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Shamanism

From Wikitheism
Shamanism
Family Indigenous / Comparative religious category
Origin region Many regions; term widely applied to ritual specialists in Indigenous and traditional societies
Founding period Ancient and continuing; modern and neo-shamanic forms also exist
Estimated adherents No single membership body; practices exist in many traditional and modern contexts.

Shamanism is a broad comparative term for traditions involving ritual specialists who enter altered states, communicate with spirits, heal, divine, or mediate between human communities and unseen powers.

Overview

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Shamanism is not one unified religion. The term has been applied to many Indigenous and traditional practices across Siberia, Central Asia, the Americas, the Arctic, and other regions. Because the term can be overgeneralized, neutral documentation should distinguish local traditions from modern neo-shamanic adaptations and avoid treating all Indigenous religions as the same.

Key beliefs

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  • The presence of spirits, ancestors, animal powers, or unseen beings in many local traditions
  • Ritual specialists may mediate between human and spirit worlds
  • Healing, protection, divination, and soul or life-force restoration
  • Sacred landscapes, animals, plants, songs, and ritual objects
  • Local variation is essential; beliefs differ widely by people and place

Practices

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  • Trance, drumming, chanting, dancing, or visionary journeying in some traditions
  • Healing rituals, divination, and spirit negotiation
  • Use of ritual clothing, drums, rattles, masks, or sacred objects
  • Initiation, apprenticeship, and community recognition
  • Seasonal, hunting, ancestral, or local ceremonies

Places of worship

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  • Homes, camps, sacred landscapes, community spaces, ritual lodges, forests, mountains, and other local sites

Sacred texts

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  • Many shamanic traditions are oral and practical rather than text-centered; modern neo-shamanic movements may use books and workshops

Holidays and observances

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  • Observances are local and may follow seasonal, ancestral, hunting, healing, or community calendars
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See also

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