
The Indian and Norwegian legend dictates that Skinwalkers are people with mystical abilities to transform into creatures, accepting not only their appearance, but also their characteristics. It is said that Skinwalkers are actually witches who practice their craft to gain power, wealth, or just harm, wherever they are.
In the southwestern United States, the Navajo, Hopi, and Ute tribes are very similar, but somehow different stories about Skinkers. Skinwalkers in nature are believed to be evil. They are said to feed on a certain force and, apparently, cause terror, wherever and whenever they manifest themselves. Those who want to become Skinwalkers to train and intensely for many years before being given the right to participate in initiation rites. Donating a sibling or a relative is what is required of a newbie before actually being authorized with the opportunity to become a Skinwalker.
For the Navajo Skinwalkers, mind control is what they use to get their victims, do what they need, or even kill themselves. While this may sound like a simple legend to the Navajo community, the existence of Skinwalkers manifested itself in the mid-1970s, when a Nevada lawyer (Michael Stuff) filed a lawsuit against a man and Skinwalker, saying that he used witchcraft to insist on detention. was processing.
The child was given permission to spend the night with his father. When the child was returned to the mother, he spoke about the events that occurred at night. According to the boy, he spent the night with his father and the "medic." They took two wooden dolls that looked like a mother and a lawyer. According to the boy, the medic-man took two dolls and started chanting, and then they took two dolls to the cemetery and buried her. When the lawyer consulted Professor Navaho on this matter, he was informed that the ritual was to force the mother, and he ended up in the cemetery where two dolls were buried, and the only way to stop it was to make Skinwalker know that he knew about the curse. So he filed a lawsuit against them.
Fortunately, the judge of the case took it quite seriously and gave the mother full custody of the child, and the father was forced to pay the full support of the child. Yes, Kozhak are really witches of all witches. They are considered the highest essence of evil known black magic. According to Dan BeniĊĦek, an anthropologist from the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, "Skinhellers have purely evil intentions,"
In another case, the description of the Skinwalker was given when a woman who was delivering paper went to the Navajo reservation in Arizona for one day. She claimed to have heard the scratches on the passenger door, where her child was lying, when the door suddenly opened and the creature with piercing eyes looked at her face. It was half a human beast. She beat off him, eventually closing the door, when she slipped away from her, she heard the creature, not lagging behind the car, the sounds of hunting stopped only when she cried for help at the nearest store. When help appeared, the beast was not where he could be found.
There are so many stories about skinwalkers; The TV show Smallville calls them "shape changers." Now you tend to be surprised that they are just fictional creatures or they are real, and society and modernization simply refuse to accept them, because science cannot explain these events. Is society turned away from ritualistic ways of life and belief only because we cannot explain it? Or is it just what we would like to forget.
There is a site that Skinwalker and many other creatures of cryptozoology describe in detail. This site is called: Unknown creatures, and can be found at this URL: http://www.unknown-creatures.com
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