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  2. Zemi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zemi

    The bowl atop the figure's head was used to hold cohoba during rituals. [1] Taino Zemi mask from Walters Art Museum. A zemi or cemi (Taíno: semi [sÉ›mi]) [2] was a deity or ancestral spirit, and a sculptural object housing the spirit, among the Taíno people of the Caribbean. [3] Cemi’no or Zemi’no is a plural word for the spirits.

  3. Cohoba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohoba

    Cohoba is a Taíno transliteration for a ceremony in which the ground seeds of the cojóbana tree (Anadenanthera spp.) were inhaled, the Y-shaped nasal snuff tube used to inhale the substance, and the psychoactive drug that was inhaled.

  4. Dominican art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominican_Art

    Taino Zemi – Left Side, circa 800 AD and 1500 AD. For millennia, the predominant inhabitants of Ayíti/Quisqueya were the Taíno civilization. They were an Arawak people indigenous to the Caribbean islands, whose ancestors settled some 2,500 years before Columbus, having migrated from South America and replacing an earlier Archaic age people that had been wiped out. [4]

  5. Yúcahu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yúcahu

    Yúcahu [1] —also written as Yucáhuguama Bagua Maórocoti, Yukajú, Yocajú, Yokahu or Yukiyú— was the masculine spirit of fertility in Taíno mythology. [2] He was the supreme deity or zemi of the Pre-Columbian Taíno people along with his mother Atabey who was his feminine counterpart. [3]

  6. File:Taino. Cohoba Spoon, 1200-1500.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Taino._Cohoba_Spoon...

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  7. Guabancex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guabancex

    Guabancex is the zemi or deity of chaos and disorder in Taíno mythology and religion, which was practiced by the Taíno people in Puerto Rico, Hispaniola, Jamaica, and Cuba, as well as by Arawak natives elsewhere in the Caribbean. She was described as a mercurial goddess that controlled the weather, conjuring storms known as "juracán" when ...

  8. 8 McDonald's Menu Items You Can Find Only in Hawaii - AOL

    www.aol.com/8-mcdonalds-menu-items-only...

    1. Rice. Thanks to the heavy Asian influence in Hawaii, rice is on the menu at McDonald's on the islands. It's only available for breakfast, though, which might seem odd to some mainlanders.

  9. Zemi Figures from Vere, Jamaica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zemi_Figures_from_Vere...

    The Zemi Figures from Vere, Jamaica (this area is situated in the modern parish of Clarendon) [1] are an important collection of pre-Columbian wooden figures found in the Carpenters Mountains in Jamaica in the late 18th century.