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Glossary›Indigenous Healing

Glossary

Indigenous Healing

Traditional healing practices rooted in the knowledge systems of Indigenous peoples worldwide, integrating physical, spiritual, emotional, and communal dimensions of wellness.

What is Indigenous Healing?

Indigenous healing refers to the traditional health and wellness practices developed and maintained by Indigenous peoples across the globe. These practices are inseparable from Indigenous cosmologies, languages, and relationships to land, operating on the principle that healing encompasses physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual dimensions simultaneously. Unlike biomedical approaches that typically isolate symptoms, Indigenous healing addresses the whole person within their web of relationships—to family, community, ancestors, land, and the spirit world. Methods vary widely by culture but commonly include plant medicine, ceremony, song, storytelling, bodywork, energy work, and the guidance of trained practitioners such as medicine people, curanderos, shamans, or healers whose roles are culturally specific.

Origins & Lineage

Indigenous healing systems predate written history, emerging from tens of thousands of years of empirical observation, spiritual revelation, and intergenerational transmission within specific cultural contexts. Each of the world’s approximately 476 million Indigenous people across 90 countries maintains distinct healing traditions. North American traditions include Lakota yuwipi ceremonies, Diné (Navajo) healing chants documented in the Beautyway and other ceremonial cycles, and Coast Salish spirit dancing. In Central and South America, Andean curanderismo integrates mesa (altar) work and San Pedro cactus, while Amazonian traditions center on ayahuasca ceremonies led by vegetalistas or ayahuasceros. African Indigenous healing includes Zulu sangoma divination and herbalism, West African Yoruba Ifa traditions, and Maasai practices. Australian Aboriginal healing involves ngangkari (traditional healers) and dadirri (deep listening), while Māori rongoā includes spiritual healing (wairua) and traditional medicine from native plants.

These systems were systematically suppressed through colonization. The Indian Act of 1876 in Canada criminalized Indigenous ceremonies until 1951. The United States banned Native American religious practices including healing ceremonies until the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978. Despite this attempted erasure, Indigenous communities maintained practices through secrecy, cultural persistence, and contemporary revitalization movements.

How It’s Practiced

Indigenous healing occurs through diverse modalities specific to each culture. Ceremonies may involve sweat lodges (inipi), vision quests, or all-night healing rituals with drumming, singing, and prayer. Plant medicines range from everyday teas and poultices to ceremonial entheogens used under strict protocols. Practitioners often enter altered states to diagnose spiritual causes of illness, extract intrusions, or retrieve lost soul parts. Physical techniques include massage (such as Māori romiromi or Hawaiian lomilomi), bone-setting, and cupping.

The practitioner-patient relationship typically extends beyond the clinical encounter. Healing may require family participation, dietary changes, behavioral modifications, and ongoing relationship with the healer and community. Payment traditionally involves reciprocity—offering tobacco, food, or service—rather than fixed fees. Diagnosis incorporates dreams, divination, and reading signs in nature alongside physical examination.

Indigenous Healing Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Indigenous healing through multiple channels, though access is complicated by questions of cultural appropriation, commodification, and authentic lineage. Some Indigenous communities offer healing services to outsiders through cultural centers, tribal health clinics, or sanctioned practitioners. The Native American Church, with approximately 250,000 members, provides peyote ceremonies within its religious context. Ayahuasca tourism in Peru and Brazil has become controversial, with some Indigenous communities offering ceremonies while others criticize commercialization.

Urban Indigenous health initiatives like the Alaska Native Medical Center integrate traditional healing with conventional medicine. The National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation in Australia advocates for culturally appropriate care. Academic institutions increasingly recognize Indigenous healing knowledge; the University of Minnesota’s Center for Spirituality & Healing includes Indigenous wellness traditions in curriculum.

Non-Indigenous practitioners claiming to teach “shamanic” or Indigenous healing raise ethical concerns. The controversy over plastic shamans—non-Indigenous people commodifying Indigenous practices—intensified after the 2009 Arizona sweat lodge deaths led by self-help author James Arthur Ray, convicted of negligent homicide.

Common Misconceptions

Indigenous healing is not a monolithic “ancient wisdom” that can be universally applied. Each tradition is culturally specific, rooted in particular languages, lands, and cosmologies. The term “shaman” itself, borrowed from the Evenki people of Siberia, is often misapplied to diverse Indigenous practitioners with distinct roles, training, and cultural contexts.

Indigenous healing is not inherently non-physical or purely spiritual. Many traditions include sophisticated herbal pharmacology—approximately 80% of the developing world relies on traditional plant medicine, according to the World Health Organization. Neither is it frozen in the past; Indigenous healing evolves as living knowledge systems, incorporating new understandings while maintaining cultural integrity.

These practices are not universally accessible to outsiders. Many ceremonies are reserved for community members, require years of relationship-building, or should not be commodified. The New Age appropriation of Indigenous practices—selling sage bundles, offering “shamanic journeying” weekends, or claiming Indigenous lineage without community recognition—constitutes cultural exploitation, not authentic engagement.

How to Begin

Those genuinely interested in Indigenous healing should first examine their motivations and relationship to Indigenous communities. If you are Indigenous, begin by connecting with elders and cultural keepers in your own nation or community. Tribal cultural centers, Indigenous-led health organizations, and Native American Church chapters (for eligible members) provide entry points.

Non-Indigenous people should prioritize learning about Indigenous rights, history, and contemporary issues before seeking healing services. Support Indigenous-led initiatives, respect protocols around sacred practices, and never purchase ceremonies or teachings from self-appointed non-Indigenous “shamans.” When Indigenous practitioners do offer services to outsiders, approach with humility, follow cultural protocols (such as offering tobacco), and commit to ongoing reciprocal relationship rather than one-time transaction.

Readings include Gregory Cajete’s Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence (2000), Linda Hogan’s The Sweet Breathing of Plants (2014), and Ross Heaven’s The Hummingbird’s Journey to God (2009) on Peruvian curanderismo. The documentary Rites of Passage (2014) examines traditional healing in Indigenous Australia. Organizations like the Indigenous Wellness Research Institute at the University of Washington and Cultural Survival provide educational resources while centering Indigenous voices.

Related terms

plant medicineshamanic journeyceremonyenergy healingtraditional chinese medicineayahuasca
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