enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Navajo medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navajo_medicine

    Navajo Nation Health Foundations was run in Ganado solely by Navajo people. In expressing identity in the medical community, the Navajo Nation took advantage of the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act to create the Navajo Health Systems Agency in 1975, being the only American Indian group to do so during that time.

  3. Navajo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navajo

    The Navajo are speakers of a Na-Dené Southern Athabaskan language which they call Diné bizaad (lit. 'People's language'). The term Navajo comes from Spanish missionaries and historians who referred to the Pueblo Indians through this term, although they referred to themselves as the Diné, meaning '(the) people'. [7]

  4. Navajo song ceremonial complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navajo_song_ceremonial_complex

    The Navajo song ceremonial complex is a spiritual practice used by certain Navajo ceremonial people to restore and maintain balance and harmony in the lives of the people. One half of the ceremonial complex is the Blessing Way, while the other half is the Enemy Way ( Anaʼí Ndááʼ ).

  5. Deoné Newell is a Diné/Black life coach, breathwork facilitator and BIPOC wellness advocate. She grew up on the Navajo Nation and in Northern California, and has incorporated Diné (or Navajo ...

  6. Navajo breath-work facilitator Deoné Newell aims to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/navajo-breath-facilitator...

    Newell aims to create more cultural authenticity in the wellness space.

  7. Dinétah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinétah

    The traditional Navajo creation story centers on the area, and Navajo place names within the region reflect its role in Navajo mythology. While Dinétah generally refers to a large geographical area, the heart of the region is regarded to be the canyons of the Largo and Carrizo washes, south of the San Juan River in New Mexico.

  8. Stereotypes. Taboos. Critics. This Navajo cultural advisor is ...

    www.aol.com/news/stereotypes-taboos-critics...

    Navajo cultural advisor George R. Joe explains the painful history, and present-day controversies, that shaped his work on AMC crime drama 'Dark Winds.' Stereotypes. Taboos.

  9. Chindi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chindi

    In Navajo religious belief, a chindi (Navajo: chʼį́įdii) is the miasma left behind after a person dies, believed to leave the body with the deceased's last breath.It is everything that was negative about the person’s life; pain, fear, anger, disappointment, dissatisfaction, resentment, and rejection as the "residue that man has been unable to bring into universal harmony". [1]