Below are the best resources we could find featuring agnes baker pilgrim about indigenous well being.
CLEAR ALL
13 Indigenous women elders, shamans and medicine women from around the world, have been called together to share their sacred wisdom and practices.
We are thirteen indigenous grandmothers. . . .
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Transcribed from an interview with one of the most important voices of the First Nation and of the world, Grandma Aggie’s stories and advice mesmerize and captivate while providing a blueprint for how inhabitants of the earth can live together in harmony and peace.
“Grandma Aggie” is here to help us honor the water. She tells the gathered crowd of two hundred that the water hears us when we thank it for cleaning us and quenching our thirst. “We are all water babies”, she says, reminding us that we are composed largely of water.
Agnes Baker Pilgrim talks of her early life and family, of her Takelma heritage, of the Sacred Salmon Ceremony, of going to Southern Oregon University and graduating at age 61, about the Circle of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers and about water, life and the earth.
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Agnes Baker-Pilgrim is the granddaughter of George Harney, a full-blooded Takelma who was the first elected Chief of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians.
Excerpt from a teaching circle of Grandmother Agnes who is a presenter at the SEED Institute’s Wisdom from the Origins conference, September 13 through 17th in ABQ, New Mexico.
The eldest living member of her tribe, the Takelma Indians of southwest Oregon, Agnes Baker-Pilgrim is a world-renowned spiritual leader, spokesperson and member of the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers, and keeper of the Sacred Salmon Ceremony—a tradition that she revived...
Agnes Pilgrim, Council of 13 Grandmas.
Photo Credit: Flickr user Sam Beebe / Distributed under the CC BY 2.0 Generic license