Merged with the older thread. The first post has a link which is now down. Here's the archived link.
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https://web.archive.org/web/20120110155356/http://www.theinstitute.org/community/evan_bio.shtmlEvan Pritchard, an author and musician of Native American extraction, has been the contributing editor to a number of books in the field of addiction and recovery, including Abused by Dee Anna Parrish, Vicious Circles also with Dee Anna Parrish, and The Journey Toward Complete Recovery by Dr. Michael Picucci.
He has also acted as editing consultant for author of Deep Healing and "grandfather of the relaxation tape," Dr. Emmit Miller, "the funnybone doctor" Dr. Bernie Siegal, Dr. Marilyn Rosannes Barrett (who was Fritz Perls' analyst!) Dr. Patch Adams, Dr. Jean Houston (on an article that was later incorporated in A Mythic Life), and many others.
His own critically acclaimed book Secrets of Wholehearted Thinking, published in 1994, was originally intended as a "guide to recovery of the complete person," as so when he saw the early version of Michael Picucci's work on Complete Recovery a few years later, he recognized the brilliance of it, and offered to help to rewrite it in a way that would have a greater emotional and intellectual impact on the world, which is exactly what happened.
In addition to editing the text, Evan Pritchard coined the term APT, Authentic Process Therapy, and proposed and designed the Trauma-Addiction-Recovery chart, which has since been adopted by several national support groups and agencies. Picucci and Pritchard completed the entire work in only six months.
Evan Pritchard is best known for his book No Word For Time: The Way of the Algonquin People from Council Oak Books, which has just been re-released in an expanded edition this year. The community healing methods described in this book closely parallel many of the ideas adopted by The Institute for Authentic Process Healing.
Later this year, Council Oak will also publish his Native New Yorkers, The Legacy of the Algonquin People of New York. His own "Sunheart" website will be up and running in the near future.
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So he went from saying he had distant unspecified Native ancestry to claiming to be Micmaq and an expert on them.
His college may be interested that he's an adjunct misrepresenting himself as a full professor in Native history, when actually he teaches College Writing 116.
https://www.marist.edu/registrar/pdfs/09sfinexam2.pdfHe did teach a philosophy course for at least one semester.
AlgonquinCulture.org has some big respected names, Bruchac and Bastine. It surprises me they'd work with someone as inaccurate as Pritchard. The site promotes Pritchard's latest book on their front page. It was published by Wilkes, basically a vanity press.
Wikipedia quotes The Holy Grail in America as saying Pritchard claims Glooscap was actually English explorer Henry Sinclair.
Pritchard does give workshops on Algonquin spiritual traditions, though not for much, $10 only a few weeks ago.
http://www.dailyfreeman.com/arts-and-entertainment/20140320/preview-calendar-march-21-to-27-2014https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/artmobile-events/b9idSG1QhSI/0SMWj_HZz9kJ