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  2. Rainmaking (ritual) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainmaking_(ritual)

    A rain dance being performed in Harar, Eastern Ethiopia Rain dance, ca. 1920 (from the Potawatomi agency, presumably Prairie Band Potawatomi people) Rainmaking is a weather modification ritual that attempts to invoke rain. It is based on the belief that humans can influence nature, spirits, or the ancestors who withhold or bring rain. [1]

  3. Prayer stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_stick

    Ethiopian mequamia. In the rituals of the Puebloan people of the American Southwest contain many prayers; thus the Zuñi have prayers for food, health, and rain. Prayer-sticks, that is sticks with feathers attached as supplicatory offerings to the "spirits," were largely used by the Pueblo.

  4. Eagle dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_dance

    These are sacred for some Native Americans in the United States because they view it as a way of how their prayers are brought to heaven. [2] Some Native Americans believe that wearing eagle feathers is a great honor. They give these to boys upon maturity. The handling of feathers is considered crucial during the Eagle Dance.

  5. Category:Rainmaking (ritual) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Rainmaking_(ritual)

    Articles relating to rainmaking rituals, weather modification rituals that attempt to invoke rain. Among the best known examples of weather modification rituals are North American rain dances, historically performed by many Native American tribes, particularly in the Southwestern United States.

  6. Rainmaking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainmaking

    The rain prayer (Arabic: صلاة الاستسقاء; ṣalāt al-istisqa, "rain request prayer") is a sunnah salah (Islamic prayer) for requesting and seeking rain water from God. A Muslim prayer offered to God seeking rain water. Indeed, the Muslim ummah regard the rain as a great divine blessing, and every time it rains showers, people ...

  7. Angak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angak

    Dances by Angak kachinas are said to bring rain, particularly gentle rainfalls, to help crop growth in the relatively arid areas of the Hopi homelands in the desert southwest. [ 2 ] [ 6 ] When rain does come, Hopi oral legend says it is the ancestor kachinas letting down their long hair across the mesas to provide life-giving rain to take care ...

  8. Cherokee spiritual beliefs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_spiritual_beliefs

    ᏗᎵᏍᏙᏗ "dilsdohdi" [1] the "water spider" is said to have first brought fire to the inhabitants of the earth in the basket on her back. [2]Cherokee spiritual beliefs are held in common among the Cherokee people – Native American peoples who are Indigenous to the Southeastern Woodlands, and today live primarily in communities in North Carolina (the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians ...

  9. Ojibwe religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ojibwe_religion

    The sweat lodge ceremony practised by Lakota groups have since spread widely among Native Americans. [286] The scholar of religion Suzanne Owen noted that she had seen Ojibwe people using the Lakota term mitakuye oyasin (all my relations) as a means of encapsulating Native American perspectives on life more broadly. [286]