Coleman Hughes on why good intentions aren
Coleman Hughes on why good intentions aren't enough...
US-Canada defense and security cooperation in the Trump era: Balkan Devlen, Jamie Tronnes, Richard Shimooka, and Alexander Lanoszka for Inside Policy Talks

What is the Native American Church and why is peyote sacred to members? WSOC TV [Video]

Categories
First Nations News

The Native American Church is considered the most widespread religious movement among the Indigenous people of North America. It holds sacred the peyote cactus, which grows naturally only in some parts of southern Texas and northern Mexico. Peyote has been used spiritually in ceremonies, and as a medicine by Native American people for millennia.

It contains several psychoactive compounds, primarily mescaline, which is a hallucinogen. Different tribes of peyote people have their own name for the cactus. While it is still a controlled substance, U.S. laws passed in 1978 and 1994 allow Native Americans to use, harvest and transport peyote. However, these laws only allow federally recognized Native American tribes to use the substance and don’t apply to the broader group of Indigenous people in the US.

The Native American Church developed into a distinct way of life around 1885 among the Kiowa and Comanche of Oklahoma. After 1891, it began …

Coleman Hughes and Abigail Shrier on Identity, Speech, and Policy / MLI
Coleman Hughes and Abigail Shrier on Identity, Speech, and Policy / MLI
TMU doubles down on race-based admissions: Peter MacKinnon in the National Post