Sun Oct 6, 2024 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM EDT
Online, Zoom
Embark on a fascinating journey to discover your Huaca and learn how it can become a powerful ally in your life. In Andean shamanic teachings, everything in nature is alive, vibrating with a life-force energy that carries consciousness, wisdom, and the knowledge of millennia.
In Andean cosmology, a Huaca refers to a sacred object, a place, or a being. This could be a mountain, river, rock, tree, animal, or even an everyday object. Each holds spiritual power and is seen as a physical embodiment of divine or ancestral forces.
Andean shamans, known as Yachaks, cultivate a deep, intimate relationship with their Huaca—like a Power Animal spirit guide—using it to journey into the unseen Spirit World to retrieve vital knowledge, bring healing, and commune with the spirits.
Prepare to discover your own Huaca and add this sacred tool to enrich your healing toolbox and life.
The session will start at 1pm NY, 6pm UK. A recording will be available for all ticket holders for 30 days.
About Itzhak
Itzhak Beery (www.itzhakbeery.com) is a leading shamanic teacher, healer, speaker, community activist, and author of three Amazon bestsellers books. He received ‘Ambassador for Peace Award’ from The Universal Peace Federation and the UN.
Since 1995, he bridges the spiritual and practical wisdom his indigenous teachers entrusted in him with a powerful contemporary approach relevant to our stressful and unbalanced modern times.
Itzhak apprenticed with Taita Don José Joaquin Pineda a well-known fifth-generation Ecuadorian Quechua Yachak (shaman) from the village of Iluman, who initiated him into the Sacred 24 Yachaks Circle of Imbabura. He was also initiated by Shoré, an Amazonian Kanamari Pajè (shaman) on the banks of the Rio Negro. Itzhak studied and assisted for 12 years with Ipupiara Makunaiman (Dr. Bernardo Peixoto). Additionally, Itzhak studied with elders and shamans in North and South America, Greenland, Siberia, and of his contemporary teachers are Michael Harner, John Perkins, Hank Wesselman, Lewis Mehl-Madrona, and Tom Cowan.















