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William C. Chittick explores "The Sufi Doctrine of Rumi"
Spiritual Poetry
Noble Faces, Strong Voices: Exploring "The Spirit of Indian Women"
Paul Goble's World: Native Americans' relationship to all created beings
Every Branch In Me: Who are we as "human" beings?
Who was Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa)?
Insights into the early Christian Desert Fathers and Mothers
What is Sacred Art?
Books about Buddhism
The Perennial Philosophy Series
Slideshows
  Ernest Thompson Seton explains "The Gospel of the Redman" Back to the List of Slideshows
    
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“There was no stronger impulse in the Indian than the deep abiding love of his country and the soil on which he and his people had lived for generations. Their most desperate fights were those in which the bravest gladly gave their lives to hold their own country for their own people.”



“The honor of their tribe, and the welfare of their nation is the first and most predominant emotion of their hearts; and from hence proceed in a great measure all their virtues and their vices. Actuated by this, they brave every danger, endure the most exquisite torments, and expire triumphing in their fortitude, not as a personal qualification, but as a national characteristic.”



Indian chief
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