Got a request about him. The request says he is an elderly white man who claims to have spent 30 years studying with the Hopi and states and that they have passed on their prophecies to him. He has a website called Dancing Awake the Fifth World which has links to "Hopi Prophecy" and "Hopi Elders Statement" (
http://dancingawakethefifthworld.com/). On the website, he offers a free e-book called: Earth Mother which outlines the arrival of aliens and offers advice.
He is listed as a "white Native American"—adopted member of the Hopi and Taos Pueblo tribes—who brings the prophecy and message to the rest of the world (
http://www.unitydallas.org/Pages/pastEvnts.html#Kimmey).
The claims he makes are obviously fraudulent, so much so that we can bypass the usual placing in Research Needed. But that certainly doesn't mean we don't need additional research.
For our requester and the general public, Kimmey is an obvious fraud because:
1. Tribes don't adopt people. Individuals or families do.
2. Adoptions does NOT give outsiders the "right" to do ceremony, nor speak on behalf of a people, nor make them supposed prophets.
3. The Hopi have had plenty of eloquent spokespeople, most notably Thomas Banyaca. It is arrogant and racist for a white to presume to speak for them.
4. The Hopi have often been flooded with false claims by Nuagers, even suing those who make false claims and having to ban them from their homeland. And I believe that includes lawsuits against claims made on supposed behalf of the very person Kimmey claims trained him and authorized him, David Monongye.
Going to his own website bio, you can see all kinds of ridiculous lies:
"John resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico where he is a practitioner and teacher of Hanmi Esoteric Buddhism."
If he were a supposed Hopi prophet, why live hundreds of miles away? And his Buddhist beliefs preclude any claim to be a traditional Hopi.
"Kimmey arrived in the Southwest in 1965 in Santa Fe. John and a group founded the American Church of God, a chapter of the Native American Church of North America."
It's a knockoff of the NAC, origins described here.
http://books.google.com/books?id=sd8vqJzZEw8C&pg=PA10&lpg=PA10&dq=%22American+Church+of+God%22+%22native+american+church%22&source=bl&ots=J_0sTwovk2&sig=WwUOa-ShpPSSC0BSFUkIvDRc_Rw&hl=en&ei=QQoIS7b3ComWtgfB4qDECg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CBIQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=%22American%20Church%20of%20God%22%20%22native%20american%20church%22&f=falseAs you can see by the passage, Kimmey didn't found it, though elsewhere I've seen accounts he was an early member.
"While still living in Santa Fe in the seventies John became acquainted with the elders of the Hopi village of Hotevilla, Arizona. he became a student and traveling companion of the late Hopi Prophet and village leader, David Monongye. At the elders' request John came to live in Hotevilla to assist them in a communication effort which reached out to the United Nations and many other world leaders."
Again, many false claims made on the supposed behalf of Monongye are all over the web, by one dubious character after another.
If Kimmey was supposed to reach out to the UN or world leaders, he didn't do a very good job. I can't find any evidence that even a single national leader ever heard of him.
"John traveled extensively in the Northwest for several years, including southern British Columbia, Canada where he delivered to native bands numerous strains of native foodcrops of the Southwest. At that time he also delievered the wisdom of the Hopi Prophecies and conducted workshops."
He seriously expects us to believe the Hopi sent him rather than going themselves?
"In 1999 John was called to deliver the Hopi Prophecies in New Zealand. He traveled for three months, being initiated into 20 Maraes, or Maori tribal centers, where he was welcomed by the wisdom keepers."
Initiation is not the big deal he'd have you believe. Basically he'd have to go through the formal process for meeting elders when going to a village. Tourists do the same.
"In 2004 Kimmey moved to Hawaii where he learned Huna ceremonial practice and Buddhist healing practice."
Huna is itself a fraudulent knockoff of Hawaiian tradition.
There is also one passage on his site which disturbs me. He seems to basically be trolling online looking for sex from his potential followers:
"I believe sexual repression is right up there as unnecessary baggage in a global peace zone. Have you noticed how every religion achieves, among it adherents some degree of sexual repression and therefore guilt? It's woven into the entire fabric of our lives. If you care to demonstrate to yourself just how deep it goes, go ahead and exercise your sexual fantasy and observe the devastating consequences....We have some attitude about the opposite sex that limits our ability to achieve relationship. We have created personal character traits that discourage others from finding us attractive....
What if we eliminate the need for fantasy completely? What kind of a world would we have created? Certainly one with a lot less videos! We have become second-hand fantasy addicts. Most of us would rather watch someone have sex in two dimensions than to do it in three....
I believe by elimination of the above three most prevalent tendencies in our present way of life; fear, jealousy and repression we will achieve a state of being which could easily be described as peaceful. And a world without fear, jealousy, and repression could begin to come close to a true state of aloha. It sounds like fun to me."
You bet, that sure sounds like "Hopi tradition" to me....For the sake of safety, I'd caution any females taking his courses to keep their guard up.
Kimmey also appeared alongside frauds like Arguelles and the UFO crowd at this conference.
http://www.greatmystery.org/events/cancun2012faculty.htmlSelling workshops in Hawaii.
http://www.thestudiomaui.com/newsletter/March1st.pdf