Lynn Louise Says

How reading about their Sioux Spiritual Belief Will Change the Way You Think About the Spiritual, Christian belief of Oneness

June 18, 2022


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Nice looking handy work, right? 



 

Hear/Enjoy the “What do you do when you can’t sleep” song!



When you’re finished listening to the music, go ahead and click on any/all of the following links/info! Crazy Horse info! Crazy Horse was born to parents from two different bands of the Lakota division of the Sioux, his father being an Oglala and his mother a Miniconjou.
Then read up on the Sioux Spiritual belief Is the Christian and Sioux concept of Oneness the same?
Sioux economy . . .Then read up on Sioux Wars
Some History The Sioux tribe originally lived as Woodland Indians along the upper Mississippi in Minnesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. The were forced west by the French and their Chippewa allies. During the migration west to the Great Plains the tribe split into three divisions - the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota.
Crazy Horse FeathersHow do you like this Crazy Horse pic? When South Dakota became a state in 1889, the Great Sioux Reservation was divided into five smaller reservations (Pine Ridge, Rosebud, Lower Brule, Cheyenne River, and Standing Rock). The 2010 U.S. Census stated that 170,110 individuals identified as Sioux at that time, either solely or in combination with another race. Roughly half of these people live on reservations. The most populous Sioux reservation is the Oglala Lakota reservation of Pine Ridge in the southwest corner of South Dakota, which in 2010 was home to 18,824 people (16,906 of whom identified as Native American). Many Sioux have migrated to metropolitan areas, and some have found flourishing urban Native American communities, particularly in Chicago and Minneapolis.

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