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St. Anthony's Church and School is a Romanesque Revival style church and an accompanying school at 514 West Main Street and 103 North 6th Street in Cedar Rapids, Nebraska within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Omaha.
Traditional Sámi spiritual practices and beliefs are based on a type of animism, polytheism, and what anthropologists may consider shamanism. The religious traditions can vary considerably from region to region within Sápmi .
Downtown Cedar Rapids: Main Street looking east from 4th Street Location of Cedar Rapids, Nebraska Coordinates: 41°33′32″N 98°08′57″W / 41.55889°N 98.14917°W / 41.55889; -98
The festival is run by the organization Isogaisa with Ronald Kvernmo as its director. Kvernmo is a member of the Sami community and is an author, cultural worker and shamanic practitioner who both studied Sami religion academically at University of Tromsø and attended the Saivo Sjamanskole [1] run by author and shaman Ailo Gaup.
The Saami Council is a voluntary, non-governmental organization of the Sámi people made up of nine Sámi member organizations from Finland, Norway, Russia, and Sweden. Since the founding of the Nordic Saami Council in 1956, among the first indigenous peoples' organizations, the Saami Council has actively dealt with Sámi public policy tasks.
Along Lime Creek immediately southeast of the center of Section 15, Township 5 North, Range 26 West [43 40°23′58″N 100°15′35″W / 40.399444°N 100.259722°W / 40.399444; -100.259722 ( Red Smoke Archeological
This area is also known as the Sámi core area, and Sámi and Norwegian are co-equal administrative languages here. According to the Swedish Sámi Parliament, estimates of the size of the Sámi population of Sweden ranges from 20,000 to 40,000. [174] As of 2021, 9,226 people were registered to vote in elections to the Swedish Sámi Parliament ...
In the Kingdoms of Denmark-Norway, the Sami religion was banned on pain of death as witchcraft. During the 17th-century, the persecution of the followers of Sami religion were more intensely persecuted than before by Christian missionaries, and several Sami were persecuted for sorcery because they practiced the Sami religion. [2]