sitting bull
Sitting Bull
he has a beard , a heart shaped face , and he gives away medicine
Sitting Bull
Catholic or close to the Catholic belief - they call them exorcist. Christian denominations don't normally have a name for it other than labeling the practice as demonic deliverance or sometimes Spiritual Warfare. In Native American terms, a person who is a traditional healer or spiritual leader is called a "medicine man" or a "medicine woman" or "medicine people". "Shaman" has also been used. These terms are not of native origins. Wichasha Wakan (Medicine Man or Holy Man) is the term used by the Oglala Lakota (Sioux).
Sitting Bull. He was also the medicine man for the Lakota tribe.
There were two different types of medicine bags. In one type the Medicine Man carried various items to use in healing other people. In the other type, the person carried items to help them to maintain a personal state of harmony.
Another word for Algonquian shaman is "medicine man" or "spiritual leader."
you go across the sea and end up in clainwood city then go to the farmacy the second building to the left then talk to the man and he will give you some medicine then beat the gym leader on clainwood city then go out and his a woman will give you the hm fly then fly back to olivine and give the gym leader the medicine and then you can go to her gym and battle her.
Yes. His mother was Walks As She Thinks (an Oglala Sioux) and his father was Lone Man (Brule Sioux.)
the men go hunting, besides the medicine man in the village which makes medicine and cures The women in the vilage normally cook, clean the tepees, make clothes out of buffalo hide ot teach the younger girls how to do these thing for when they grow up
The word "powwaw" means "spiritual leader" in the Narragansett language.
Although he is most remembered as a great leader and warrior, Sitting Bull or Tatanka Iyotanka was a very gifted medicine man and mystic.