Wakan: Difference between revisions

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<blockquote class="definition">'''Wakan''' is a term used by the plains Sioux to refer to the important principle of [[Force]].</blockquote>
<blockquote class="definition">'''Wakan''' (or wakonda) <ref>Rogers, Spencer L. The Shaman: His Symbols and His Healing Power. Illinois: Charles Thomas Publishers, 1982.</ref> is a term used by the plains Sioux and is syncretic with the LP concept of [[Force]].</blockquote>


==Syncretic Terms==
==Syncretic Terms==
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[[category:terms]][[Is a syncretic term::Force| ]]
[[category:terms]]
[[Is a syncretic term::Force| ]]

Latest revision as of 15:45, 19 December 2022

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Wakan (or wakonda) [1] is a term used by the plains Sioux and is syncretic with the LP concept of Force.

Syncretic Terms

Force > Imagination, Mana, Miwi, Nu Shug, Orenda, Perspective, Prana, Wakan, Will, Yang, Zaki

Notes

Wakan is will, the force of will, action in the world. "Wakan is not a mystery, something ethereal to be worshipped in the abstract. When Black Elk sings the western grandfather's song for Neihard--"The thunder nation is appearing, may you behold" -- his words reflect the emergence of warrior energy in the people.....Black Elk...learns that instead of passively receiving protection from the spirits, the must seize the power to live."[2] It is the warrior energy, the power available to all people to take responsibility and act/change the world. The will and energy to change the world. The warrior's job, in addition to defense, is to invoke wakan energy in the people.

Wakan is a basic principle, antagonistic to notions of the "Great Spirit" which "was either a missionary imposition or an oversimplification of Lakota belief offered by elders attempting to explain their spirituality to non-Indians. When a person prays, he or she must already have a firm resolve and a basic plan. The spirits can only supply the tools, not the will or the purpose, and man must initiate the relationship." [3]

Though wakan is usually translated as 'holy,' 'sacred,' or 'mysterious,' and Wakan Tanka is usually taken to mean 'Great Mystery or 'God,' the term probably [means] an all-suffusing cosmic energy obtained through personal visions." [4]<ref>c.f. Fabric of Consciousness.

Footnotes

  1. Rogers, Spencer L. The Shaman: His Symbols and His Healing Power. Illinois: Charles Thomas Publishers, 1982.
  2. Rice, Julian. Before the Great Spirit: The Many Faces of Sioux Spirituality. University of New Mexico, 1998. p. 23 https://amzn.to/2C9fM5E.
  3. Rice, Julian. Before the Great Spirit: The Many Faces of Sioux Spirituality. University of New Mexico, 1998. p. 29.
  4. Rice, Julian. Before the Great Spirit: The Many Faces of Sioux Spirituality. University of New Mexico, 1998. p 21. https://amzn.to/2C9fM5E.