Swami Ratnamurti Saraswati

Swami Ratnamurti Saraswati I'm a yoga teacher, specialising in deep spirituality.

Twenty eight years as a clairvoyant, energy healer, past life regression, including twelve years practising Maori healing.

Love this
26/02/2026

Love this

For 10,000 years, they knew. It took DNA to make the world listen.

The Blackfoot people have always known their connection to the northern Plains runs deeper than memory. Their oral traditions speak of "time immemorial"—of ancestors who hunted bison across glacial valleys, who witnessed ice retreating from mountains, who survived when ancient floodwaters receded and reshaped the land.

But for nearly two centuries, Western anthropologists told a different story.

Based on linguistic similarities to Great Lakes tribes, scholars theorized the Blackfoot had migrated westward sometime in the last thousand years. Never mind that Blackfoot oral history contained no memory of such a journey. Never mind the archaeological evidence suggesting far older presence. Never mind the detailed knowledge of landscapes that no recent arrival could possess.

The theory became textbook fact. And it threatened something crucial: land and water rights that depend on proving ancestral connection to territory.

So the Blackfoot Confederacy did something remarkable. They partnered with geneticists to let science test what their ancestors had always known.

In April 2024, the results were published in Science Advances. And they didn't just challenge the migration theory—they obliterated it entirely.

DNA analysis revealed that modern Blackfoot people belong to a previously unknown genetic lineage that diverged from all other studied Indigenous groups approximately 18,000 years ago, during the last Ice Age.

Let that sink in. While most Native American populations studied share common ancestral lineages, the Blackfoot split off into genetic isolation nearly 18 millennia ago—and remained in their homeland ever since. Eighteen thousand years of unbroken connection to the same land. Eighteen thousand years of memory.

The study was led by Blackfoot community members—Dorothy First Rider, Anna Wolf, and others—working alongside archaeologist Maria Zedeño and geneticist Ripan Malhi. They analyzed DNA from six living Blackfoot individuals and seven ancestral remains dating back 100-200 years.

The findings confirmed genetic continuity: today's Blackfoot are directly descended from those who lived on this land at European contact, who descended from those who lived there through thousands of years before that.

But here's what makes this truly extraordinary: Blackfoot oral traditions contain memories that align perfectly with this deep Ice Age ancestry. Dreams and stories passed down through countless generations describe standing in caves watching glaciers melt. Accounts of crossing ice to reach better lands. Knowledge of extinct megafauna like giant beavers and camels that disappeared 10,000 years ago.

"The Blackfoot can dream of the Ice Age," explained Andy Blackwater. "Through dreams, people are able to recollect the deep past by bonding to ancestral spirits from long ago."

This isn't mysticism. It's the transmission of ancestral knowledge across timescales Western science once deemed impossible. It's human memory preserved with a fidelity that rivals sediment cores and carbon dating.

Gheri Hall, archaeologist with the Blackfeet Tribal Historic Preservation Office, captured the moment perfectly: "This really confirms what we already knew. Now we can use the new science to fight the old science."

Because here's the critical point: This wasn't about science finally admitting Indigenous people were right. This was Indigenous communities using scientific tools on their own terms to generate evidence for legal battles over land, water, and sovereignty.

The Blackfoot Confederacy has fought for decades to protect their ancestral territories from governments and energy companies. In 2023, they won a major victory when Solenex LLC relinquished drilling rights in the sacred Badger-Two Medicine area. Studies like this provide crucial legal evidence for treaty rights and territorial claims.

But they also expose something uncomfortable: How often has Indigenous knowledge been dismissed as "myth" or "legend" until Western methods confirmed it? How many other truths are waiting to be "discovered" by science—truths that communities have known all along?

The Blackfoot didn't need DNA testing to know who they are or where they belong. But in a world that values certain kinds of evidence over others, they used the tools available to protect what has always been theirs.

The question isn't whether science should lead conversations about the past.

The question is: When will we start listening to the people who never forgot?

Fun Fact: Blackfoot oral traditions describe Ice Age landscapes with stunning accuracy—glacial floods, retreating ice sheets, and extinct megafauna—thousands of years before archaeologists mapped these same events. Knowledge preserved through storytelling proved as reliable as any instrument we've invented to study the past. Perhaps it's time we recognize that some forms of evidence have been valid all along.

I have seen people who were short limbed and lived many thousands of years ago. The ones that I saw, several times, taki...
22/02/2026

I have seen people who were short limbed and lived many thousands of years ago. The ones that I saw, several times, taking people through past lives, were not primitive peoples. They lived in sync with nature, could read the weather, the air, communicated with faeries, were guardians of crystal caves.

Just a few weeks ago, a groundbreaking new study confirmed what had long been an unsettling suspicion among archaeologists: the Lapedo Child, whose remains were discovered in a Portuguese cave in 1998, is far more than just an ancient child's fossil. Using cutting-edge molecular dating techniques, scientists have determined that the child lived between 27,800 and 28,500 years ago. But the most astonishing revelation is that this child was not a pure Homo sapiens, nor a full Neanderthal—he was a hybrid. The offspring of two distinct human species. And that changes everything.

Until recently, it was widely believed that Neanderthals had gone extinct around 40,000 years ago without leaving direct descendants. However, this new analysis not only reveals that Neanderthals were still around thousands of years later, but that they were also interbreeding with modern Homo sapiens. The Lapedo Child had a robust jaw and short limbs, traits typical of Neanderthals, along with a rounded skull and defined chin like those of modern humans. These features aren’t random; they are the unmistakable markers of interspecies hybridization—physical proof that human evolution is not a straight line, but a braided stream of shared blood and heritage.

Even more intriguing is the context of the burial itself. The child had been carefully laid to rest, covered in red ochre, surrounded by animal bones and feathers—elements that suggest a symbolic funeral ritual. Such practices were rare among southern European Homo sapiens of that era but were common among Neanderthals. Could it be that we also inherited their beliefs, their rituals, their view of life and death? This discovery, confirmed in March 2025 by multiple European research teams, strongly implies that modern humans are not the product of a single lineage, but of a deep, ancient fusion. The legacy of the Neanderthals lives on—not only in our DNA but perhaps in our emotions, our fears, our memories, and our ways of honoring the dead. The Lapedo Child is not just a fossil—he is a reminder that our humanity is, and always has been, shared.

22/02/2026

Pūrākau of Tāne Mahuta and the origins of rongoā

Within Māori cosmology, the natural world is understood through whakapapa. Plants, forests, and healing practices do not exist independently of atua but emerge through relationships that establish order, balance, and purpose within Te Ao Māori.

Following the separation of Ranginui and Papatūānuku, Tāne Mahuta assumed responsibility for the flourishing of the world of light. This responsibility extended beyond the formation of the forest itself to the generation of life capable of sustaining, healing, and supporting humankind. In pūrākau, this process is expressed through Tāne’s unions with atua wāhine, each embodying distinct domains of the taiao.

Hine te iwaiwa carries authority over women’s wellbeing, fertility, childbirth, and weaving. From her whakapapa came harakeke, a plant central to healing, protection, clothing, and social continuity. Harakeke embodies principles of care, regeneration, and collective responsibility, and its use is governed by tikanga that reflects its wāhine lineage.

Hine tū a huru is associated with trees, bark, and the structural strength of the forest. From this domain emerged trees whose bark, sap, and resins were used for pain relief, wound treatment, and protection. In this whakapapa, trees are recognised as healers, reinforcing their role as living taonga rather than inert materials.

Hine wai and Hine korako are connected to moisture, water margins, and leafy growth. Plants descending from these atua wāhine are commonly used in leaf based rongoā for cooling, cleansing, soothing inflammation, and restoring balance to the wairua. Their effects are gradual and gentle, reflecting the environments from which they arise.

Hine ahua is understood as the atua wāhine associated with form and physical expression. Through her influence, plants assumed distinct structures and functions. Leaves that draw and release, roots that ground and stabilise, bark that protects, and flowers that signal vitality. This understanding underpins rongoā practice, where observation of form, growth pattern, texture, and habitat informs both diagnosis and treatment.

Taken together, these pūrākau articulate a worldview in which rongoā is inseparable from whakapapa. Plants are not resources to be extracted but kin with genealogical relationships to atua wāhine and Tāne Mahuta. Harvesting therefore constitutes an engagement with living lineages and requires karakia, respect, and ethical responsibility.

Ko te rongoā he taonga tuku iho. He uri nō ngā atua wāhine.
Healing is sustained through relationship, and relationship carries obligation.

Whakapapa is all-important
22/02/2026

Whakapapa is all-important

These gems fill my heart
22/02/2026

These gems fill my heart

22/02/2026
22/02/2026

The Story of Rongomāui and Pani-tinaku: How Kūmara Came, and Why Pests Followed

Rongomāui was born of heavenly origins, a being who moved between realms and carried the ability to bring sacred things into the human world. He was the younger brother of Whānui, the bright star known as Vega, whose presence in the sky marked seasons, timing, and the careful order of things.

Rongomāui watched the people on earth struggling. He saw families relying on uncertain food sources, never knowing whether the next season would bring enough. Hunger was not just an empty stomach. It was fear, instability, and the slow wearing down of wellbeing.

He carried this worry with him, and it followed him into his marriage with Pani-tinaku.

Pani-tinaku was a woman of deep spiritual power. Not only a wife, but a vessel of creation. She held the capacity to transform sacred potential into living sustenance. She understood the earth, and she understood sacrifice.

Rongomāui wanted a gift that would endure. Something that could be planted, multiplied, stored, and shared. A taonga that could anchor whole communities. But the kūmara was not freely given.

So Rongomāui did what many would judge as dangerous.

He stole the kūmara.

He took it from the heavenly realm and carried it down to earth, placing it into the care of Pani-tinaku. And because Pani-tinaku was not simply a keeper of food but a bringer of life, she did not just plant it.

She gave birth to it.

From her came kūmara. A living gift made permanent in the world of people. With it came warmth in winter, strength for workers, fullness for children, and stability for whānau. The kūmara spread, and with it spread a new kind of hope. Food that could be grown again and again.

But the heavens did not remain silent.

Whānui saw what his younger brother had done. He understood the impact of the theft. A sacred thing had been taken. The balance between realms had been challenged. Rongomāui had acted out of love for humanity, but he had also crossed a boundary.

So Whānui sent down a consequence. Not to take the kūmara back, but to remind the world that every gift carries responsibility.

From the sky came Anuhe, Toronū, and Moko. The caterpillars that attack the leaves of the kūmara plant. They were not just pests. They were a warning woven into nature. Cultivated abundance would never come without effort, vigilance, and care.

From that time onward, people learned that kūmara is not a lazy crop. It demands attention. It requires protection. It calls for observation, timing, and respect.

In this way, Whānui’s curse became a lesson.

Rongomāui and Pani-tinaku had given the world nourishment. Whānui ensured the world would understand the cost of sustaining it.

And so the story was carried forward.

Kūmara arrived through love bold enough to steal,
through a woman powerful enough to give birth to a taonga,
and through a star bright enough to enforce balance.

To this day, when pests chew through kūmara leaves, the old story stirs again. It reminds us that abundance is sacred, and that what we are given must be guarded with care.

I love this
22/02/2026

I love this

17/10/2025

Address

Auckland

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Swami Ratnamurti Saraswati posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Swami Ratnamurti Saraswati:

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram