Sacred Connection News

Sananga

The word ‘sananga’ refers to a number of different traditional eye drops used in some Amazonian cultures. Medicinal eye drops are used by Amazonian peoples such as the Matsés, Huni Kuin, Yawanawá and Ticuna for their wide-ranging healing properties, and as a source of spiritual exploration. The reported benefits of sananga include the treatment of […]

How to use Rapé

100 Ways to Blow Rapé There are many ways to blow Rapé: Long and slow, quick and sharp, and everything in between. You will soon learn to judge what is most appropriate, depending on your particular style or the needs of the person you are serving. A short, quick blow of Rapé has more of […]

The Puyanawa tribe

The Puyanawa tribe Entry to the Puyanawa tribal lands. Rapé! Raqui, protector of their culture. Youngster are young everywhere. Children enjoying. Well behaved… Little chief! Their ceremonial lodge. Dancing… And singing… Tradition. The main protectors of their culture and religion. Beautiful bead work. Filming. Elegance… Relaxing. Circular tribal dance. Pensative. Observing the drone. A house. […]

Yawanawa Festival

  The pristine Gregorio River, highway to the Yawanawá. Filling the engine at the gas station. Cruising on the river. Arrival at Nova Esperança where the festival is held. Opening the games. A clay pot with a bamboo, used for events but also by shamans for healing. Yawanawá warrior. Circular dancing, somethings exist in all […]

What is Rapé?

The word Rapé explained Rapé (pronounced “ha-pay”) is a shamanic and sacred tobacco-based snuff used across Amazonian indigenous groups. Searching online this question is most of the time answered focusing on the French origin of the word rapé. Maybe ingredients are mentioned: powdered tobacco, ashes and maybe some other plants. To a certain extent that […]

Sacred Connection Sacred Snuff TI Yawanawá Gregorio River

A day in the forest with the Yawanawá tribe.

A day in the forest with the Yawanawá tribe. The sandy banks of the pristine Gregorio River. Samauma, the queen of the forest. Yawanawá man consecrating his Rumã (rapé) under the Samauma. Macaw enjoying a moments rest. View from Nova Esperança village over the forest. Tsunu bark harvested to make ash for Rapé. Cacique (chief) […]

Amazon tribe creates 500-page traditional medicine encyclopedia

In one of the great tragedies of our age, indigenous traditions, stories, cultures and knowledge are winking out across the world. Whole languages and mythologies are vanishing, and in some cases even entire indigenous groups are falling into extinction. This is what makes the news that a tribe in the Amazon—the Matsés peoples of Brazil […]

Tsunu Sacred Snuff Rapé Yawanawá

Sacred Ashes

Ashes are an essential ingredient in Sacred Rapé Snuff. They are burned from a variety of trees like Tsunu, Parica, Murici and others.

The Origin of Rapé: Yawanawá Legend and Spiritual Roots

Where does rapé come from? Among the many sacred stories passed down through generations of Indigenous peoples in the Amazon, the Yawanawá origin myth of rapé is perhaps one of the most powerful. It reveals not only how this sacred shamanic snuff came to Earth, but also why it holds such an essential place in […]

War, petroleum, and profit: with their backs against a cliff, the U’wa mobilize against oil extraction

By Jake Ling / Intercontinental Cry Featured image: Inside the United U’wa Resguardo on the cloud forests along the Colombia-Venezuela border. Photo: Jake Ling This is the final installment of “The Guardians of Mother Earth,” Intercontinental Cry’s four-part series examining the Indigenous U’wa struggle for peace in Colombia. The vast wetland savanna called Los Llanos stretches thousands of […]