MP3 Jerome Kills Small - Inikagapi - Celebration Of Life Sweat lodge inipi
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Song As The Ceremonial Pipes Are Filled (Translation)
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Song As The Ceremonial Pipes Are Filled (Sung)
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Song As The Stones Are Brought Into The Inipi (Translation)
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Song As The Stones Are Brought Into The Inipi (Sung)
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First Door, Seven Directions Song (Translation)
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First Door, Seven Directions Song (Sung)
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Friend, It Is I Who Is Coming (Translation)
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Friend, It Is I Who Is Coming (Sung)
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I Pray To âGreat Spiritâ First (Translation)
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I Pray To âGreat Spiritâ First (Sung)
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Second Door, Great Spirit, Grandfather (Translation)
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Second Door, Great Spirit, Grandfather (Sung)
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Third Door, Grandfather I Send You My Voice (Translation)
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Grandfather Have Compassion On Me (Sung)
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Third Door, Grandfather I Send You My Voice (Translation)
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Third Door, Grandfather I Send You My Voice (Sung)
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Grandfather, Look My Way (Translation)
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Grandfather, Look My Way (Sung)
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They Are Bringing You A Sacred Pipe (Translation)
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They Are Bringing You A Sacred Pipe (Sung)
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Fourth Door, Grandfather You Have Pleased Me (Translation)
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Fourth Door, Grandfather You Have Pleased Me (Sung)
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Grandfatherâs Rituals Have Been Given (Translation)
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Grandfatherâs Rituals Have Been Given (Sung)
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Evening Song For Gratitiude (Translation)
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Evening Song For Gratitiude (Sung)
Similar Videos: Jerome Kills Small
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Lakota sweat lodge songs
26 MP3 Songs
SPIRITUAL: Spirituals, WORLD: Native American
Details:
Jerome Kills Small, Red Robin, of Pine Ridge, South Dakota is Oglala Sioux. Jerome's great grandfather's name was Old Man Afraid of His Horses. He had four sons; Young Man Afraid of His Horses, Red Star, Black Mountain Sheep and Clown Horse. Red Star is the father of Jerome's Mother. Old Man Afraid of His Horses chose his son's names by experiences he had during Hanbleceya (vision quest ceremony) at Grey Horn Butte (known as Devil's Tower). He is the oldest of eight children and was always raised by his grandparents. He was blind as a child until a medicine man, Jess Steed, healed his eyes. He attended Holy Rosary Mission and spent summer vacations in Porcupine, South Dakota. Originally the Oglala occupied land west of the Missouri to the Big Horn Mountains south to the Platt River and north to Montana. The Lakota treaty land gradually shrank to the Black Hills area for a short time until the discovery of gold and then the reservation system was developed. Today, the reservation is next to the Badlands. The terrain consists of range, valleys, meadows great for alfalfa, fields of corn and sugar beets, creeks and streams and the hilly higher altitudes have lots of pine trees.
Jerome is the recipient of the Distinguished Scholar Award from South Dakota Humanities Council, Reconciliation Award from the Governor of South Dakota, George Nickleson, University of South Dakota Poet of the Year in 1994, and he has awards and certificates for speaking at Red Road Retreat and the Building Bridges Conference. He has been in several videos for Iowa State University.
Jerome has many talents and as a traditional storyteller and oral historian, he presents workshops for both adults and children. Presently he portrays Tecumseh and Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman, the first medicine doctor of the Lakota people, for the Nebraska and South Dakota Speaker's Bureau and Chautauqua Series. He knows the origins and stories behind the flag song, patriotic songs of the Lakota, ceremonial songs, songs of the Little Big Horn, Wounded Knee and Big Foot. He is an arena director, conducts ceremonies, and explains cultural protocol. He makes drums and drum sticks, does feather work, made the staff for the first sun dance at Vermillion and constructs sweat lodges. Jerome and his wife grow and harvest foods and medicines in the Lakota tradition.
26 MP3 Songs
SPIRITUAL: Spirituals, WORLD: Native American
Details:
Jerome Kills Small, Red Robin, of Pine Ridge, South Dakota is Oglala Sioux. Jerome's great grandfather's name was Old Man Afraid of His Horses. He had four sons; Young Man Afraid of His Horses, Red Star, Black Mountain Sheep and Clown Horse. Red Star is the father of Jerome's Mother. Old Man Afraid of His Horses chose his son's names by experiences he had during Hanbleceya (vision quest ceremony) at Grey Horn Butte (known as Devil's Tower). He is the oldest of eight children and was always raised by his grandparents. He was blind as a child until a medicine man, Jess Steed, healed his eyes. He attended Holy Rosary Mission and spent summer vacations in Porcupine, South Dakota. Originally the Oglala occupied land west of the Missouri to the Big Horn Mountains south to the Platt River and north to Montana. The Lakota treaty land gradually shrank to the Black Hills area for a short time until the discovery of gold and then the reservation system was developed. Today, the reservation is next to the Badlands. The terrain consists of range, valleys, meadows great for alfalfa, fields of corn and sugar beets, creeks and streams and the hilly higher altitudes have lots of pine trees.
Jerome is the recipient of the Distinguished Scholar Award from South Dakota Humanities Council, Reconciliation Award from the Governor of South Dakota, George Nickleson, University of South Dakota Poet of the Year in 1994, and he has awards and certificates for speaking at Red Road Retreat and the Building Bridges Conference. He has been in several videos for Iowa State University.
Jerome has many talents and as a traditional storyteller and oral historian, he presents workshops for both adults and children. Presently he portrays Tecumseh and Dr. Charles Alexander Eastman, the first medicine doctor of the Lakota people, for the Nebraska and South Dakota Speaker's Bureau and Chautauqua Series. He knows the origins and stories behind the flag song, patriotic songs of the Lakota, ceremonial songs, songs of the Little Big Horn, Wounded Knee and Big Foot. He is an arena director, conducts ceremonies, and explains cultural protocol. He makes drums and drum sticks, does feather work, made the staff for the first sun dance at Vermillion and constructs sweat lodges. Jerome and his wife grow and harvest foods and medicines in the Lakota tradition.
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