius and his fol-
lowers), and the idea that a person belongs to only one 
religion at a time (which does not apply in Japan, where 
people freely follow various religious traditions).
Not all religious behavior occurs within institution-
al confines. The inner dimensions of religion—such as 
experiences, beliefs, and values—can be referred to as 
spirituality. This is part of what is called religion, but it 
may occur in personal, noninstitutional ways, without 
the ritual and social dimensions of organized religions. 
Indeed there are growing numbers of people in the world 
today who describe themselves as “spiritual but not 
religious” (see box, p. 4). Personal spirituality without 
reference to a particular religious tradition permeates 
much contemporary artistic creation. Without theology, 
without historical references, such direct experiences are 
difficult to express, whether in words, images, or music. 
Contemporary artist Lisa Bradley says of her luminous  
paintings:
In them you can see movement and stillness at the same 
time, things coming in and out of focus. The light seems 
to be from behind. There is a sense of something like a 
permeable membrane, of things coming from one dimension  
to another. But even that doesn’t describe it well. How do  
you describe truth in words?2
Religions can be dynamic in their effects, bringing deep changes in individuals 
and societies, for good or ill. As Professor Christopher Queen, world religions 
scholar from Harvard University, observes:
The interpersonal and political realms may be transformed by powerful religious 
forces. Devotion linking human and divine beings, belief in holy people or sacred 
space, and ethical teachings that shape behaviors and attitudes may combine to 
transform individual identities and the social order itself.3
Frederick Streng (1933–1993), an influential scholar of comparative religion, 
suggested in his book Understanding Religious Life that the central definition of 
religion is that it is a “means to ultimate transformation.” A complete definition 
of religion would include its relational aspect (“tying back”), its transformational 
potential, and also its political dimensions.
Current attempts to define religions may thus refer more to processes than 
to fixed independent entities. Professor of Religious Studies Thomas A. Tweed, 
for instance, proposes this definition in his book Crossing and Dwelling: A Theory 
of Religion:
Religions are confluences of organic-cultural flows that intensify joy and confront 
suffering by drawing on human and suprahuman forces to make homes and cross 
boundaries—terrestrial, corporeal, and cosmic. ...This theory is, above all, about 
movement and relation, and it is an attempt to correct theories [of religion] that 
have presupposed stasis and minimized interdependence.4
Religion is such a complex and elusive topic that some contemporary schol-
ars of religion are seriously questioning whether “religion” or “religions” can be 
studied at all, or whether the concept of religion itself is useful. They have deter-
mined that no matter where and at what point they try to define the concept, 
other parts will get away. Nonetheless, this difficult-to-grasp subject is central to 
many people’s lives and has assumed great political significance in today’s world, 
Lisa Bradley, Passing Shadow, 
2002.
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4  RELIGIOUS RESPONSES
LIVING RELIGIOUS RESPONSES
An Interview with Ivy DeWitt
Ivy DeWitt is a recent college 
graduate who majored in both 
economics and religious studies. 
Raised in a traditional Baptist 
Church, she found that as she 
learned more about different 
religions, and asked questions 
about issues such as women’s roles within religions, 
she no longer felt comfortable identifying herself as a 
member of one specific religious group. Now, like about 
eighteen percent of Americans, she describes herself as 
“spiritual but not religious,”5 exploring her beliefs in an 
individualistic way rather than through set teachings 
and practices of a single religious organization. Ivy 
explains:
 Being spiritual but not religious allows for a more 
individualized experience and expression of religion. 
Spirituality feels like an entirely personal experience in 
many ways to me, and being spiritual but not religious 
allows me to question and explore a variety of religious 
identities without feeling as though I’m constrained by 
a single religious institution. By calling myself spiritual 
but not religious, I can still acknowledge my belief 
that there may be higher powers of a divine nature 
without necessarily accepting just one belief system of an 
organized religious institution.
 Ivy acknowledges the important role that religious 
organizations play in building a strong community, but 
found that her personal exploration of spirituality was 
more important to her:
 I think of “religion” as having more to do with 
communities and institutions. Growing up as a Baptist 
Protestant Christian, I felt that the most important part 
of the religious experience was having strong ties to 
your group. I also believe another important aspect of 
religion is doctrines. While I acknowledge that people 
can have a variety of opinions within a single religion, 
and that views can also vary throughout branches 
of a religion, doctrines help to unify people under a 
central belief system, which can also be very important 
in holding a community together. In contrast, I think 
of spirituality as a more individualized experience, 
something that isn’t defined by the specific teachings or 
practices of a particular religion. While many people 
associate spirituality with a greater sense of feeling 
or emotion than anything that comes about through 
being part of an organized religion, I don’t necessarily 
agree. Religion and spirituality can overlap to create 
a wide sense of emotional experiences, but I like to 
associate spirituality with individual discovery. To me, 
spirituality is not just about emotional experience, but 
also about finding what your values are, and aligning 
them either with a religious identity or a personalized 
belief system.
 Ivy first began to question whether her own 
evolving beliefs were compatible with what she was 
taught in school and church during high school:
 I attended a non-denominational Protestant high 
school. I had questions about women’s roles in church, 
and I wondered if my personal beliefs aligned with 
Protestant teachings on contemporary social issues. There 
were discussions within my communities about whether 
women could be pastors. I struggled to understand 
whether this implied that women and men had 
different spiritual capabilities, and if I agreed with that 
sentiment. I started to distance myself from the church 
as a way to decide what my own viewpoints were 
concerning women’s rights and other social issues—and 
whether they aligned with the religious perspectives I 
had been raised with. I decided to identify as spiritual 
but not religious roughly about partway through my 
junior year of college. I began to realize that I didn’t 
hold any set beliefs that I felt aligned with my religious 
tradition. Ultimately I decided that it didn’t make sense 
for me to continue identifying as a Protestant, and the 
spiritual but not religious label seemed to capture how 
I felt at the time. I continue to use it now because I 
believe it is the most accurate description of my belief 
system. I care more about holding to my personal beliefs 
in relation to women’s rights and social justice than 
the community or doctrinal aspects of religion. It’s 
not that I believe the religious beliefs I grew up with 
are completely incongruent with my own, but at the 
moment identifying with a single religious community 
isn’t reconcilable with other principles that I value.
 For Ivy, spiritual experience does not follow from 
accepting a particular set of beliefs, but more from 
exploring many different religious traditions to see 
what inspires her.
 Being spiritual but not religious allows me to 
navigate religious history while also navigating my own 
identity. I don’t believe I’ll ever finish navigating either 
one, which is why I enjoy how being spiritual has 
allowed me to do that free of any particular religious 
labels. Some people disagree with certain key tenets of 
their religion, but still remain a part of it. I think that 
they choose to focus on what they see as core principles 
of the tradition, in spite of whatever disagreements they 
have, and they may find it hard to give up being part 
of a religious community. I do think that spiritual but 
not religious people are to some extent missing out on 
some of the community-related parts of religion. But I 
believe that most people who identify as spiritual but 
not religious probably aren’t looking for a community 
religious experience. Having participated in a religious 
community myself, I sincerely enjoy my current ability 
to explore different religious traditions and identities on 
my own without feeling tied to a specific institution.6
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RELIGIOUS RESPONSES  5
so it is important to try sincerely to understand it. In this introductory chapter, 
we will try to develop some understanding of religion in a generic sense—why 
it exists, its various patterns and modes of interpretation, its encounters with 
modern science, its inclusion or exclusion of women, and its potentially nega-
tive aspects—before trying in the subsequent chapters to understand the major 
traditions known as “religions” practiced around the world today.
Why are there religions?
What major theories have evolved to explain the existence of 
religion?
In many cultures and times, religion has been the basic foundation of life, per-
meating all aspects of human existence. In fact, in some cultures what we may 
now identify as “religion” has so permeated everything that it was not even 
identified as a particular category of human experience. But from the time of 
the European Enlightenment, religion has become in the West an object to be 
studied, rather than a basic fact of life. Cultural anthropologists, sociologists, 
philosophers, psychologists, and even biologists and neuroscientists have peered 
at religion through their own particular lenses, trying to explain what religion 
is, its function and purpose, and developing a wide range of methods for study-
ing religion. In the following pages we will briefly examine some of the major 
theories that have evolved. They are not mutually exclusive.
Materialist perspective: humans invented religion
During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, scientific materialism gained 
considerable prominence as a theory to explain the fact that religion can be 
found in some form in every culture around the world. The materialistic point 
of view is that the supernatural is invented by humans; only the material world 
exists.
An influential example of this perspective can be found in the work of the 
nineteenth-century philosopher Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872). He reasoned 
that deities are simply projections, objectifications of human qualities such as 
power, wisdom, and love onto an imagined cosmic deity outside ourselves. 
Then we worship it as Supreme and do not recognize that those same qualities 
lie within ourselves; instead, we see ourselves as weak and sinful. Feuerbach 
developed this theory with particular reference to Christianity as he had seen it.
Other scientific materialists believe that religions have been created or at 
least used to manipulate people. Historically, religions have often supported 
and served secular power. The nineteenth-century socialist philosopher Karl 
Marx (1818–1883), author of The Communist Manifesto, argued that a culture’s 
religion—as well as all other aspects of its social structure—springs from its eco-
nomic framework. In Marx’s view, religion’s origins lie in the longings of the 
oppressed. It may have developed from the desire to revolutionize society and 
combat exploitation, but in failing to do so it became otherworldly, an expres-
sion of unfulfilled desires for a better, more satisfying life:
Man makes religion: religion does not make man. … The religious world is but 
the reflex of the real world. … Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the 
sentiment of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium 
of the people.7
According to Marx, not only do religions pacify people falsely, they may 
themselves become tools of oppression. For instance, he charged Christian 
authorities of his times with supporting “vile acts of the oppressors” by explain-
ing them as due punishment of sinners by God. Other critics have made simi-
lar complaints against Asian religions that blame the sufferings of the poor on 
their own misdeeds in previous lives. Such interpretations and uses of religious  
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6  RELIGIOUS RESPONSES
teachings lessen the perceived need for society to help those who are oppressed 
and suffering. Marx’s ideas thus led toward twentieth-century atheistic com-
munism, for he had asserted, “The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness 
of the people is required for their real happiness.”8
Many contemporary atheist thinkers have also adopted a materialist approach 
to religion, arguing that religious assertions about the supernatural, such as the 
existence of God, are testable hypotheses that cannot be proven.
Functional perspective: religion is useful
Another line of reasoning has emerged in the search for a theory explaining the 
universal existence of religions: They are found everywhere because they are 
useful, both for society and for individuals. Religions “do things” for us, such as 
helping us to define ourselves and making the world and life comprehensible to 
us. Functional explanations have come from many disciplines.
One version of the functional explanation is based on sociology. Pioneering 
work in this area was done by French sociologist Emile Durkheim (1858–1917). 
He proposed that humans cannot live without organized social structures, and 
that religion is a glue that holds a society together. Surely religions have the 
potential for creating harmony in society, for they all teach social virtues such as 
love, compassion, altruism, justice, and discipline over our desires and emotions. 
Political scientists Robert Putnam and David Campbell concluded from a survey 
of religiosity in the United States that people who are involved in organized 
religions are generally more generous toward their neighbors and more con-
scientious as citizens than those who do not participate in religions,9 although 
critics have noted that it may be that the group affiliation that is part of religion 
is a better predictor of generosity than religious belief itself. The role of religion 
in the social process of identity formation at individual, family, community, and 
national levels is now being carefully examined, for people’s identification with 
a particular religion can be manipulated to influence social change—either to 
thwart, moderate, or encourage it.
Biology also offers some functional reasons for the existence of religion. 
For instance, John Bowker, author of Is God a Virus?, asserts that religions are 
organized systems that serve the essential biological purpose of bringing people 
together for their common survival. To Bowker, religion is found universally 
because it protects gene replication and the nurturing of children. He proposes 
that because of its survival value, the potential for religiosity may even be genet-
ically inherent in human brains.
Some medical professionals have found that religious faith may be good 
for our health. Research conducted by the Center for the Study of Religion/
Spirituality and Health at Duke University found that those who attend religious 
services or read scriptures frequently are significantly longer lived, less likely to 
be depressed, less likely to have high blood pressure, and nearly ninety percent 
less likely to smoke. Many other studies have indicated that patients with strong 
faith recover faster from illness and operations. In contrast, however, some 
scholars have pointed out that some of the most religious regions of the world 
also have very high rates of disease, suggesting that it is not just religion but 
broader societal factors such as community support as well as access to health 
care that factor into overall wellbeing.
Many medical studies have also been done on the potential of prayer to heal 
illness, but results have been mixed. However, meditation has been proved to 
reduce mental stress and also to help develop positive emotions, even in the face 
of great difficulties. Citing laboratory tests of the mental calmness of Buddhists 
who practice “mindfulness” meditation, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama points out 
that:
Over the millenniums, many practitioners have carried out what we might call 
“experiments” in how to overcome our tendencies toward destructive emotions. The 
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RELIGIOUS RESPONSES  7
world today needs citizens and leaders who can work toward ensuring stability 
and engage in dialogue with the “enemy”—no matter what kind of aggression or 
assault they may have endured. If humanity is to survive, happiness and inner 
balance are crucial. We would do well to remember that the war against hatred 
and terror can be waged on this, the internal front, too.10
From the point of view of individual psychology, there are many explanations 
of the usefulness of religion. Psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud (1856–1938) sug-
gested that religion fulfills neurotic needs. He described religion as a collective 
fantasy, a “universal obsessional neurosis”—a replaying of our loving and fearful 
relationships with our parents. Religious belief gives us a God powerful enough 
to protect us from the terrors of life, and will reward or punish us for obedience 
or nonobedience to social norms. From Freud’s extremely sceptical point of 
view, religious belief is an illusion springing from people’s infantile insecurity 
and neurotic guilt; as such it closely resembles mental illness.
On a more positive note, the twentieth-century psychoanalyst Erich Fromm 
(1900–1980) concluded that humans have a need for a stable frame of reference, 
and that religion fulfills this need. As Mata Amritanandamayi, a contemporary 
Indian spiritual teacher, explains:
Faith in God gives one the mental strength needed to confront the problems of life. 
Faith in the existence of God makes one feel safe and protected from all the evil 
influences of the world. To have faith in the existence of a Supreme Power and to 
live accordingly is a religion. When we become religious, morality arises, which, 
in turn, will help to keep us away from malevolent influences. We won’t drink, 
we won’t smoke, and we will stop wasting our energy through unnecessary gossip 
and talk. … We will also develop qualities like love, compassion, patience, mental 
equipoise, and other positive traits. These will help us to love and serve everyone 
equally. … Where there is faith, there is harmony, unity and love. A nonbeliever 
always doubts. … He cannot be at peace; he’s restless. … The foundation of his 
entire life is unstable and scattered due to his lack of faith in a higher principle.11
For many, the desire for material achievement offers a temporary sense of 
purposefulness. But once achieved, material goals may seem hollow. Guru Tegh 
Bahadur, the Ninth Sikh Guru, said:
The whole world is just like a dream;
It will pass away in an instant,
Like a wall of sand,
[Though] built up and plastered with great care,
Which does not last even four days.
Likewise are the pleasures of mammon.12
Once this realization comes, a search for something more lasting and deeply 
meaningful may then arise.
Religions propose ideals that can radically transform people. Mahatma 
Gandhi (1869–1948) was an extremely shy, fearful child. His transformation 
into one of the great political figures of the twentieth century occurred as he 
meditated single-mindedly on the great Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita, par-
ticularly the second chapter, which he says was “inscribed on the tablet of my 
heart.”13 It reads, in part:
He is forever free who has broken
Out of the ego-cage of I and mine
To be united with the Lord of Love.
This is the supreme state. Attain thou this
And pass from death to immortality.14
People need inner strength for dealing with personal problems. Those who 
are suffering severe physical illness, privation, terror, or grief often turn to the 
divine for help. Conviction that Someone or Something that cannot be seen 
exists may be an antidote to the discomforting sense of being alone in the  
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8  RELIGIOUS RESPONSES
universe. This isolation can be painful, even terrifying. 
The divine may be sought as a loving father or mother, 
or as a friend. Alternatively, some paths offer the way 
of self-transcendence. Through them, the sense of iso-
lation is lost in mystical merger with the One Being, 
with the Ultimate Reality.
According to some Asian religions, the concept that 
we are distinct, autonomous individuals is an illusion; 
what we think of as “our” consciousnesses and “our” 
bodies is in perpetual flux. Thus, freedom from prob-
lems lies in accepting temporal change and devaluing 
the “small self” in favor of the eternal self. The ancient 
sages of India, whose teachings are preserved in the 
Upanishads, called this eternal self “the breathing 
behind breathing, the sight behind sight, the hearing 
behind hearing, the thinking behind thinking… ”15
Buddhists see the problem of human existence dif-
ferently. What humans have in common, they feel, is 
the suffering that comes from life’s impermanence and 
our craving for it to remain the same. For Buddhists, 
reliance on an Absolute or God and the belief in a per-
sonal self or an Eternal Self only makes the suffering 
more intense. The solution is to let go of these ideas, to 
accept the groundlessness and openness of life, and to 
grow in clear awareness and humanistic values.
We may look to religions for understanding, for 
answers to our many questions about life. Is life just a 
series of random and chaotic incidents, or is there some 
meaning and order behind what is happening? Who 
are we? Why are we here? What happens after we die? 
Why is there suffering? Why is there evil? Is anybody 
up there listening? We have difficulty accepting the commonsense notion that 
this life is all there is. We are born, we struggle to support ourselves, we age, and 
we die. If we believe that there is nothing more, fear of death may inhibit enjoy-
ment of life and make all human actions seem pointless. Confronting mortality 
is so basic to the spiritual life that, as the Christian monk Brother David Steindl-
Rast observes, whenever monks from any spiritual tradition meet, within five 
minutes they are talking about death.
It appears that throughout the world man [sic] has always been seeking 
something beyond his own death, beyond …
INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  33
C H A P T E R  2
INDIGENOUS 
SACRED WAYS
“I am a child of both worlds. Despite being a university 
professor, and one who has embraced modernity, I am 
still a Maasai girl deep down.” Damaris Parsitau1
2.1 Outline the challenges faced by scholars in 
understanding indigenous sacred ways
2.2 Explain the cultural diversity of indigenous groups
2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships
2.4 Identify the different spiritual specialists in indigenous 
sacred ways
2.5 Summarize group and individual observances in 
indigenous sacred ways
2.6 Illustrate how the processes of globalization are 
affecting indigenous peoples
2.7 Discuss how development projects have affected 
indigenous peoples and how they have responded
Here and there around the globe, pockets of people still follow local sacred ways 
handed down from their remote ancestors but adapted to contemporary circum-
stances. They are often referred to by religious scholars as indigenous peoples. 
In common parlance, “indigenous” means “native to a place,” but some of these 
groups have actually migrated or been displaced from somewhere else. This 
is thus a somewhat catch-all label used to distinguish these local groups from 
worldwide religions. Despite their great variety, “indigenous peoples” have two 
characteristics in common: Their spiritual beliefs, rituals, and social practices are 
centered on their own ancestors, and they relate to a specific geographic place. 
Their distribution around the world, suggested in the map overleaf, reveals 
a fascinating picture, with many indigenous groups surviving in the midst of 
industrialized societies, but with globalization processes altering their traditional 
lifeways.
Indigenous peoples comprise at least four percent of the world’s population. 
Some who follow the ancient spiritual traditions still live close to the earth in 
nonindustrial, small-scale cultures; some do not. In some places, such as parts of 
Africa and India, many traditional spiritual practices and ways of understanding 
Insert chapter opener 
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34  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
have been retained, albeit influenced by modernity and global religions. In other 
places, the ways that indigenous peoples may refer to as their “original instruc-
tions” on how to live have almost been lost under the onslaught of genocidal 
colonization, conversion pressures from global religions, mechanistic material-
ism, and the destruction of their natural environments by the global economy 
of limitless consumption. In those cases, much of the ancient visionary wisdom 
has disappeared. To seek paying jobs and modern comforts such as electricity, 
people have shifted from their natural environments into urban settings. In the 
southwestern United States, there are few traditionally trained elders left and 
few young people willing to undergo the lengthy and rigorous training necessary 
for spiritual leadership in these sacred ways. Nevertheless, in many places there 
is now a renewal of interest in these traditions among the people, fanning hope 
that what they offer will not be lost.
To what extent can [indigenous groups] reinstitute traditional religious values 
in a world gone mad with development, electronics, almost instantaneous 
transportation facilities, and intellectually grounded in a rejection of spiritual and 
mysterious events?
Vine Deloria, Jr.2
Understanding indigenous sacred ways
What challenges have scholars faced in understanding indigenous 
sacred ways?
Outsiders have known or understood little of the indigenous sacred ways, many 
of which have long been practiced only in secret. In Mesoamerica, the ancient 
teachings have remained hidden for 500 years since the coming of the conquis-
tadores, passed down within families as a secret oral tradition. The Buryats living 
Inuit
(Eskimo)
Lakota
(Sioux)
Hopi
Kogi
Navajo
Papago
Huichol
Zuni
Cheyenne
Onondaga
Mohegan
Da
ga
ra
Da
ho
m
ey
Ibo
Am
as
iri
Tsalagi (Cherokee)
Akan
Yoruba
Ogoni
Bakongo
Achewa
Vaduma
Kung
Efe
Nankani
Kikuyu
Kalmyk
Indian
tribals
Orang Asli
Khasi
Buryat
Yakut
Ainu
Australian
Aborigines
Saami
(Lapp)
Toltec
Maya
Haida
Ne
z 
Pe
rc
e
Yup´ik
Koyukon
Dene Tha
Yurok
Apache
Haudenosaunee
(Iroquois)
Maori
The approximate distribution of 
indigenous groups mentioned in 
this chapter.
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INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  35
near Lake Baikal in Russia were thought to have been converted to Buddhism 
and Christianity centuries ago; however, almost the entire population of the 
area gathered for indigenous ceremonies on Olkhon Island in 1992 and 1993.
In parts of Aboriginal Australia, the indigenous teachings have been under-
ground for 200 years since white colonialists and Christian missionaries 
appeared. As Aborigine Lorraine Mafi Williams explains:
We have stacked away our religious, spiritual, cultural beliefs. When the 
missionaries came, we were told by our old people to be respectful, listen and 
be obedient, go to church, go to Sunday school, but do not adopt the Christian 
doctrine because it takes away our cultural, spiritual beliefs. So we’ve always 
stayed within God’s laws in what we know.3
Not uncommonly, the newer global traditions have been blended with the 
older ways. For instance, Buddhism as it spread often adopted existing customs, 
such as the recognition of local deities. Now many indigenous people practice 
one of the global religions while still retaining many of their traditional ways.
Until recently, those who attempted to ferret out the native sacred ways had 
little basis for understanding them. Many were anthropologists who approached 
spiritual behaviors from the nonspiritual perspective of Western science or else 
the Christian understanding of religion as a means of salvation from sinful earth-
ly existence—a belief not found among most indigenous peoples. There is a great 
difference between the conceptual frameworks of the religions of Africa and 
the thinking of Western scholars. Knowing that researchers from other cultures 
did not grasp the truth of their beliefs, native peoples have at times given them 
information that was incorrect in order to protect the sanctity of their practices 
from the uninitiated.
Academic study of traditional ways is now becoming more sympathetic and 
self-critical, however, as is apparent in this statement by Gerhardus Cornelius 
Oosthuizen, a South African scholar:
[The] Western worldview is closed, essentially complete and unchangeable, 
basically substantive and fundamentally non-mysterious; i.e. it is like a rigid 
Uluru (Ayers Rock), a unique 
mass rising from the plains 
of central Australia, has long 
been considered sacred by the 
Aboriginal groups of the area, 
and in its caves are many ancient 
paintings.
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36  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
programmed machine. … This closed worldview is foreign to Africa, which is still 
deeply religious. … This world is not closed, and not merely basically substantive, 
but it has great depth, it is unlimited in its qualitative varieties and is truly 
mysterious; this world is restless, a living and growing organism.4
Indigenous spirituality is a lifeway, a particular approach to all of life. It is 
not a separate experience, like meditating in the morning or going to church on 
Sunday. Spirituality ideally pervades all moments. As an elder of the Huichol in 
Mexico puts it:
Everything we do in life is for the glory of God. We praise him in the well-swept 
floor, the well-weeded field, the polished machete, the brilliant colors of the picture 
and embroidery. In these ways we prepare for a long life and pray for a good one.5
In most native cultures, spiritual lifeways are shared orally. Oral transmis-
sion has been used in all religions, but in indigenous religions oral transmission 
rather than written scripture remains the main way of sharing and carrying on 
the traditions. The people create and pass on songs, proverbs, myths, riddles, 
short sayings, legends, art, music, and the like. This helps to keep the indige-
nous sacred ways dynamic and flexible rather than fossilized. It also keeps the 
sacred experience fresh in the present. Oral narratives may also contain clues to 
the historical experiences of individuals or groups, but these are often carried 
from generation to generation in symbolic language. The symbols, metaphors, 
and humor are not easily understood by outsiders but are central to a people’s 
understanding of how life works. To the Maori of New Zealand, life is a continual 
dynamic process of becoming in which all things arise from a burst of cosmic 
energy. According to their creation story, all beings emerged from a spatially 
confined liminal state of darkness in which the Sky Father and Earth Mother 
were locked in eternal embrace, continually conceiving but crowding their off-
spring until their children broke that embrace. Their separation created a great 
burst of light, like wind sweeping through the cosmos. That tremendously free-
ing, rejuvenating power is still present and can be called upon through rituals 
in which all beings—plants, trees, fish, birds, animals, people—are intimately 
and primordially related.
The lifeways of many small-scale cultures are tied to the land on which they 
live and their entire way of life. They are most meaningful within this context. 
Many traditional cultures have been dispersed or dismembered, as in the forced 
emigration of slaves from Africa to the Americas. Despite this, the dynamism of 
traditional religions has made it possible for African spiritual ways to transcend 
space, with webs of relationships still maintained between the ancestors, spirits, 
and people in the diaspora, though they may be practiced secretly and are little 
understood by outsiders.
Despite the hindrances to understanding of indigenous forms of spirituality, 
the doors to understanding are opening somewhat in our times. The traditional 
elders are very concerned about the growing potential for planetary disaster. 
Some are beginning to share their basic values, if not their esoteric practices, in 
hopes of preventing industrial societies from destroying the earth.
Cultural diversity
Why are indigenous groups culturally diverse?
In this chapter we are considering the faithways of indigenous peoples as a 
whole. However, behind these generalizations lie many differences in social con-
texts as well as in religious beliefs and practices. There are hundreds of different 
indigenous traditions in North America alone, and at least fifty-three different 
ethnolinguistic groups in the Andean rainforests. And Australian Aboriginal 
lifeways, which are some of the world’s oldest surviving cultures, traditionally 
included more than 500 different clan groups, with differing beliefs, living pat-
terns, and languages.
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INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  37
Indigenous traditions have evolved within 
materially as well as religiously diverse cul-
tures. Some are descendants of civilizations 
with advanced urban technologies that sup-
ported concentrated populations. When the 
Spanish conqueror Hernán Cortés took over 
Tenochtitlán (which now lies beneath Mexico 
City) in 1519, he found it a beautiful, clean city 
with elaborate architecture, indoor plumbing, 
an accurate calendar, and advanced systems of 
mathematics and astronomy. Former African 
kingdoms were highly culturally advanced 
with elaborate arts, such as intricate bronze 
and copper casting, ivory carving, goldwork-
ing, and ceramics. In recent times, some Native 
American tribes have become quite materially 
successful via economic enterprises, such as 
gambling complexes.
Among Africa’s innumerable ethnic and social groupings, there are some 
indigenous groups comprising millions of people, such as the Yoruba of West 
Africa and the Ashanti of Ghana. Even though they are so large as to be con-
sidered “nations,” these groups can be labelled indigenous because they are 
located in one region, their stories of origin relate to how their ancestors came 
to occupy that land, and they are bound by lines of kinship, even though these 
may be mythical. At the other extreme are those few small-scale cultures that 
still maintain a survival strategy of hunting and gathering. For example, some 
Australian Aborigines continue to live as mobile foragers, though restricted to 
government-owned stations. A nomadic survival strategy necessitates simplicity 
in material goods; whatever can be gathered or built rather easily at the next 
camp need not be dragged along. But material simplicity is not a sign of spiritual 
poverty. The Australian Aborigines have complex cosmogonies, or models of the 
origins of the universe and their purpose within it, as well as a working knowl-
edge of their own bioregion.
Some traditional peoples live in their ancestral enclaves, though not 
untouched by the outer world. The Hopi people have continuously occupied a 
high plateau area of the southwestern United States for between 800 and 1,000 
years; their sacred ritual calendar is tied to the yearly farming cycle. By contrast, 
tribal peoples have lived in India for thousands of years, but the forests they now 
occupy may not have been their primary homelands. There is evidence that they 
once lived in the hills and plains but were marginalized by higher-caste Hindus 
and then British colonizers, and the only place left for them was the forests. 
Since the twentieth century even the forests have been taken over for “devel-
opment” projects and encroached upon by more politically and economically 
powerful groups, rendering many of the seventy-five million Indian tribespeople 
landless laborers.
Other indigenous peoples visit their sacred sites and ancestral shrines but live 
in more urban settings because of job opportunities. The people who participate 
in ceremonies in the Mexican countryside include subway personnel, journal-
ists, and artists of native blood who live in Mexico City.
In addition to variations in lifestyles, indigenous traditions vary in their adap-
tations to dominant religions. Often native practices have become interwoven 
with those of global religions, such as Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity. In 
Southeast Asia, household Buddhist shrines are almost identical to the spirit 
houses in which the people still make offerings to honor the local spirits. In 
Africa, the spread of Islam and Christianity saw the introduction of new religious 
ideas and practices into indigenous sacred ways. The encounter transformed 
indigenous religious thought and practice but did not supplant it; indigenous 
religions preserved some of their beliefs and ritual practices but also adjusted  
The indigenous community of 
Acoma Pueblo—built on a high 
plateau in New Mexico—live 
in what may be the oldest 
continuously occupied city in the 
United States.
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38  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
to the new sociocultural milieu. The Dahomey tradition from West Africa 
was carried to Haiti by African slaves and called Vodou, from vodu, one of the 
names for the chief nonhuman spirits. Forced by European colonialists to adopt 
Christianity, worshipers of Vodou secretly fused their old gods with their images 
of Catholic saints. More recently, emigrants from Haiti have formed diaspora 
communities of Vodou worshipers in cities such as New York, New Orleans, 
Miami, and Montreal, where Vodou specialists are often called upon to heal sick-
ness and use magic to bring desired changes. In Australia, some Aboriginal peo-
ple are converting to Islam for various reasons. These include honouring their 
roots among ancestors who intermarried with Muslim traders from Indonesian 
islands or cameleers from Afghanistan, political activism against social injustice, 
and the search for a positive identity. Conversion does not necessarily mean 
abandoning their traditional culture. As one convert explains:
Islam recognises tribes and nations. It gives you identity, a purpose. It doesn’t 
just say, “You’re Muslim, that’s it.” It says yes, all Muslims are the same, but 
it does recognise we belong to different tribes and nations, so it doesn’t do what 
Christianity did to a lot of Aboriginal people [which] was try and make them like 
white people. … Islam allows you your identity, your tribe and nation, and that is 
quoted in the Quran.6
Despite their different histories and economic patterns, and their geograph-
ical separation, indigenous sacred ways have some characteristics in common. 
Similarities found among the myths and symbols of geographically separate peo-
ples can be partly accounted for by global diffusion through trade, travel, com-
munications, and other kinds of contact. Perhaps from ancient contact across 
land-bridges that no longer exist, there are similarities between the languages 
of the Tsalagi in the Americas, Tibetans, and the aboriginal Ainu of Japan. There 
are also basic similarities in human experience, such as birth and death, pleasure 
and pain, and wonderment about the cosmos and our place in it. Cognitive sci-
entists of religion also relate similarities in symbols and stories to shared human 
environmental conditions and the way the human mind functions. For instance, 
in all cultures, people tend to project human qualities onto plants, animals, and 
inanimate things and cross boundaries of this-worldly logic, developing belief 
in beings or forces that operate in extraordinary ways in the midst of ordinary 
time and space. People’s relationships to, and the concepts surrounding, these 
symbols are not inevitably the same. Nevertheless, the following sections look 
at some recurring themes in the spiritual ways of diverse indigenous cultures. 
These tendencies are not unique to indigenous religions, for they appear in other 
religions as well, but they may be particularly prominent in indigenous lifeways.
The circle of right relationships
What is the circle of right relationships?
For many indigenous peoples, everything in the cosmos is intimately interre-
lated. These interrelationships originate in the way everything was created. To 
Australian Aborigines, before time began there was land, but it was flat and 
devoid of any features. Powerful ancestral beings came forth from beneath the 
surface and began moving around, shaping the land as they moved across it. In 
this “Dreamtime,” the ancestral figures also created groups of humans to take 
care of the places that had been created. The people thus feel that they belong 
to their native place in an eternal sacred relationship.
A symbol of unity among the parts of this sacred reality is a circle. This is not 
used by all indigenous people; the Navajo, for instance, regard a completed cir-
cle as stifling and restrictive. However, many other indigenous peoples hold the 
circle sacred because it is infinite—it has no beginning, no end. Time is circular 
rather than linear, for it keeps coming back to the same place. Life revolves 
around the generational cycles of birth, youth, maturity, and physical death, 
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INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  39
the return of the seasons, the cyclical movements of the moon, sun, stars, and 
planets. Rituals such as rites of passage may be performed to help keep these 
cycles in balance.
To maintain the natural balance of the circles of existence, most indigenous 
peoples have traditionally been taught that they must develop right relation-
ships with everything that is. Their relatives include the unseen world of spirits, 
the land and weather, the people and creatures, and the power within.
Relationships with spirit
The cosmos is thought to contain and be affected by numerous divinities, spir-
its, and also ancestors. For many indigenous groups, ancestors are the closest 
and most important spirits. Death is not an end; connection continues between 
the spirit of the dead person and the living relatives. To the Nankani of north-
ern Ghana, ancestors have been delegated the power to take care of the needs 
and quarrels of their descendants, since they know and understand them well. 
For the Amasiri people of southeast Nigeria, the relationship of ancestors with 
the living is so intimate that the dead person may be buried in the floor of the 
home. During a funeral, mourners beg the parent not to forget them—to always 
remember and protect them.
Traditional Africans understand that the person is not an individual, but a 
composite of many souls—the spirits of one’s parents and ancestors—resonating 
to their feelings. Rev. William Kingsley Opoku, International Coordinator of the 
African Council for Spiritual Churches, says:
Our ancestors are our saints. Christian missionaries who came here wanted us to 
pray to their saints, their dead people. But what about our saints? … If you are 
grateful to your ancestors, then you have blessings from your grandmother, your 
grandfather, who brought you forth.7
Continued communication with the “living dead” (ancestors who have died 
within living memory) may include libation rituals in which food and drink 
are offered to the ancestors, acknowledging that they are still in a sense living 
and engaged with the people’s lives. For the Nankani, female ancestors are 
represented by pots within the house decorated with bangles; male ancestors 
are represented by pots placed outside the house. The guidance and protection 
of the ancestors is essential. Failure to keep in touch with them is a dangerous 
oversight, which may bring misfortunes to the family.
Among the gentle Efe pygmies of 
the Ituri Forest in the Democratic 
Republic of Congo (formerly 
Zaire), children learn to value 
the circle by playing the “circle 
game.” With feet making a circle, 
each child names a circular 
object and then an expression 
of roundness (the family circle, 
togetherness, “a complete 
rainbow”).
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40  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
Many unseen powers are perceived to be at work in the material world. In 
addition to ancestors, some of these are perceived without form, as mysterious 
presences, who may be benevolent or malevolent. Others are perceived as hav-
ing more definite, albeit invisible, forms and personalities. These may include 
deities with human-like personalities, the nature spirits of special local places, 
such as venerable trees and mountains, animal spirit helpers, personified ele-
mental forces, or the nagas, known to the traditional peoples of Nepal as invisible 
serpentine spirits who control the circulation of water in the world and also 
within our bodies.
The Dagara of Burkina Faso in West Africa are familiar with the kontombili, 
who look like humans but are only about one foot (thirty centimeters) tall, 
because of the humble way they express their spiritual power. Other West 
African groups, descendants of ancient hierarchical civilizations, recognize a 
great pantheon of deities, the orisa or vodu, each the object of special worship. 
The orisa are embodiments of the dynamic forces in life, such as Oya, powerful 
goddess of change, experienced in winds; Osun, orisa of fresh waters, associat-
ed with sweetness, healing, love, fertility, and prosperity; Olokun, ruler of the 
mysterious depths of consciousness; Shango, a former king who is now honored 
as the stormy god of electricity and genius; Ifa, god of wisdom; and Obatala, 
the source of creativity, warmth, and enlightenment. At the beginning of time, 
in Yoruba cosmology, there was only one godhead, described by psychologist 
Clyde Ford as “a beingless being, a dimensionless point, an infinite container 
of everything, including itself.”8 According to the mythology, this being was 
smashed by a boulder pushed down by a rebellious slave, and broke into hun-
dreds of fragments, each of which became an orisa. According to some analysts, 
orisa can also be seen as archetypes of traits existing within the human psyche. 
Their ultimate purpose—and that of those who pay attention to them as inner 
forces—is to return to that presumed original state of wholeness.
Australian Aborigines 
understand their environment as 
concentric fields of subtle energies. 
(Nym Bunduk, 1907–1974, 
Snakes and Emu.)
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INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  41
Many indigenous traditions also worship a 
Supreme Being who they believe created the cos-
mos. This being is known by the Lakota as “Great 
Mysterious” or “Great Spirit.” African names for 
the being are attributes, such as “All-powerful,” 
“Creator,” “the one who is met everywhere,” 
“the one who exists by himself,” or “the one who 
began the forest.” To traditional Buryats of Russia, 
the chief power in the world is the eternally blue 
sky, Tengry. The Supreme Being is often referred 
to by male pronouns, but in some groups the 
Supreme Being is a female. Some tribes of the 
southwestern United States call her “Changing 
Woman”—sometimes young, sometimes old, the 
mother of the earth, associated with women’s 
reproductive cycles and the mystery of birth, the 
creatrix. Many traditional languages make no 
distinction between male and female pronouns, 
and some see the divine as androgynous, a force 
arising from the interaction of male and female 
aspects of the universe. In the religions of Africa, 
the Supreme Being—whether singular or plural—
may have human-like qualities, but no gender. 
This great Source is so awesome that no images 
are used to represent it. An Inuit spiritual adept 
described his people’s experience of:
a power that we call Sila, which is not to be explained in simple words. A great 
spirit, supporting the world and the weather and all life on earth, a spirit so 
mighty that [what it says] to mankind is not through common words, but by 
storm and snow and rain and the fury of the sea; all the forces of nature that 
men fear. But Sila has also another way of [communicating]; by sunlight and 
calm of the sea, and little children innocently at play, themselves understanding 
nothing. … When all is well, Sila sends no message to mankind, but withdraws 
into endless nothingness, apart.9
African myths suggest that the High God was originally so close to humans 
that they became disrespectful. The All-powerful was like the sky, they say, 
which was once so close that children wiped their dirty hands on it, and women 
(blamed by men for the withdrawal) broke off pieces for soup and bumped it 
with their sticks when pounding grain. Although southern and central Africans 
believe in a high being who presides over the universe, including less powerful 
spirits, they consider this being either too distant, too powerful, or too dangerous 
to worship or call on for help.
It cannot therefore be said that indigenous concepts of, and attitudes toward, 
a Supreme Being are necessarily the same as that which Western monotheistic 
religions refer to as God or Allah. In the religions of Africa, much more emphasis 
tends to be placed on the transcendent dimensions of everyday life and doing 
what is spiritually necessary to keep life going normally. The spirits are thought 
to be available to those who seek them as helpers, as intermediaries between 
the people and the power, and as teachers. A right relationship with these 
spirit beings can be a sacred partnership. Seekers respect and learn from them;  
they also purify themselves in order to engage their services for the good of the 
people.
Teachings about the spirits also help the people to understand how they 
should live together in …
INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  33
C H A P T E R  2
INDIGENOUS 
SACRED WAYS
“I am a child of both worlds. Despite being a university 
professor, and one who has embraced modernity, I am 
still a Maasai girl deep down.” Damaris Parsitau1
2.1 Outline the challenges faced by scholars in 
understanding indigenous sacred ways
2.2 Explain the cultural diversity of indigenous groups
2.3 Describe the circle of right relationships
2.4 Identify the different spiritual specialists in indigenous 
sacred ways
2.5 Summarize group and individual observances in 
indigenous sacred ways
2.6 Illustrate how the processes of globalization are 
affecting indigenous peoples
2.7 Discuss how development projects have affected 
indigenous peoples and how they have responded
Here and there around the globe, pockets of people still follow local sacred ways 
handed down from their remote ancestors but adapted to contemporary circum-
stances. They are often referred to by religious scholars as indigenous peoples. 
In common parlance, “indigenous” means “native to a place,” but some of these 
groups have actually migrated or been displaced from somewhere else. This 
is thus a somewhat catch-all label used to distinguish these local groups from 
worldwide religions. Despite their great variety, “indigenous peoples” have two 
characteristics in common: Their spiritual beliefs, rituals, and social practices are 
centered on their own ancestors, and they relate to a specific geographic place. 
Their distribution around the world, suggested in the map overleaf, reveals 
a fascinating picture, with many indigenous groups surviving in the midst of 
industrialized societies, but with globalization processes altering their traditional 
lifeways.
Indigenous peoples comprise at least four percent of the world’s population. 
Some who follow the ancient spiritual traditions still live close to the earth in 
nonindustrial, small-scale cultures; some do not. In some places, such as parts of 
Africa and India, many traditional spiritual practices and ways of understanding 
Insert chapter opener 
symbol
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34  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
have been retained, albeit influenced by modernity and global religions. In other 
places, the ways that indigenous peoples may refer to as their “original instruc-
tions” on how to live have almost been lost under the onslaught of genocidal 
colonization, conversion pressures from global religions, mechanistic material-
ism, and the destruction of their natural environments by the global economy 
of limitless consumption. In those cases, much of the ancient visionary wisdom 
has disappeared. To seek paying jobs and modern comforts such as electricity, 
people have shifted from their natural environments into urban settings. In the 
southwestern United States, there are few traditionally trained elders left and 
few young people willing to undergo the lengthy and rigorous training necessary 
for spiritual leadership in these sacred ways. Nevertheless, in many places there 
is now a renewal of interest in these traditions among the people, fanning hope 
that what they offer will not be lost.
To what extent can [indigenous groups] reinstitute traditional religious values 
in a world gone mad with development, electronics, almost instantaneous 
transportation facilities, and intellectually grounded in a rejection of spiritual and 
mysterious events?
Vine Deloria, Jr.2
Understanding indigenous sacred ways
What challenges have scholars faced in understanding indigenous 
sacred ways?
Outsiders have known or understood little of the indigenous sacred ways, many 
of which have long been practiced only in secret. In Mesoamerica, the ancient 
teachings have remained hidden for 500 years since the coming of the conquis-
tadores, passed down within families as a secret oral tradition. The Buryats living 
Inuit
(Eskimo)
Lakota
(Sioux)
Hopi
Kogi
Navajo
Papago
Huichol
Zuni
Cheyenne
Onondaga
Mohegan
Da
ga
ra
Da
ho
m
ey
Ibo
Am
as
iri
Tsalagi (Cherokee)
Akan
Yoruba
Ogoni
Bakongo
Achewa
Vaduma
Kung
Efe
Nankani
Kikuyu
Kalmyk
Indian
tribals
Orang Asli
Khasi
Buryat
Yakut
Ainu
Australian
Aborigines
Saami
(Lapp)
Toltec
Maya
Haida
Ne
z 
Pe
rc
e
Yup´ik
Koyukon
Dene Tha
Yurok
Apache
Haudenosaunee
(Iroquois)
Maori
The approximate distribution of 
indigenous groups mentioned in 
this chapter.
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INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  35
near Lake Baikal in Russia were thought to have been converted to Buddhism 
and Christianity centuries ago; however, almost the entire population of the 
area gathered for indigenous ceremonies on Olkhon Island in 1992 and 1993.
In parts of Aboriginal Australia, the indigenous teachings have been under-
ground for 200 years since white colonialists and Christian missionaries 
appeared. As Aborigine Lorraine Mafi Williams explains:
We have stacked away our religious, spiritual, cultural beliefs. When the 
missionaries came, we were told by our old people to be respectful, listen and 
be obedient, go to church, go to Sunday school, but do not adopt the Christian 
doctrine because it takes away our cultural, spiritual beliefs. So we’ve always 
stayed within God’s laws in what we know.3
Not uncommonly, the newer global traditions have been blended with the 
older ways. For instance, Buddhism as it spread often adopted existing customs, 
such as the recognition of local deities. Now many indigenous people practice 
one of the global religions while still retaining many of their traditional ways.
Until recently, those who attempted to ferret out the native sacred ways had 
little basis for understanding them. Many were anthropologists who approached 
spiritual behaviors from the nonspiritual perspective of Western science or else 
the Christian understanding of religion as a means of salvation from sinful earth-
ly existence—a belief not found among most indigenous peoples. There is a great 
difference between the conceptual frameworks of the religions of Africa and 
the thinking of Western scholars. Knowing that researchers from other cultures 
did not grasp the truth of their beliefs, native peoples have at times given them 
information that was incorrect in order to protect the sanctity of their practices 
from the uninitiated.
Academic study of traditional ways is now becoming more sympathetic and 
self-critical, however, as is apparent in this statement by Gerhardus Cornelius 
Oosthuizen, a South African scholar:
[The] Western worldview is closed, essentially complete and unchangeable, 
basically substantive and fundamentally non-mysterious; i.e. it is like a rigid 
Uluru (Ayers Rock), a unique 
mass rising from the plains 
of central Australia, has long 
been considered sacred by the 
Aboriginal groups of the area, 
and in its caves are many ancient 
paintings.
M02_P033-071_CH02.indd   35 20/11/2015   13:34
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All Rights Reserved. Pearson Custom Edition.
36  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
programmed machine. … This closed worldview is foreign to Africa, which is still 
deeply religious. … This world is not closed, and not merely basically substantive, 
but it has great depth, it is unlimited in its qualitative varieties and is truly 
mysterious; this world is restless, a living and growing organism.4
Indigenous spirituality is a lifeway, a particular approach to all of life. It is 
not a separate experience, like meditating in the morning or going to church on 
Sunday. Spirituality ideally pervades all moments. As an elder of the Huichol in 
Mexico puts it:
Everything we do in life is for the glory of God. We praise him in the well-swept 
floor, the well-weeded field, the polished machete, the brilliant colors of the picture 
and embroidery. In these ways we prepare for a long life and pray for a good one.5
In most native cultures, spiritual lifeways are shared orally. Oral transmis-
sion has been used in all religions, but in indigenous religions oral transmission 
rather than written scripture remains the main way of sharing and carrying on 
the traditions. The people create and pass on songs, proverbs, myths, riddles, 
short sayings, legends, art, music, and the like. This helps to keep the indige-
nous sacred ways dynamic and flexible rather than fossilized. It also keeps the 
sacred experience fresh in the present. Oral narratives may also contain clues to 
the historical experiences of individuals or groups, but these are often carried 
from generation to generation in symbolic language. The symbols, metaphors, 
and humor are not easily understood by outsiders but are central to a people’s 
understanding of how life works. To the Maori of New Zealand, life is a continual 
dynamic process of becoming in which all things arise from a burst of cosmic 
energy. According to their creation story, all beings emerged from a spatially 
confined liminal state of darkness in which the Sky Father and Earth Mother 
were locked in eternal embrace, continually conceiving but crowding their off-
spring until their children broke that embrace. Their separation created a great 
burst of light, like wind sweeping through the cosmos. That tremendously free-
ing, rejuvenating power is still present and can be called upon through rituals 
in which all beings—plants, trees, fish, birds, animals, people—are intimately 
and primordially related.
The lifeways of many small-scale cultures are tied to the land on which they 
live and their entire way of life. They are most meaningful within this context. 
Many traditional cultures have been dispersed or dismembered, as in the forced 
emigration of slaves from Africa to the Americas. Despite this, the dynamism of 
traditional religions has made it possible for African spiritual ways to transcend 
space, with webs of relationships still maintained between the ancestors, spirits, 
and people in the diaspora, though they may be practiced secretly and are little 
understood by outsiders.
Despite the hindrances to understanding of indigenous forms of spirituality, 
the doors to understanding are opening somewhat in our times. The traditional 
elders are very concerned about the growing potential for planetary disaster. 
Some are beginning to share their basic values, if not their esoteric practices, in 
hopes of preventing industrial societies from destroying the earth.
Cultural diversity
Why are indigenous groups culturally diverse?
In this chapter we are considering the faithways of indigenous peoples as a 
whole. However, behind these generalizations lie many differences in social con-
texts as well as in religious beliefs and practices. There are hundreds of different 
indigenous traditions in North America alone, and at least fifty-three different 
ethnolinguistic groups in the Andean rainforests. And Australian Aboriginal 
lifeways, which are some of the world’s oldest surviving cultures, traditionally 
included more than 500 different clan groups, with differing beliefs, living pat-
terns, and languages.
M02_P033-071_CH02.indd   36 20/11/2015   13:34
Living Religions, Tenth Edition, by Mary Pat Fisher and Robin Rinehart. Published by Pearson. Copyright © 2017 by Pearson Education, Inc. 
All Rights Reserved. Pearson Custom Edition.
INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  37
Indigenous traditions have evolved within 
materially as well as religiously diverse cul-
tures. Some are descendants of civilizations 
with advanced urban technologies that sup-
ported concentrated populations. When the 
Spanish conqueror Hernán Cortés took over 
Tenochtitlán (which now lies beneath Mexico 
City) in 1519, he found it a beautiful, clean city 
with elaborate architecture, indoor plumbing, 
an accurate calendar, and advanced systems of 
mathematics and astronomy. Former African 
kingdoms were highly culturally advanced 
with elaborate arts, such as intricate bronze 
and copper casting, ivory carving, goldwork-
ing, and ceramics. In recent times, some Native 
American tribes have become quite materially 
successful via economic enterprises, such as 
gambling complexes.
Among Africa’s innumerable ethnic and social groupings, there are some 
indigenous groups comprising millions of people, such as the Yoruba of West 
Africa and the Ashanti of Ghana. Even though they are so large as to be con-
sidered “nations,” these groups can be labelled indigenous because they are 
located in one region, their stories of origin relate to how their ancestors came 
to occupy that land, and they are bound by lines of kinship, even though these 
may be mythical. At the other extreme are those few small-scale cultures that 
still maintain a survival strategy of hunting and gathering. For example, some 
Australian Aborigines continue to live as mobile foragers, though restricted to 
government-owned stations. A nomadic survival strategy necessitates simplicity 
in material goods; whatever can be gathered or built rather easily at the next 
camp need not be dragged along. But material simplicity is not a sign of spiritual 
poverty. The Australian Aborigines have complex cosmogonies, or models of the 
origins of the universe and their purpose within it, as well as a working knowl-
edge of their own bioregion.
Some traditional peoples live in their ancestral enclaves, though not 
untouched by the outer world. The Hopi people have continuously occupied a 
high plateau area of the southwestern United States for between 800 and 1,000 
years; their sacred ritual calendar is tied to the yearly farming cycle. By contrast, 
tribal peoples have lived in India for thousands of years, but the forests they now 
occupy may not have been their primary homelands. There is evidence that they 
once lived in the hills and plains but were marginalized by higher-caste Hindus 
and then British colonizers, and the only place left for them was the forests. 
Since the twentieth century even the forests have been taken over for “devel-
opment” projects and encroached upon by more politically and economically 
powerful groups, rendering many of the seventy-five million Indian tribespeople 
landless laborers.
Other indigenous peoples visit their sacred sites and ancestral shrines but live 
in more urban settings because of job opportunities. The people who participate 
in ceremonies in the Mexican countryside include subway personnel, journal-
ists, and artists of native blood who live in Mexico City.
In addition to variations in lifestyles, indigenous traditions vary in their adap-
tations to dominant religions. Often native practices have become interwoven 
with those of global religions, such as Buddhism, Islam, and Christianity. In 
Southeast Asia, household Buddhist shrines are almost identical to the spirit 
houses in which the people still make offerings to honor the local spirits. In 
Africa, the spread of Islam and Christianity saw the introduction of new religious 
ideas and practices into indigenous sacred ways. The encounter transformed 
indigenous religious thought and practice but did not supplant it; indigenous 
religions preserved some of their beliefs and ritual practices but also adjusted  
The indigenous community of 
Acoma Pueblo—built on a high 
plateau in New Mexico—live 
in what may be the oldest 
continuously occupied city in the 
United States.
M02_P033-071_CH02.indd   37 20/11/2015   13:34
Living Religions, Tenth Edition, by Mary Pat Fisher and Robin Rinehart. Published by Pearson. Copyright © 2017 by Pearson Education, Inc. 
All Rights Reserved. Pearson Custom Edition.
38  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
to the new sociocultural milieu. The Dahomey tradition from West Africa 
was carried to Haiti by African slaves and called Vodou, from vodu, one of the 
names for the chief nonhuman spirits. Forced by European colonialists to adopt 
Christianity, worshipers of Vodou secretly fused their old gods with their images 
of Catholic saints. More recently, emigrants from Haiti have formed diaspora 
communities of Vodou worshipers in cities such as New York, New Orleans, 
Miami, and Montreal, where Vodou specialists are often called upon to heal sick-
ness and use magic to bring desired changes. In Australia, some Aboriginal peo-
ple are converting to Islam for various reasons. These include honouring their 
roots among ancestors who intermarried with Muslim traders from Indonesian 
islands or cameleers from Afghanistan, political activism against social injustice, 
and the search for a positive identity. Conversion does not necessarily mean 
abandoning their traditional culture. As one convert explains:
Islam recognises tribes and nations. It gives you identity, a purpose. It doesn’t 
just say, “You’re Muslim, that’s it.” It says yes, all Muslims are the same, but 
it does recognise we belong to different tribes and nations, so it doesn’t do what 
Christianity did to a lot of Aboriginal people [which] was try and make them like 
white people. … Islam allows you your identity, your tribe and nation, and that is 
quoted in the Quran.6
Despite their different histories and economic patterns, and their geograph-
ical separation, indigenous sacred ways have some characteristics in common. 
Similarities found among the myths and symbols of geographically separate peo-
ples can be partly accounted for by global diffusion through trade, travel, com-
munications, and other kinds of contact. Perhaps from ancient contact across 
land-bridges that no longer exist, there are similarities between the languages 
of the Tsalagi in the Americas, Tibetans, and the aboriginal Ainu of Japan. There 
are also basic similarities in human experience, such as birth and death, pleasure 
and pain, and wonderment about the cosmos and our place in it. Cognitive sci-
entists of religion also relate similarities in symbols and stories to shared human 
environmental conditions and the way the human mind functions. For instance, 
in all cultures, people tend to project human qualities onto plants, animals, and 
inanimate things and cross boundaries of this-worldly logic, developing belief 
in beings or forces that operate in extraordinary ways in the midst of ordinary 
time and space. People’s relationships to, and the concepts surrounding, these 
symbols are not inevitably the same. Nevertheless, the following sections look 
at some recurring themes in the spiritual ways of diverse indigenous cultures. 
These tendencies are not unique to indigenous religions, for they appear in other 
religions as well, but they may be particularly prominent in indigenous lifeways.
The circle of right relationships
What is the circle of right relationships?
For many indigenous peoples, everything in the cosmos is intimately interre-
lated. These interrelationships originate in the way everything was created. To 
Australian Aborigines, before time began there was land, but it was flat and 
devoid of any features. Powerful ancestral beings came forth from beneath the 
surface and began moving around, shaping the land as they moved across it. In 
this “Dreamtime,” the ancestral figures also created groups of humans to take 
care of the places that had been created. The people thus feel that they belong 
to their native place in an eternal sacred relationship.
A symbol of unity among the parts of this sacred reality is a circle. This is not 
used by all indigenous people; the Navajo, for instance, regard a completed cir-
cle as stifling and restrictive. However, many other indigenous peoples hold the 
circle sacred because it is infinite—it has no beginning, no end. Time is circular 
rather than linear, for it keeps coming back to the same place. Life revolves 
around the generational cycles of birth, youth, maturity, and physical death, 
M02_P033-071_CH02.indd   38 20/11/2015   13:34
Living Religions, Tenth Edition, by Mary Pat Fisher and Robin Rinehart. Published by Pearson. Copyright © 2017 by Pearson Education, Inc. 
All Rights Reserved. Pearson Custom Edition.
INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  39
the return of the seasons, the cyclical movements of the moon, sun, stars, and 
planets. Rituals such as rites of passage may be performed to help keep these 
cycles in balance.
To maintain the natural balance of the circles of existence, most indigenous 
peoples have traditionally been taught that they must develop right relation-
ships with everything that is. Their relatives include the unseen world of spirits, 
the land and weather, the people and creatures, and the power within.
Relationships with spirit
The cosmos is thought to contain and be affected by numerous divinities, spir-
its, and also ancestors. For many indigenous groups, ancestors are the closest 
and most important spirits. Death is not an end; connection continues between 
the spirit of the dead person and the living relatives. To the Nankani of north-
ern Ghana, ancestors have been delegated the power to take care of the needs 
and quarrels of their descendants, since they know and understand them well. 
For the Amasiri people of southeast Nigeria, the relationship of ancestors with 
the living is so intimate that the dead person may be buried in the floor of the 
home. During a funeral, mourners beg the parent not to forget them—to always 
remember and protect them.
Traditional Africans understand that the person is not an individual, but a 
composite of many souls—the spirits of one’s parents and ancestors—resonating 
to their feelings. Rev. William Kingsley Opoku, International Coordinator of the 
African Council for Spiritual Churches, says:
Our ancestors are our saints. Christian missionaries who came here wanted us to 
pray to their saints, their dead people. But what about our saints? … If you are 
grateful to your ancestors, then you have blessings from your grandmother, your 
grandfather, who brought you forth.7
Continued communication with the “living dead” (ancestors who have died 
within living memory) may include libation rituals in which food and drink 
are offered to the ancestors, acknowledging that they are still in a sense living 
and engaged with the people’s lives. For the Nankani, female ancestors are 
represented by pots within the house decorated with bangles; male ancestors 
are represented by pots placed outside the house. The guidance and protection 
of the ancestors is essential. Failure to keep in touch with them is a dangerous 
oversight, which may bring misfortunes to the family.
Among the gentle Efe pygmies of 
the Ituri Forest in the Democratic 
Republic of Congo (formerly 
Zaire), children learn to value 
the circle by playing the “circle 
game.” With feet making a circle, 
each child names a circular 
object and then an expression 
of roundness (the family circle, 
togetherness, “a complete 
rainbow”).
M02_P033-071_CH02.indd   39 20/11/2015   13:34
Living Religions, Tenth Edition, by Mary Pat Fisher and Robin Rinehart. Published by Pearson. Copyright © 2017 by Pearson Education, Inc. 
All Rights Reserved. Pearson Custom Edition.
40  INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS
Many unseen powers are perceived to be at work in the material world. In 
addition to ancestors, some of these are perceived without form, as mysterious 
presences, who may be benevolent or malevolent. Others are perceived as hav-
ing more definite, albeit invisible, forms and personalities. These may include 
deities with human-like personalities, the nature spirits of special local places, 
such as venerable trees and mountains, animal spirit helpers, personified ele-
mental forces, or the nagas, known to the traditional peoples of Nepal as invisible 
serpentine spirits who control the circulation of water in the world and also 
within our bodies.
The Dagara of Burkina Faso in West Africa are familiar with the kontombili, 
who look like humans but are only about one foot (thirty centimeters) tall, 
because of the humble way they express their spiritual power. Other West 
African groups, descendants of ancient hierarchical civilizations, recognize a 
great pantheon of deities, the orisa or vodu, each the object of special worship. 
The orisa are embodiments of the dynamic forces in life, such as Oya, powerful 
goddess of change, experienced in winds; Osun, orisa of fresh waters, associat-
ed with sweetness, healing, love, fertility, and prosperity; Olokun, ruler of the 
mysterious depths of consciousness; Shango, a former king who is now honored 
as the stormy god of electricity and genius; Ifa, god of wisdom; and Obatala, 
the source of creativity, warmth, and enlightenment. At the beginning of time, 
in Yoruba cosmology, there was only one godhead, described by psychologist 
Clyde Ford as “a beingless being, a dimensionless point, an infinite container 
of everything, including itself.”8 According to the mythology, this being was 
smashed by a boulder pushed down by a rebellious slave, and broke into hun-
dreds of fragments, each of which became an orisa. According to some analysts, 
orisa can also be seen as archetypes of traits existing within the human psyche. 
Their ultimate purpose—and that of those who pay attention to them as inner 
forces—is to return to that presumed original state of wholeness.
Australian Aborigines 
understand their environment as 
concentric fields of subtle energies. 
(Nym Bunduk, 1907–1974, 
Snakes and Emu.)
M02_P033-071_CH02.indd   40 20/11/2015   13:34
Living Religions, Tenth Edition, by Mary Pat Fisher and Robin Rinehart. Published by Pearson. Copyright © 2017 by Pearson Education, Inc. 
All Rights Reserved. Pearson Custom Edition.
INDIGENOUS SACRED WAYS  41
Many indigenous traditions also worship a 
Supreme Being who they believe created the cos-
mos. This being is known by the Lakota as “Great 
Mysterious” or “Great Spirit.” African names for 
the being are attributes, such as “All-powerful,” 
“Creator,” “the one who is met everywhere,” 
“the one who exists by himself,” or “the one who 
began the forest.” To traditional Buryats of Russia, 
the chief power in the world is the eternally blue 
sky, Tengry. The Supreme Being is often referred 
to by male pronouns, but in some groups the 
Supreme Being is a female. Some tribes of the 
southwestern United States call her “Changing 
Woman”—sometimes young, sometimes old, the 
mother of the earth, associated with women’s 
reproductive cycles and the mystery of birth, the 
creatrix. Many traditional languages make no 
distinction between male and female pronouns, 
and some see the divine as androgynous, a force 
arising from the interaction of male and female 
aspects of the universe. In the religions of Africa, 
the Supreme Being—whether singular or plural—
may have human-like qualities, but no gender. 
This great Source is so awesome that no images 
are used to represent it. An Inuit spiritual adept 
described his people’s experience of:
a power that we call Sila, which is not to be explained in simple words. A great 
spirit, supporting the world and the weather and all life on earth, a spirit so 
mighty that [what it says] to mankind is not through common words, but by 
storm and snow and rain and the fury of the sea; all the forces of nature that 
men fear. But Sila has also another way of [communicating]; by sunlight and 
calm of the sea, and little children innocently at play, themselves understanding 
nothing. … When all is well, Sila sends no message to mankind, but withdraws 
into endless nothingness, apart.9
African myths suggest that the High God was originally so close to humans 
that they became disrespectful. The All-powerful was like the sky, they say, 
which was once so close that children wiped their dirty hands on it, and women 
(blamed by men for the withdrawal) broke off pieces for soup and bumped it 
with their sticks when pounding grain. Although southern and central Africans 
believe in a high being who presides over the universe, including less powerful 
spirits, they consider this being either too distant, too powerful, or too dangerous 
to worship or call on for help.
It cannot therefore be said that indigenous concepts of, and attitudes toward, 
a Supreme Being are necessarily the same as that which Western monotheistic 
religions refer to as God or Allah. In the religions of Africa, much more emphasis 
tends to be placed on the transcendent dimensions of everyday life and doing 
what is spiritually necessary to keep life going normally. The spirits are thought 
to be available to those who seek them as helpers, as intermediaries between 
the people and the power, and as teachers. A right relationship with these 
spirit beings can be a sacred partnership. Seekers respect and learn from them;  
they also purify themselves in order to engage their services for the good of the 
people.
Teachings about the spirits also help the people to understand how they 
should live together in …
				    	
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