Anasazi Lies? Taking the Past Back.

2023 ж. 9 Шіл.
293 155 Рет қаралды

In this video Navajo Historian, Wally Brown, teaches the traditional Navajo teachings surrounding Chaco Canyon.
It's an ugly history and goes against the popular opinion of anthropologists.
The oral stories surrounding the Anasazi people paint a much different picture.
A violent people whose economy is based on slavery. A people who worshiped the darkness and participated in human sacrifice.
Most of our Navajo people know the stories we have are different than the popular narrative from the anthropologists.
We travel to Chaco and walked through the ruins. Through the "Place of Crying".
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  • I have an MA in Anthropology. I'm an electrician by trade and familiar with building techniques, survival, agriculture, and some so-called primitive technologies. Simply by observing the building locations toward the end of the Anasazi period you can tell many were living in fear of someone and something horrific. It's common sense. So I believe these Navajo stories. Not because of hatred but because it makes sense.

    @highplains7777@highplains77772 ай бұрын
    • they were afraid of the sky

      @adairjanney7109@adairjanney71092 күн бұрын
  • So fascinating! Many years ago, growing up in New Mexico, I asked some of my Dine friends about the Anasazi. I had noticed that they seemed repulsed by the ruins. They said that those were evil places, but did not explain further. Thank you for this explanation.

    @amymorales4622@amymorales462210 ай бұрын
    • Is this Chaco Canyon?

      @thespirituniversity3527@thespirituniversity352710 ай бұрын
    • He's covered in other videos that the Navajo don't like to talk about "evil" because they believe to talk about evil gives it power. That's why most white people don't know the truth about the Anasazi.

      @brainflash1@brainflash110 ай бұрын
    • @@thespirituniversity3527 Yes

      @Stogdad1@Stogdad110 ай бұрын
    • ​@@thechiefwildhorse4651so say the archaeologists who have been proved wrong many times over. You may not know any Dine history IDK but the oral of the Dine say nothing of coming from the north 800 years ago.

      @johnbrian118@johnbrian11810 ай бұрын
    • It's not archeology genius, it's genetic testing and genealogy testing. We cal tell migration paths from DNA. Maybe learn some shit before being confidently incorrect.

      @ghagzor@ghagzor10 ай бұрын
  • I appreciate this great man, because he reminds me of other wise men from the past. You can tell he’s not looking for praise he is plainly sharing these stories without even a hint of falsehood. He is telling the truth and I believe to help pass on good and correct understanding. I don’t have an Indian heritage myself yet I love learning from him. I’ve known some people in life who are unwilling to share useful information (they withhold it) therefore not helping others. This wise man is the opposite because he cares enough to pass it on. I see that as a strong character trait!

    @subforceusa694@subforceusa6943 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for sharing dear sir

      @CaseyBoles-bc2yk@CaseyBoles-bc2ykАй бұрын
    • @@ANCESTOR- I agree some things should be kept secret indeed. Because there are those in life that abuse things they’re given so it’s best to keep it a secret. On the other hand some things revealed can be helpful if received properly. You’re right though and like it says In Deuteronomy 29:29 the secret things belong to God then goes on to talk about the things that are revealed are for us and our children etc.

      @subforceusa694@subforceusa69417 күн бұрын
  • My grandfather told similar stories about this subject, and he never told the stories in the house because of the evilness attached to what happened.

    @jackalope4286@jackalope428610 ай бұрын
    • Interesting! It seems to me it matters in this beautiful culture how things are spoken of. We too easily take violence as entertainment. These people deliberately choose beauty and good so do not lightly speak of evil, except when a wise person sees a value as our kind teacher here does. The context matters and in the gentle tone it’s a living context. My impression of “ repressed” stories, here where someone is generously showing it, is that these gentle cultures here in the southwest, whose perspective is priceless, learned humility and kindness and simplicity and respect out of suffering. How priceless to be allowed to kearn a little from the raw facts history and also the way it is told. How can we afford to not cherish this perspective? I’m afraid of anyone or anything wanting to cash in on such things. Save oak flat. The worlds largest surface copper deposit can’t possibly be worth more than this Wisdom.

      @tangelohallllc9882@tangelohallllc988210 ай бұрын
    • @@tangelohallllc9882 I've been watching many stories of tribes and small towns recently. Generally speaking murder and genocide are accepted in a closed system even if certain elements of that society wish it hadn't come to that. Once the possibility of retribution dissolves to time the generation of regret passes. Today we engage an open systen governed by laws that may develop into a country wide closed system. Lets hope the darkness doesn't win.

      @unconsciouscreator3012@unconsciouscreator301210 ай бұрын
    • Wow thats realy telling. Was your family Dine/ Navajo?

      @Sam-ck4gd@Sam-ck4gd4 ай бұрын
    • @@Sam-ck4gd yes

      @jackalope4286@jackalope42864 ай бұрын
  • I wish I could spend forever learning from this man. He knows so much, and not just about Anasaza. I am old in years, but I feel like a child when I listen to him talk about things. He knows so much, and I know so little.

    @Chompchompyerded@Chompchompyerded10 ай бұрын
    • I understand your sentiments, i was found by this channel weeks ago

      @No_Therapy_Needed@No_Therapy_Needed10 ай бұрын
    • I feel as you do. Dine` beliefs make more sense than what most of us have learned or been taught.

      @annalisette5897@annalisette589710 ай бұрын
    • That's quite a claim. He is dene. If you are Dine (and he is) you are taught from very young not to lie. It might just be a matter of him having a different world view than you have. That's okay. It's not right or wrong to have a different world view, and it doesn't mean he is lying just because his world view doesn't match up with yours. It doesn't mean that you are lying either. The two of you just see things differently. If you think he is lying, it is on you to prove that he is. So tell me why you think he's lying?

      @Chompchompyerded@Chompchompyerded10 ай бұрын
    • @@michaelcharlesthearchangel why do you say that?

      @anthonydunn8199@anthonydunn819910 ай бұрын
    • ​@@michaelcharlesthearchangelabout what?

      @johnbrian118@johnbrian11810 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much it felt good to hear to speak native language luv u all

    @tiffanybruce4933@tiffanybruce493310 ай бұрын
    • Love will conquer all!

      @kastenolsen9577@kastenolsen957710 ай бұрын
  • I find this fascinating. I was one of a group of people the last year that visitors were allowed into the Great Kiva at Chaco Canyon for summer solstice. It was an amazing experience to see the light shine into the space as the sun rose. I tried to imagine what it might have been like when the kiva was in use. I never imagined that it could have such an evil history. I put much more faith in the traditional stories than I do in the supposed "truths" told to us by mainstream archeologists. It is important that these stories are preserved.

    @carladewitt1947@carladewitt194710 ай бұрын
    • @@mountainstream8351 You know, it was the mid 90's, so a long time ago. I don't remember keying in on either a positive or negative vibe. I just remember being fascinated that something with that great precision was erected so long ago.

      @carladewitt1947@carladewitt194710 ай бұрын
    • These stories he's saying are not true and Chaco is not an evil place. The Hopi, Zuni, Acoma, Tacoma etc. highly disagree with these stories.

      @the_endgame@the_endgame7 ай бұрын
    • This guy doesn't know what he's talking about. The "Anasazi " were long gone when the Navajo wandered into Hopi Land. They were scared of our food because all they ate was raw meat. He's probably trying to lay a foundation for claiming our food, deities, culture, and land.

      @kevinwhitman530@kevinwhitman5302 ай бұрын
    • @@the_endgamei’m hopi and the elders i’ve spoke to have told similar stories, the anasazi were evil people who used bad medicine and took/stole ceremonial teachings and used them for bad. it had got to the point where everyone gained up on them and killed them because they were evil. he is not wrong

      @indicacarrots@indicacarrots2 ай бұрын
    • ​,,,he is closer to the Truth,than you could ever hope to be!

      @Georgia-Vic@Georgia-VicАй бұрын
  • Love hearing the language spoken unbroken. Please continue to have him speak to save this for the future. Blessings ✌️❤️

    @bluiiis430@bluiiis43010 ай бұрын
  • Thank you you guys,I’m glad to hear the stories from people who actually know what they are talking about instead of the people who just guess and come up up with their own version instead of talking to the people who have been there for a thousand years

    @timothymeehan5680@timothymeehan568010 ай бұрын
    • Stories are like a barrel of a gun, they just guide you the right way, if the teller wants you to go the right way, and if you agree.. You are like the bullet, you must use your own powder to fulfill your own momentum into the direction of your favorite story!

      @markgibsons_SWpottery@markgibsons_SWpottery10 ай бұрын
    • Because archeological evidence means guessing 😅

      @jonnybgoode7742@jonnybgoode774210 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jonnybgoode7742 if people want to really know the history you gotta cross reference stories passed down or it is a lot of guess work and theory. After all, isn't a big part of a scientists job is to theorize and hypothesize? EDIT: to clarify, I'm not anti archeology, I just think you need to cross reference every sorce with every other sorce and figure out which dots make a straight line. That's how you find truth.

      @annebird9195@annebird919510 ай бұрын
    • @@annebird9195 theorize and hypothesis based on?.... evidence right?... until more evidence can be found to either prove or discredit said hypothesis/theory right?...

      @jonnybgoode7742@jonnybgoode774210 ай бұрын
    • ​@@annebird9195history is full of lies. The loudest liers win!

      @johnbrian118@johnbrian11810 ай бұрын
  • Great to see Uncle Wally out & about!! Aho 💚

    @PedroPeyolo@PedroPeyolo10 ай бұрын
  • I am always humbled by the teachings told by Wally Brown, he is such a fantastic story teller. It' is so good to hear the history passed down from a people that would know what they are talking about, verses the revisionist stories told by people that regularly change history to suit their narrative.

    @tuffgirl922@tuffgirl92210 ай бұрын
    • Hahaha!

      @kevinwhitman530@kevinwhitman5302 ай бұрын
    • I learn something wow .

      @user-bq5fv4mq6b@user-bq5fv4mq6bАй бұрын
  • This has the ring of truth. I grew up in Colorado and Arizona and used to love exploring. Coming across ruins was commonplace. At some, the despair, the horror, dread..and the uncountable loss I would feel near some of them made my insides clench..such imagery ran through my mind. I have profound respect for what the ancestors of he contemporary nations endured.

    @elizabethf8078@elizabethf80783 ай бұрын
  • Knowing what little I know of the Navajo people when I read the history of Chaco Canyon that wrongfully said there was famine so they started to cannibalize one another I knew that was a flat out lie. Living up so high and hidden in the cliffs was obviously a defensive position for your people to take and surely not an easy way of life. Thank you for the true history.

    @Harrytrueman-st5yz@Harrytrueman-st5yz10 ай бұрын
    • Canabals were a fact.....proven by clues!

      @Philip-xk5ui@Philip-xk5ui9 ай бұрын
    • The reason they lived up so high was the fear of being eaten and enslaved.....

      @Philip-xk5ui@Philip-xk5ui8 ай бұрын
    • Yes - the Anasazi probably came from Mexico (Aztecs) and found a people ripe to be dominated and terrorized. The Anasazi used brutal acts of cannibalism and dismemberment that the Aztecs practiced. They cooked heads face up to bake the brains for dinner.

      @fredharvey2720@fredharvey27208 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Philip-xk5uiThe Anasazi were the ones cannibalizing and enslaving.

      @fredharvey2720@fredharvey27208 ай бұрын
    • Chaco is not Navaho but people from northern Mexico

      @georgesheffield1580@georgesheffield15808 ай бұрын
  • I learned more in this 15 minute video about the Anasazi than in all of my history classes and on every TV documentary.

    @waynecampeau4566@waynecampeau456610 ай бұрын
    • Now learn from the Anasazi themselves, they are still here.

      @robertgeorge9909@robertgeorge990910 ай бұрын
    • Me too!

      @lushoberg8052@lushoberg805210 ай бұрын
    • ​@@robertgeorge9909some of them migrated south and brought their evil ways with them, it is true. Later they would be called the Aztecs

      @stephenmeier4658@stephenmeier465810 ай бұрын
    • @@stephenmeier4658oh, oooh, well they’re very dead now and you can thank the Tlaxcalas for that

      @jonathanwells223@jonathanwells2239 ай бұрын
    • @@stephenmeier4658 The aztecs? Wtf,I thought the Aztecs are just modern Mayans,didn't the Mayans make their way to Mexico?

      @SolidGeddoe@SolidGeddoe9 ай бұрын
  • You are sir are a national treasure. Please keep making these videos... I lived in New Mexico for over 12 years and have visited Chaco many times. Altnough it is impressive architecturally, there is an overwhelming dark energy present. Most non-Native people I've talked to thought it was this great spiritual place, but I've always felt very uneasy entering that canyon. It was an undeniable feeling that I cant say I've experienced anywhere else. I would carry that feeling sometimes for days aftering leaving. The prevailing theories about Chaco culture never made sense to me. There was so much not explained. It wasn't until years, and several visits, later that I learned some of the real history of the ruins through some of my Jemez friends. One friend told me they "were messing with things they should not be messing with." I heard that they were trying to change time and the weather and that they had to be destroyed. Most of my Native friends would say very little if anything about that place. That always made me wonder. I also learned from friends who worked for the US Forrest Service about some bizzare archeological and forensic findings including bones, etc. Most of this information is not available in books or on the internet. But, thanks to men like Mr. Brown we can know more of the truth.

    @zackp3401@zackp340110 ай бұрын
    • There was evidence in an article about 10 years back that claimed there was evidence in the bone piles of human sacrifice. Scratches on human bones and so I think Wallys oral history is truer than what we learned.

      @johnbrian118@johnbrian11810 ай бұрын
    • Recently, archeologists are trained not to see human sacrifice, even taught that "there is no evidence" for it. Evidence and sites are reinterpreted, so that even things with NO other logical explanation are reburied academically. I know of one place which now is said to have been a used for rituals involved in treaties between people groups. But what had been found there decades before, showed that children and infants had been sawn into pieces before ritual burial. Evil.

      @ethanheyne@ethanheyne10 ай бұрын
    • That is very interesting! Thank you for sharing!

      @chenoah7963@chenoah796310 ай бұрын
    • That feeling of DARKNESS or uneasiness comes from your own dark history of the United States. They were masters of time and space and marked celestial events. Not trying to change time or nature. That was done by biliganas (Caucasians) and is still being done today. The Cern experiment has messed up the timeline and global warming is driving cloud seeding, trying to control the weather. We don't believe that Caucasians should be destroyed because they're doing that, so what on earth would make you think that Navajos would want to destroy a people for thinking different? Friends who worked for the US Forest Service?? Sounds like BS...pardon my french. The national database on artifacts excavated from these sites proves that their was never any ritualistic sacrifices or prisoners held at ANY of these pueblos. PROVE ME WRONG

      @indigenouswarrior3146@indigenouswarrior314610 ай бұрын
  • Thank you. The Creator’s Holy People are defeating wicked giants every day. Grateful of the Navajo to share their experiences. Humanity shares this in common and now we know.

    @00leaveralone@00leaveralone10 ай бұрын
  • Had a beautiful Dine family pick me up in the desert today when it was 100 degrees. They were coming the back way from Alamo towards To’hajiilee. I lost count how many Pueblos passed me by.

    @johannamaynard@johannamaynard10 ай бұрын
  • I fell into the Anasazi rabbit hole last night. I watched documentaries from the 70s until now, that was probably 4 hours of my night, you gave me more in the first 4 minutes then I had all night. Ty

    @bella42291@bella422913 ай бұрын
  • Fascinating history. I watch hikers on KZhead who come across all the broken pottery and ruins and they have no idea about this history and meaning. Ive always wondered and im so glad i found this channel.

    @teradrew7555@teradrew75553 ай бұрын
  • I saw one of those pottery mounds. I could no imagine that people could make such a huge mound of broken pottery.

    @soyoucametosee7860@soyoucametosee786010 ай бұрын
  • 4:36 this is strange bewildering truth for me, about these legends. Their truths harken back to a time when secrets outweigh what is known.

    @abyssoulzenith@abyssoulzenith10 ай бұрын
  • I remember watching a documentary from the 90s (I think--could have been early 2000s) where an archaeologist had found evidence that the Anasazi, in at least one ruin, had practiced cannibalism. It caused quite a bit of controversy at the time, but since then there have been more discoveries, plus listening to the oral traditions, that seem to validate those findings.

    @peterpike@peterpike10 ай бұрын
    • they didn't practice cannibalism, they were cannibalized. 'somehow' a dimensional portal was opened and 6 fingers/6 toes foot giants human flesh eaters came to this world and start the feast.

      @alesecardhu7303@alesecardhu730310 ай бұрын
    • The problem is Dine/Navajo-Pueblo animosity going back to ancient times confounds the issue and complicating it was a clueless archeologist in the early 20th Century using the name "Anasazi" to name the ancient culture of the area who were clearly a Pueblo people and not "outsiders" as the name implies especially as they were there long before the Navajo/Dine peoples arrived. So when cannibalism was discovered in the "Anasazi" culture, a backlash ensued against the perceived bias of both Western and Navajo/Dine perspectives. But as the documentary shows, the cannibalism did not originate with that ancient Pueblo culture. It makes its appearance around the 10th Century CE and disappears after the 12th Century which fits in with the old tales. So the "Anasazi" that most people think of were actually ancient Pueblo peoples living there for thousands of years and the "Anasazi" of the Dine tales were an outside group from the South (most likely Mexico) who dominated the area for a short time and were eventually destroyed.

      @RoninDave@RoninDave10 ай бұрын
    • @@RoninDaveyou sound like a honk boy

      @Ajidam@Ajidam10 ай бұрын
    • ❤🩵💙🥰

      @rhondahicks1965@rhondahicks196510 ай бұрын
    • Love these videlistening to them🎉os!!? Will never stop listening to them!!!❤🩵💙💜🩷🥰😣

      @rhondahicks1965@rhondahicks196510 ай бұрын
  • Growing up. Being Navajo my grandparents and my mother told us never to go near ancient ruins. Not to touch or play around them. There is evil and bad spirits there. In Navajo there alot of Taboos about our people going near ruins. My grandparents were kinda upset my two aunts married into pueblo families. Because their ways were totally different from ours but eventually they became to deal with it.

    @Hey_its_Koda@Hey_its_Koda10 ай бұрын
  • Lived in Arizona for fifty years. Love our land. As for the video, I just want to say it explains much about the feelings we get sometimes. Thanks so much.

    @murderedbypoguesandparasit8988@murderedbypoguesandparasit898810 ай бұрын
  • Growth is always a gift imparted by suffering meant for our benefit, if we will receive it. I live in Dine territory not far from the Indian Highway. Much of the same style of Baal-like ritualistic entertainment reminds me of many Dine and other native warning stories. Thank you for teaching the history. Only word of mouth and stone tell tales in the end

    @erinshepard150@erinshepard15010 ай бұрын
    • Demonic rituals always call for human sacrifices. Horrible vibes and devoid of consciousness in those altars

      @homiesenatep@homiesenatep10 ай бұрын
    • Anasazi and Anunaki aren't far off etymologically speaking. Not saying they are the same beings, but they do have similar qualities (or lack thereof).

      @MrRabiddogg@MrRabiddogg10 ай бұрын
    • sometimes, it's alright if you reject suffering, and stuff it up the posterior of whomever offers it to you. pack it in there good where it belongs. free west papua, 62 years of silent genocide for u.s. gold mining.

      @atomictraveller@atomictraveller10 ай бұрын
    • make sure it's packed extra tight.

      @atomictraveller@atomictraveller10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@homiesenatepIsn't the Christian religion based around a human sacrifice?

      @Ith4qua@Ith4qua10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing the precious wisdom of your elders. Everyone should be encouraged to do the same.

    @huffthomas1@huffthomas110 ай бұрын
  • At Pueblo Pintado I noticed that the construction was similar to what you pointed out with large stones then layers of small stones and large stones and so forth. Also traditionalist stayed away from the ruins and said something about ghost sickness.

    @rchrdjms62@rchrdjms6210 ай бұрын
  • Wow, this is fascinating. When I was young, there was a summer gathering with drumming circle where I live, I remember being brought to tears listening to the beautiful sound of the drumming and the voices. Not a drop of Native ancestry in my history, but that doesn't mean something in the universal language of music didn't speak directly into my spirit. I feel kindred, if nothing else. Thank you for sharing your history.

    @kellywaller8829@kellywaller882910 ай бұрын
  • Migwech. Its beautiful to hear you speak in your language. Thanks for interesting teachings.

    @dragonflysadler@dragonflysadler10 ай бұрын
  • I can remember going on a field trip to Chaco when I was a kid. It made me ill but I didn't know why. I went back there about 20 yrs ago. From that experience, I know there was darkness and evil there. Your history explains my experiences. Thank you

    @mow4607@mow46078 ай бұрын
  • This explains a lot about why the cliff dwellers lived up so high and why their homes were not easy to get to. Thank you for the video, I had never heard this before and it explains so much about the different building styles as well.

    @mamapillow8365@mamapillow836510 ай бұрын
    • Thankyou for your explanation of cliff dwellers. Now only I understood why they stayed so much up on the cliff so as not to be attacked by the Anasazi.

      @NiviKuruvillaWord@NiviKuruvillaWord17 күн бұрын
  • I never went there but even seeing photos and videos of Chaco left me with a bad feeling. Thank you for helping me understand why!

    @rebelgale1045@rebelgale1045Ай бұрын
    • Wow! U r so sensitive. Its good that by just seeing the pics u r getting a negative feeling. I wish I could also feel like that as its an important skill in many ways.

      @NiviKuruvillaWord@NiviKuruvillaWord17 күн бұрын
  • thank you for making this video. im navajo, and unfortunately im not really in touch with my culture. i only know a few things, so these videos really help me.

    @piinkbxnnyy@piinkbxnnyy10 ай бұрын
    • Its not what it was

      @supme7558@supme755810 ай бұрын
  • It's always interesting to listen to Wally speak about his people. Its very fascinating and enlightening.

    @klatuk4u1@klatuk4u1Ай бұрын
  • I find it to such a sublimely familiar sensation, listening to your words. It feels like a lesson from a elder family member did as a child. I suppose that's your job. I believe you do it well, and I believe you. Your videos are turning my world upside down and I think its good. Does anyone else feel more at peace within themselves after listening to this man?

    @shlamimk4664@shlamimk46644 ай бұрын
  • Blessings for sharing the truth with us all.

    @Fairies00@Fairies008 ай бұрын
  • This is great history. I hope and pray that this is remembered and carried on into future generations.

    @shockwavegaming1376@shockwavegaming1376Ай бұрын
  • Chaco means the place of crying,very fitting name. I have personally had paranormal experiences there.

    @Philip-xk5ui@Philip-xk5ui10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Grandfather Wally. I suppose this is all the more reason to protect and heal the space.

    @danyellerobinson5940@danyellerobinson594010 ай бұрын
  • Truth is good to hear,... A'ho, Ahe'hye'e

    @danielbradmacboleniii5601@danielbradmacboleniii560110 ай бұрын
  • What a beautiful language! I want to learn more about these amazing people!

    @mystxmojo8520@mystxmojo8520Ай бұрын
  • Thank You Wally!!! ❤️❤️🔥🙌 👍👍🙏✨✨✨🎵🎶

    @johnmuench6459@johnmuench6459Ай бұрын
  • It is Good that the old, real histories have found a way to stay with us. I am Inuvialuit first peoples, and I am NOT happily assimilated. I continuously seek out stories from ALL Citizens of All Cultures of Turtle Island. We are not gone, extinct, detritus or even replaceable.

    @seanhewitt603@seanhewitt60310 ай бұрын
    • Indeed, have you spoken to the European tribes? The Welsh, the Frisians etc? There are plenty of unassimilated groups of people that would love to talk to you about your perspectives

      @AzSedonaAdventurer@AzSedonaAdventurer10 ай бұрын
    • Yes but if you want to know about ancient Puebloan people it might be more accurate to consult present Puebloan people not a tribe that just recently took over their lands.

      @robertgeorge9909@robertgeorge990910 ай бұрын
    • Old Sagas..Wiking fx..they are interesting..can fx look in to who made the rainbow saga wikings...who is loke?...

      @allanmeierjensen4925@allanmeierjensen492510 ай бұрын
    • @@allanmeierjensen4925 i believe you mean loki

      @crystalinedreams6039@crystalinedreams603910 ай бұрын
    • ​@@AzSedonaAdventurerdie ouwe friezen

      @TravellerTinker@TravellerTinker5 ай бұрын
  • It's an honor to see and hear from this man. Before this continent was stolen from its true inhabitants, their country was radiant and amazing. Thank U

    @Utubesux@Utubesux8 ай бұрын
    • The Navajo stole it from several other “tribes”. No one owns it. It gets occupied for awhile. All people have been migrating all over the planet since our beginning,

      @adeshwodan4679@adeshwodan4679Ай бұрын
  • I LOVE hearing him speak his Native language. 🥰

    @hAckAbleMe@hAckAbleMe10 ай бұрын
  • Видео 🔥 очень понравилось, как всё интересно. Большое Вам спасибо. Вдохновение и успехов всей вашей семье! Народ навахо ❤👍

    @user-fc2gx3bz8i@user-fc2gx3bz8i10 ай бұрын
  • It would be wonderful if you could teach at schools within the NN. You are such an important historian and man of knowledge. You could do a few classes a day on the language, and a few on the ways and the history. Yah bless you for the videos you do for us all around the world.

    @cheri_b@cheri_b10 ай бұрын
    • To sacred for that why do people always just want things explot3d for their own benefit 😢

      @BuffaloCheeseburger1@BuffaloCheeseburger110 ай бұрын
    • ​@@BuffaloCheeseburger1shut up

      @Xterminate13@Xterminate1310 ай бұрын
    • Yes this would be of great benefit to humanity if we just listen to our natives....

      @Xterminate13@Xterminate1310 ай бұрын
    • It's a very difficult language that's why the employed them as code talkers during the last world war, it's unbreakable.

      @elizabethjansen2684@elizabethjansen268410 ай бұрын
    • @@BuffaloCheeseburger1I mean they’re putting it on KZhead, there’s obviously some information they’re willing to share publicly.

      @cielopachirisu929@cielopachirisu9299 ай бұрын
  • I don't think anyone else dicusses this information about the Anasazi. I find it riveting. I really appreciate it. Ty.

    @Tejah@Tejah10 ай бұрын
  • I’ll watch this again and again.

    @riverunner9978@riverunner99784 ай бұрын
  • Once again I am grateful for the lesson. I was one of the misinformed people who believed that they were a wise and great people (the Anasazi). I'm glad to know the truth behind the misconception so I can help educate others.

    @alexmajors7915@alexmajors791510 ай бұрын
  • This dovetails neatly with controversial archeological findings that Anasazi human remains show characteristic signs of butchery and cannibalism. These signs appear late in the history of the cliff dwellers after a migration of people from Aztec territory in the south, as I recall.

    @Darkstar-se6wc@Darkstar-se6wc10 ай бұрын
  • The history of the Dine is fascinating. I have not heard before of the legend that the cliff dwellers and the Dine had merged and eradicated earlier slave-holding groups. That makes perfect sense and seems to fit with archaeological observations. Thank you.

    @drmichaelshea@drmichaelshea10 ай бұрын
    • The slave-holding people were not "earlier." They came from the south and enslaved the peoples who had been living in this southwest area for thousands of years. Their reign of terror was only about 300 years.

      @Mooseman327@Mooseman3279 ай бұрын
    • It was NOT the dine ppl who eradicated, but their gods, the Navajo never take any responsibility of what the gods do, that's a big no no if they do...if they did they wouldn't be any better than those evil cannibals.

      @cyn2612@cyn26128 ай бұрын
    • ​@@cyn2612My theory is that it was the slaves of the Anazasi who had to resort to cannibalism.

      @auntie_Slayer@auntie_Slayer8 ай бұрын
  • It is a worthy thing to preserve such wisdom that I would not hear - but I have ears to hear, and now we are in a new time. A time when one voice may share knowledge through generations.

    @majordetractor@majordetractorАй бұрын
  • I love hearing him speak Navajo.

    @Miss5250@Miss5250Ай бұрын
  • My eyes have been opened to things that I did not know.

    @chasebansai7396@chasebansai739610 ай бұрын
  • Thank you, this was clearly a difficult but important topic to cover.

    @rbmk__1000@rbmk__100010 ай бұрын
  • Now this really opened my eyes! Thank you Wally, for teaching me 💙

    @langaaskessler@langaaskessler27 күн бұрын
  • I love your teachings. Thank you very much

    @hmmmmidk@hmmmmidkАй бұрын
  • Thank you, Grandfather Wally. What you tell us are always lessons for us to learn. I greatly appreciate your explanations, and those are difficult to dispute. Also, it sounds like you are having some breathing difficulties. You are in my prayers. You are a true treasure of the Dine, and although I am not of your People, I have nothing but the deepest and most sincere respect for you, and for the Dine. May the Great Spirit provide your needs in abundance.

    @curtisgoss2669@curtisgoss266910 ай бұрын
  • I learned that the Anasazi were not well liked among their neighbors, to put it mildly. Don't know where I got that, but I have always been interested in archeology, so I picked it up somewhere. Seemed like archeologists tried their best to find other reasons for what they found, but it was like an Olympic sized stretch.

    @saradunn3938@saradunn393810 ай бұрын
  • Finally, I get to hear a true history of the Anasazi. Even to this day, the ruins of the Anasazi are said to be a favorite haunt of numerous evil spirits/entities.

    @de1018@de101810 ай бұрын
    • If you want to hear the "true" history it would be better to ask their direct descendants the Hopi, Zuni, Acoma, Tacoma etc and not Navajo who were their enemies.

      @the_endgame@the_endgame7 ай бұрын
    • It's evil alright. 😮

      @spookygirl7761@spookygirl7761Ай бұрын
  • It's crazy. I've been watch stuff on KZhead that say that the Anasazi and ancestral pueblo where same people. But this says different. Love the story this fella tells. ❤

    @PeterInglis21@PeterInglis214 ай бұрын
  • You’ve probably heard this before…but we need to have these stories written down, translate your historyical stories and write them for us, and please, continue to teach your Navaho Language!

    @bigviper64@bigviper6410 ай бұрын
  • Maney years ago I traveled to Chaco . Perhaps it is cursed. With in a year the life I had lived was destroyed. I traveled very far away . changed ever dark way I was involved . I was sorry and changed . Today I begin to comprehend how a life of peace is to be lived. Thank you for sharing. Means a lot.

    @jerrylarson723@jerrylarson7239 ай бұрын
  • Appreciated the opening moments of your video in your native language. We needed to hear the ancient words being spoken. Thank you.

    @steverodgers333@steverodgers33310 ай бұрын
  • You are a gem in a difficult world I’m grateful ❤

    @crazyawakening@crazyawakening27 күн бұрын
  • I have heard that about the Anasazi and what they did but you saying that about the Cliff Dwellers cleared up so much. It makes sense now. Thank you I wish he would write a book.

    @cyb9754@cyb975410 ай бұрын
  • ‼️A'HO‼️We love you so very much Mr.Wally Thank you for all the wonderful wisdom you give to us. ✨️All good blessings to you and your family ✨️

    @glynnphillips9703@glynnphillips970310 ай бұрын
  • 🇦🇺 Thank you so much for revealing this rich heritage of your people. It’s so important for you to document this for the following generations. You are a true inspiration. 🕊🙏

    @catherinesarah5831@catherinesarah583110 ай бұрын
  • I first learned about the Anasazi from a book called “She who remembers” featuring Kokopelli, I never knew about their dark offerings. Amazing info about their demise. Thank you

    @tamborinevillage333@tamborinevillage3332 ай бұрын
    • Oh wow, I read those "She Who Remembers" books as a young adult, decades ago! I felt strangely drawn to Native American culture at that time. ( As far as I know, I don't have Native American ancestry) I had no idea about the true nature of the Anasazi.

      @jessohara9178@jessohara91782 ай бұрын
  • you remind me of my father who passed a couple years ago he was so intelligent, and he would tell you the history of things of all sort in great depth like you!

    @LADYxREBEL@LADYxREBELАй бұрын
  • Thank you sooooo much for this lesson! It explains so much about who these people were, the weird building styles, why I didn’t love Chaco Canyon, why my dreams were so weird there, why people won’t always talk about the Anasazi… now I have a million more questions.

    @juliatrainer2633@juliatrainer263310 ай бұрын
    • @@michaelcharlesthearchangel but the navajo say they came from the east .. the koreans tried to invade japan in the time of the bushido and they met the "divine wind" kamikaze as did the spanish armada to our land .. there can be only one - highlander and he living on the cliffs perhaps / mac cloud - son of the clouds ?

      @fieldagentryan@fieldagentryan10 ай бұрын
    • My Dine friends call themselves Mongolian sheep herders, they are recent invaders to the SW with their brother tribe the Apache. If you want to know about the ancient ones ask the modern ones, the Hopi, Zuni and Acoma, they are the Anasazi.

      @robertgeorge9909@robertgeorge990910 ай бұрын
    • @@SMiki55 is coker in anasaki code denis .

      @fieldagentryan@fieldagentryan10 ай бұрын
    • @@SMiki55 colm bia is in north and south america .. whats in between ?

      @fieldagentryan@fieldagentryan10 ай бұрын
    • @@SMiki55 But anasazi is a Navajo word, misapplied to Ancestral Pueblo People by a white archeologist around 100 years ago. I haven't heard anyone dispute that Hopi and Zuni descended from ancient Pueblo people, the speaker even said so in the video.

      @captsorghum@captsorghum10 ай бұрын
  • thank you for the teachings, i have a tendency to believe what you are saying. i am grateful to learn. i had s roommates who were navajo and one who was hopi the navajo, then my other was mexican. i lived and played with native children in their homes and outside when i was a child myself in the moutains of montana. my roomates lived in farmington, new mexico area. i loved them because we played hiked and did almost every everything together. i dreamed as a child to live with the indigenous people. my dad said said i had almostmore native in me, because of my actions home erc..t was accused by people that i was a native child, when living in a foster home, it made me happy they'. when i was born my hair was pitch black and skin olive the hosp, wondered if i had indigenous in me,. then a straight line medicine man who's name two trees told my friend he believed i had native in me. i feel love for you and grateful if i do have indigenous in me, i feel honored i do.

    @sherylhawker9593@sherylhawker959310 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing your wisdom ❤

    @michelledale3334@michelledale333410 ай бұрын
  • It’s is so important to get the word out. These “never talked to a native” scholars tell the story in such a way that makes no sense. The lands and remaining dwellings/ cliff dwellings tell a different story than they preach. What you say makes sense.

    @kristinessTX@kristinessTX7 ай бұрын
  • I watch these for better understanding. This is why the tradition of oral story telling for history is so very important. thank you.

    @werewolf74@werewolf7410 ай бұрын
  • Before watching this I believed the Cliff dwellers were Anasazi. What an education! Thank you so much!

    @jrae4348@jrae434820 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for your teachings, Elder. I’m learning a lot. You are an excellent teacher. This is great information. Is a shame they don’t teach this stuff in schools, they only teach lies. You should write books about all this for future generations so is not forgotten. Thank you again Honorable Elder.

    @anaalvarez1925@anaalvarez192510 ай бұрын
  • This explains so much.

    @cringirl@cringirl10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you, Honored Teacher. The future will appreciate this history you are saving. Many blessings to you and your team.

    @QuietRiverBear@QuietRiverBear10 ай бұрын
  • It’s an Honor to hear these stories! Thank you for sharing!❤

    @dianaspy6733@dianaspy673310 ай бұрын
  • You are such a gift. Thank you!

    @michellewerries7433@michellewerries743310 ай бұрын
  • We are Shoshone (Sosoni) - The Valley People

    @merlin6625@merlin662510 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing this.

    @elperro3683@elperro3683Ай бұрын
  • Thank you once again for sharing your stories, friends. I am pleased to be a student

    @g.cosper8306@g.cosper830610 ай бұрын
  • Shocking and so very sad. There are some fragmented stories about how some of the people who came from the land of the south ended up, going into the eastern part of the southern half of North America. They had an influence on the architecture and some of the cultural things that were happening in the southeast. There’s another rumor that said that they would push as far in land as they could, and they would take captives and make slaves of them. Some of the Warriors would have black snakes or serpents or dragons or something like that tattooed on their back, covering their shoulder blades and going onto their shoulders. I’ve talked to a few people about this, and not many people have heard of this. There are legends and stories, mostly fragmented talk about people who built stacked stone and piled stone walls in what is now Georgia and up into the mountains. There was one story to talk to about how they had built a stone temple on top of the mountain. Inside the temple, there was a statue of a snake or serpent with red stone eyes. these are things I have been told. I don’t know whether these things are true or not, but they are very striking stories. Especially the part about the cultural exchange and the slavery. These people were called “the snake people “and they were very violent people. They were obsessed with wealth and power.

    @csluau5913@csluau59139 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for clarifying the history of the Anasazi, it changed my whole perception of them.

    @dorseyblack9833@dorseyblack9833Ай бұрын
  • You're passing it on to millions my friend

    @johnnybuttcrust765@johnnybuttcrust7653 ай бұрын
  • Finally a honest documentary. Thank you!

    @corneliussulla4858@corneliussulla485810 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing this. The only way to keep history from repeating itself is to remember and learn from the past. Evil should not have enough power to enslave people again.

    @jenniferbriski567@jenniferbriski56710 ай бұрын
    • Their is more slaves today then 300 years ago. Especially sex trafficking Evil has always been here, just clothed as your neighbor an dressed in suit an tie(GOV)

      @ryanbarneson555@ryanbarneson55510 ай бұрын
  • This man is a keeper of such important information, especially at these end times. Thankyou for facilitating these accounts for posterity. I hope you keep them in a very afe place.

    @juliawitt3813@juliawitt38137 ай бұрын
  • The documentary called "The bloody truth behind America's Ancient Anasazi" shows that the research today agrees with your teaching.

    @karinschleicher2619@karinschleicher2619Ай бұрын
  • Good morning Elder Wally! Good morning Shane! I’m so grateful for you both for sharing & bringing us this knowledge, thank you!! I’m in northern Arizona & never got a good vibration from the Anasazi & their dwellings but I had no idea that they went to the dark side. I have a hard time believing anything we’ve been told about his-story since the majority seems to have agendas & misdirection woven throughout, so I truly appreciate you sharing this untainted truth. Napoleon supposedly said something about history is written by the victors & I think that makes sense more so now than ever. I hope to learn much more from you & wish I could do so in person someday. I have nothing but love & respect for you & I want your knowledge, lessons, stories & wisdom to carry on & on & on! Thank you kindly❤️

    @TreeHuggingTruther@TreeHuggingTruther2 ай бұрын
  • Fascinating. Your presentation helped answer many of my questions.

    @andrewmorke@andrewmorke10 ай бұрын
  • Now for the real truth. ! We are fighting this same evil today in the world.. Amazing that the historians have hidden this from us ! This is very relevant to our present times.

    @melodyhart2017@melodyhart20179 ай бұрын
    • @ANCESTOR-@ANCESTOR-5 ай бұрын
    • What I was thinking

      @claudiabottom4086@claudiabottom4086Ай бұрын
    • Ashkenazi?

      @PropiaPersona@PropiaPersona25 күн бұрын
  • What you do on this channel is very important to me and others, that unfortunately have spent much of our lives away from our home lands and family. You're videos help me feel more connected to the Dine. Thank you.

    @bryceyazzie8779@bryceyazzie8779Ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much for this. It is so very important for this history be recorded for all of humanity. That is how we connect and grow.

    @kayezbiciak544@kayezbiciak5442 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much for that history lesson!

    @pkerber@pkerber10 ай бұрын
    • Every people likes to tell their side of their history. Of course they’ll most likely paint themselves are the righteous ones… It is probably true that all the tribes in pre-Colombian did terrible things. However some tribes or civilizations were more evil than others of course… ;)

      @batcaveloner1383@batcaveloner138310 ай бұрын
  • This video, your whole channel, is incredible. Please continue to make these videos. This wisdom and these teachings and this history is available no where else, and it is so vital to understanding the continent we inhabit, and it's native people's history. Fantastic work, what an honor to have the opportunity to hear his words. May he be well and live many more healthy happy years, and his family as well.

    @well_intended_devil@well_intended_devil8 ай бұрын
  • Thank You So Very Much for sharing this information. I love the desert. I have some American Indian in my ancestry. It must all be located in my heart. I know I have lived other lives as an Indian. I have had flashbacks. Your videos make me proud. Thank You Again! John Thorne

    @johnthorne136@johnthorne1362 ай бұрын
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