KB = Kaxinawa Boa Rapé – made by Kaxinawa, who are also known as “Huni Kuin” tribe from Brazil.
~ An extremely special, rare, and very limited stock of rapé, which expresses the spirit of the Boa constrictor snake.
~ Very deep, tribal, and very powerful medicine, which provides a deep connection with the Amazon jungle, and amazing divine Boa spirit.
~ A very beautiful, tribal, and Amazonian jungle energy, and profound awakening of all our chakras combined.
~ It activates the awakening of new consciousness, rebirth, and radical transformation.
~ It’s amazing for activating all our chakras, and opening-up, and awakening the inner powerful Kundalini energies.
~ Deep, profound, and beautiful awakening – from the base chakra up, and then spiraling all the way upwards through to the crown chakra!
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*Boa Constrictor Snake = Symbolism:
- Fertility & Sexuality = Female creative energy, procreation, abundance, and renewal
- Transformation & Rebirth = Death/rebirth cycle, transition, wisdom, transcendence, and rebirth
- Power & Strength = Raw muscular force, ability to capture large prey, and amazing power
- Guardianship & Protection = Benevolent guardian spirits, deities, and protection
- The Boa Constrictor is one of the most sacred animal spirits – for many indigenous tribes in the Amazon jungles, especially within the Pano linguistic root tribes of Brazil and Peru.
- She represents the Divine Mother of Creation, radical transformation, rebirth, wisdom, fertility, procreation, divinity, protection, and divine strength.
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According the the Huni Kuin or Kaxinawa people, ‘Haux’ is a very sacred sound, and was traditionally used only by Pajés or Shamans – for prayers, invoking, and to consecrate medicines, healings, and rapé rituals.
They considered it to be sacred sound of ‘Haux’, which was the initial sound made by the Boa constrictor.
Nowadays, it is used in a more casual way generally for greetings, and salutations.
The Kaxinawá people (Huni Kuin) are an indigenous people of Brazil and Peru. Their villages are located along the Purus and Curanja Rivers in Peru and the Tarauacá, Jordão, Breu, Muru, Envira, Humaitã, and Purus Rivers. In the Peruvian Amazon rainforest, some Kaxinawá live on the Alto Purús Indigenous Territory with the Kulina people.
The Kaxinawá are also known as the Cashinauá, Caxinauá, or Kashinawa people. This name come from kashi or “bat” and nawa meaning “outsiders” or “foreigners”. Their autonym is Huni Kuin or “real men” or “true people”, from huni, “man”, and kuin meaning “real” or “true”. Their language belongs to the Pano linguistic family, which they call hatxa-Kuin (true language).
The population is approximately 4,000 people, and they account for a percentage of 42% of the indigenous population of Acre, Brazil.
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