Inter-Tribal Medicine Man Red Elk touched on such topics as Bigfoot,
Thunderbirds, earth changes, Mel's Hole, and Hopi prophecy. He said he
saw Thunderbirds during a time travel experience, and there are several
different types, resembling larger versions of eagles. The Three
Mountains area in Saskatchewan is their breeding ground said Red Elk,
who'd planned to go there to call the birds back.
Regarding earth
changes, people's negative energies contribute to the unprecedented
storms, he explained. He's had a vision of Mount Rainier erupting, as
well as a huge tsunami sliding Seattle into Puget Sound. The destructive
visions of Hopi prophecy will come to pass unless 84%-87% of the
world's population "get right with the creator," Red Elk declared.
He
spoke of his visit to Mel's Hole across the Yakima River, many years
ago. Taken there by his father, he described the hole as around 9 ft.
around and somewhere between 24â"28 miles deep. It's a blowhole for
Mount Rainier, he added. Red Elk also shared his grandsons' encounter
with intelligent Bigfoot and that the creatures could be called by
banging on a tree in a certain manner.
Biography:
Red Elk
is an Inter-Tribal Medicine Man. He is a self-described half-breed
Native American / white, of both the BlackFeet and Shoshoni Nations, as
well as part Irish and French. He is a member of the Heyoka (hi - OH -
kah) Society, a Contrarian group of Native Americans who do not follow
the normal path of mankind. Red Elk is one of twelve Inner Heyoka
members. He is one of the nine members of the Red Web Society who are
working to bring understanding of many hidden sacred teachings to the
people of Earth. He is also an honorary member of the Cherokee Nations
Twisted Hair Society.
In 1973 Red Elk went on a 69 day fast,
taking water, juices, and vitamins. On or about the 49th day Red Elk
began to experience a vision about the future. For a little more than an
hour each day for 3 days Red Elk saw and experienced a future that he
didn't want to see. The East and West coasts of America subside, a huge
meteor strikes the Atlantic, unimaginably great earthquakes rip apart
the earth as massive volcanic eruptions darken the skies and blacken the
land. But these tribulations pale in comparison to what soon follows as
the earth's axis flips and ensuing floods and 300 mile per hour winds
savagely destroy buildings, people, ecosystems and entire nations.
Red
Elk believes that there is Hope and that we have time to change and
prepare... But the first thing we must change is ourselves.
Wikipedia
The
phrase "Earth Changes" was coined by the American psychic Edgar Cayce
to refer to the belief that the world will soon enter on a series of
cataclysmic events causing major alterations in human life on the
planet.
This includes "natural events" (such as major
earthquakes, the melting of the polar ice caps, a pole shift of the
planetary axis, major weather events, solar flares and so on) as well as
huge changes of the local and global social, economical and political
systems.
The Hopi maintain a complex religious and mythological
tradition stretching back over centuries. However, it is difficult to
definitively state what all Hopis as a group believe. Like the oral
traditions of many other societies, Hopi mythology is not always told
consistently and each Hopi mesa, or even each village, may have its own
version of a particular story. But, "in essence the variants of the Hopi
myth bear marked similarity to one another." It is also not clear that
those stories which are told to non-Hopis, such as anthropologists and
ethnographers, represent genuine Hopi beliefs or are merely stories told
to the curious while keeping safe the Hopi's more sacred doctrines. As
folklorist Harold Courlander states, "there is a Hopi reticence about
discussing matters that could be considered ritual secrets or
religion-oriented traditions." David Roberts continues that "the secrecy
that lies at the heart of Puebloan [including Hopi] life...long
predates European contact, forming an intrinsic feature of the culture."
In addition, the Hopis have always been willing to assimilate foreign
ideas into their cosmology if they are proven effective for such
practical necessities as bringing rain. As such, the Hopi had at least
some contact with Europeans beginning the 16th century, and some believe
that European Christian traditions may have entered into Hopi cosmology
at some point. Indeed, Spanish missions were built in several Hopi
villages starting in 1629 and were in operation until the Pueblo Revolt
of 1680. However, after the revolt, it was the Hopi alone of all the
Pueblo tribes who kept the Spanish out of their villages permanently,
and regular contact with whites did not begin again until nearly two
centuries later
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