Author Topic: Trishuwa and the Church of Gaia  (Read 10702 times)

Offline Smart Mule

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Posts: 1074
Trishuwa and the Church of Gaia
« on: January 19, 2013, 07:10:23 pm »
I received a request about this woman.
http://www.gaianstudies.org/Trishuwa.html
"Trishuwa works with the ceremonial forms of communicating with the invisibles of the world-Sweat Lodge, Sacred Pipe, Vision Quest and the Medicine Wheel.  She is Ceremonial Director of the Church of Gaia and founding member of Foundation for Gaian Studies.  As a young child she lived near San Juan Pueblo in New Mexico, along the Rio Grande.  While living there she had her first visions that have guided her throughout her life and are the foundation of her work.  She is of mixed blood; Irish, Cherokee, African American and English.  Her genetic mixture and spiritual visions influenced her to advocate the inclusion of people of all races in indigenous ceremony."

"Trishuwa’s apprenticeship with Sun Bear, the Ojibway holy man who founded The Bear Tribe Medicine Society included working with Vision Quest, Sacred Pipe, Sweat Lodge, the Medicine Wheel, and the indigenous heart language for communicating with all species, the elementals, and the invisible world of Spirit.  Her teaching partnership with Stephen Buhner expanded these ceremonies to include inner-council work focusing on individual awareness which is intuitive and feeling based as well as analytical."

http://www.gaianstudies.org/VisionQuest.html
http://www.gaianstudies.org/Trishuwa_SweatLodge.html
http://www.gaianstudies.org/Trishuwa_SweatLodgeAdv.html




« Last Edit: January 20, 2013, 05:00:18 pm by sky »

Offline educatedindian

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Posts: 4740
Re: Trishuwa and the Church of Gaia
« Reply #1 on: January 20, 2013, 01:30:49 am »
Her twitter account indicates her legal name is Trisha Caldwell.



"Trishuwa" has been on the Dont Pay to Pray list of frauds for many years.
Another old warning on her.

----------
http://www.network54.com/Forum/237458/message/1194437674/Wannabes+to+avoid
Trishuwa

Yet another instant-pipe carrier with a whold gaggle of pseudo-feminist sweat lodge groupies. This one offers a An Earth-Centered Correspondence Course where you "learn how to create your own personalized ceremony." The irony escapes her.

She appears to be one of the few hucksters who hasn?t read our checklist. She offers tarot readings for $75.00,

"Trishuwa consults the Tarot for your healing and enlightenment. Using a Medicine Wheel spread the cards are windows to revelation and wisdom."

You can see how committed this one is to lightening the wanabii wallet by her statement, "those that are called, is an additional cost of $500 ? $700." The site is full of the usual buzzwords that indicate fraud "spiritual intention of the altar and the Pipe Bundle". This one?s pretty arrogant. She claims that sacred ceremonies not relayed to legit NDNz are "each person's birth rite" and later refers to them as each person?s "your bite right" Non-NDNZ say the darndest things!

Read about how caring and loving she was when confronted by REAL NDNZ!
Please support this groups efforts by offering your constructive criticism.

Autumn

  • Guest
Re: Trishuwa and the Church of Gaia
« Reply #2 on: January 20, 2013, 03:34:57 am »
Can you possibly be mixing up two people here? 

It appears to me that Trishuwa and Trish Casimira are two separate people.  They don't look alike, they don't have the same background/teachers, etc., and they live in different areas of the country.

« Last Edit: January 20, 2013, 05:02:06 pm by sky »

Autumn

  • Guest
Re: Trishuwa and the Church of Gaia
« Reply #3 on: January 20, 2013, 04:49:13 am »
This is an interesting article, although quite old.  Trishuwa and her husband are both mentioned and quoted in it.  http://www.nytimes.com/1993/12/27/us/spiritual-seekers-borrow-indians-ways.html?src=pm

And she is mentioned in this thread:  http://www.newagefraud.org/smf/index.php?topic=1496.0

Quote
I would like to aknowledge and thank the beautiful teachers and spiritual elders that I have spent time with on this learning journey called the Red Road.

Beaver Chief, Mary Thunder, Arvol Looking Horse, Steven Greywolf Kemp, Sun Bear, Charlie Wolf Moondance, Archie Fire, Buck Ghost Horse, Steven Little Coyote, Ghostwolf, Jamie Sams,Trishuwa, Sharon White Arrow, Dawn Songfeather, Wallace Black Elk, Bright Owl, Corbin Harney, Roxanne Arising Sun Arispe, Jeffery White Horse Hubble, Gilbert Walking Bull, Evelyn Eaton, Barbara Means Adams, Noah Longcrane, Dave Chief, Marie O'sota Hanhepi Wi Wainman, Rocky Shopbell .
« Last Edit: January 20, 2013, 05:02:18 pm by sky »

Offline Smart Mule

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Posts: 1074
Re: Trishuwa and the Church of Gaia
« Reply #4 on: January 20, 2013, 05:03:59 pm »
Autumn, yep, I accidentally added info on another individual. It's fixed now. Thanks  :)

Offline Smart Mule

  • Administrator
  • *****
  • Posts: 1074
Re: Trishuwa and the Church of Gaia
« Reply #5 on: January 22, 2013, 05:09:04 pm »
Expounding on the article Autumn posted -

"All that was missing was an Indian. The 40 or so people gathered in the circle, sitting cross-legged on pillows and futons, were white. They are adherents of the growing New Age movement, which emulates Indian ways in a spiritual quest.

But many Indian tribes and organizations, far from being flattered by the imitators, have denounced the movement as cultural robbery. 'Declaration of War'

"This is the final phase of genocide," said John Lavelle, a Santee Sioux who is the director of the Center for Support and Protection of Indian Religions and Indigenous Traditions. "First whites took the land and all that was physical. Now they're going after what is intangible."




"The pipe smokers here, who gathered on the second-floor of an office building over a pizzeria, are members of the Church of Gaia: Council of the Six Directions, a group named for the Greek earth goddess. The congregation of about 100 people includes teachers, pharmacists and I.B.M. executives.

"We're baby boomers, middle-class whites," said Stephen Buhner, a founder of the church, which was incorporated in 1990. He described his church as a blend of mysticism and ecology, a spirituality that "allows you to re-establish your harmony and proper relationship with the web of life."

Mr. Buhner, who is 41, said he grew up in suburban Dallas as a Methodist, a religion he found "boring and not very much fun at all." He said he experienced a spiritual revelation in 1969 while attending a Jefferson Airplane concert in San Francisco, and began a quest for an "earth-centered" religion that led him to Boulder.

His wife, Trishuwa, who does not use a last name, leads the pipe ceremony. The couple lives in a solar home on 35 acres of pine-covered land in the foothills west of Boulder, where they sponsor vision quests and the rites of the sweat lodge. Mr. Buhner also works as a "spiritual mentor" at $20 an hour per student.

He said he knew that many Indians considered his church to be a mockery of sacred rituals. In fact, he said, some Indians have threatened harm to the church unless it closes. But Mr. Buhner accuses those critics, whom he described as "Indian fundamentalists," of practicing "reverse racism.""