Author Topic: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"  (Read 1981237 times)

Offline goozih

  • Posts: 34
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #720 on: January 11, 2011, 12:49:46 pm »
Interesting.... She has taken the time to stir us up....taunt even...
Any way ...I don't think Kiesha Crowther is her real name..nor is Little Grandmother....
As for her followers....It is sad ...beyond pathetic to follow such a phony baloney so blindly :o

Offline Twinkie_Slayer

  • Posts: 39
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #721 on: January 11, 2011, 02:50:22 pm »
 I've used my real name and email address in correspondence regarding this matter. She (or her mouthpiece) are just trying to spin and twist and hope their followers are baffled by large amounts of B.S. And yes, her name really is Kiesha Crowther...you can take that to the bank.

Offline luciddreamer

  • Posts: 0
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #722 on: January 11, 2011, 08:12:17 pm »
goozhi - yes they are pathetic, so blinded by this cult that they spout absolute nonsense and arrogance such as:

"WE are all native american when we embrace all beings healthy happy spirit way! Alot o those "Natives" are careless consumer power trippers. Peace and love is the Native world way ...and you are a Native American born here, loving Ecotopian values ...so shine on, sweat, call the 4 directions, see the world turning under the feet o the raging imposters and smile all knowingly! lol : )"......Disgusting

"Never mind ANY of the old ways. We are living in new energies ... follow your HEART?

I LoVe YOU~"...................pass me the bucket!!

You notice she also uses the word 'livelihood' in her response, doesn't your livelihood refer to how you make a living? and people asking questions is threatening that...says it all Kiesha dear

The bigger picture is that all those who follow her are blinded by her scam, which let's have it right isn't such a clever one after all, and in the meantime these 'lightworkers' are jeopardizing their own spiritual values by jumping in with their patronizing love spiel (and quite often attacks) in response to REAL spiritual people who are asking for truth.....That is the key to spiritual enlightenment isn't it..truth, why don't you 'get it'

Offline Saga

  • Posts: 53
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #723 on: January 11, 2011, 09:02:46 pm »
There is also this one little thing... I am occasional "spiritual sponge" when I don't watch it out, so I know what I am talking about. It is still making me sick occasionally. I KNOW absolutely, without a doubt that this white lighty scene is totally wrong to me, it only makes me cease from everything, ignore my loved ones (I happen to love my family and friends) and only talk, talk, talk endlessly online about what is good for this world (humans know that ofc) and do nothing about anything and soon I found out that I live like a zombie and only wait for the shift that I can stop pretending to be happy and superior and just die away and never come back... But, when I detach myself from all of it, like I know have, including the last groups where my best (online) friends were... I feel guilty. I am happier than ever, but the effect in those groups is so immense that you will be wondering it for a long time after, if you are actually risking your "spot in heaven" or something. Like in christianity. :p I really enjoy actually LIVING again and enjoying this world and digging into dirt and trying to work for the good things and for my dreams as well, but still, occasionally I feel sick about the past. Then again, further from it I go and more objective I look at it, to me it seems now pretty hypocrite movement... not just what Kiesha represents, but all of it... There's lots of good, twisted useless... Atleast to me. I still love some of the people who believe in that and most of them still are somewhat grounded as well and awesome people, and I accept them with everthing they are, but this scene. Well, it makes me puke. I need something that isn't about information gathering and sharing, but about the real spirituality, seeing other people as equal beings and the earth as nurturer we should take care of bit better and work to make good things happen. Anyway, just my point of view. :p

Sorry friends, if some of you reads this (I know some of them keep track of Kiesha stuff), I love you anyway, as you are.

Offline educatedindian

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Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #724 on: January 11, 2011, 09:21:34 pm »
I've published this article on Crowther. It contains all our research to date, including genealogy and all her claims of elders supporting her debunked.

Pls repost widely. Quoting and linking to it are also fine.

-------------

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/01/11/18668858.php

Tribe of Many Colors or Tribe of Many Dollars?
By Dr. Al Carroll


Kiesha Crowther AKA “Little Grandmother” has garnered a lot of attention, over a thousand followers, perhaps millions in cash, and even more controversy in less than two years. Falsely claiming to be the “shaman” for the “Sioux Salish tribe,” Crowther has gathered an all white, mostly European “Tribe of Many Colors” around her with bizarre claims. Native activists and former followers have vowed to oppose her and expose her.


From Santa Fe to Sweden, Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands, and soon to that most “American Indian” of places, Palm Springs, Kiesha Crowther draws crowds of hundreds with each gathering of ceremony selling, charging from several hundred to up to $6,000 a person. Crowther is a small red haired woman of 33, yet looks young enough to be a teenager. Adding to the strangeness, Crowther calls herself “Little Grandmother” (she is not one) and often talks in a little girl voice with fanciful (and largely false) stories about her childhood.

Crowther mixes in stories of vulnerability with dire prophecies of doom and fantastic claims, none of which are true. She claims to be the “shaman” for the “Sioux Salish tribe.” She claims to be the descendant of famous Lakota and Salish leaders, with a “fullblood Indian mother” and a grandmother supposedly on the reservation. Crowther claims to be made “shaman” by an alleged Salish elder named Falling Feathers. She claims to be recognized by dozens of tribes from New Zealand to United States to the Arctic Circle to Scandinavia to Central America. She claims to have been recognized by Native tribes at as young as age eight and to be the fulfillment of a supposed prophecy about a “fair haired girl.” She even suggests in one video that she is the returned White Buffalo Calf Woman of Lakota prophecy, a claim sure to outrage the Plains Indian tribes that hold the prophecy sacred.

Yet not a single one of these claims are true. Most are extremely obvious lies.



Who Is The Real Kiesha Crowther?

The real Kiesha Crowther was born Kiesha Rae Kreps in Sanford, Colorado, to a white middle class background, with a truck driver father and a mother owning small businesses. Her mother’s maiden name is Rodda. The Salish tribe she claims to have ancestry from do not have a single known person named Crowther, Kreps, or Rodda, either enrolled or known to the small and close knit community. (Most Salish have Irish last names given them by missionaries. A few Salish have traditional names, but none are ever translated into English.) The Salish elders in fact issued a public statement, saying officially she is not their “shaman,” asking her to quit claiming so, and pointing out no Salish had ever even heard of her. Their statement in full is at the end of this article.

Contrary to Crowther/Krep’s claim of a “fullblood Indian” mother and grandmother, there is no evidence of any Native ancestry in her family line. Her family ancestry has been traced back to her great-grandparents from England. Every census form lists all of her ancestors as white. No one else in the family has ever claimed to be or identified as American Indian, including her mother and grandmother. The only Natives in the family are two children (with no relation by blood) adopted by an uncle near Missoula, Montana. Kiesha Crowther’s mother and other family members have in fact urged her repeatedly to quit lying about the family ancestry.

Kiesha Kreps was raised as a Mormon and baptized into the Mormon Church at age eight at the same time she claims to have been recognized by Indian tribes and living alone in the woods. Crowther was married in the Mormon Church in Littleton, Colorado, and was a practicing member of the church only two years ago. She is married with two children, but separated from her husband and estranged from her entire family due to her “calling.”

In fact, absolutely no one in her family backs her claims of Native ancestry or being a “shaman.” A source very close to the family called her a “fraud” and “elaborate liar.” Numerous stories Kiesha Crowther tells at paid ceremonies are described as “lies,” such as claiming to have lived alone in the woods, nursing a dying owl, and being recognized by tribal leaders. The young Kiesha Kreps was actually fairly popular in school and not the lonely isolated kid she claims. Crowther's stranger lies include once giving a "Viking treasure ring" to her sister, who then noted one could see the trademark symbol on it.

The same source close to the family also claims Crowther’s veterinary degree is fake and came from an online degree mill, with the "degree" printed in notebook style paper rather than the stock paper degrees generally come on. It was also confirmed an animal rescue group Crowther claimed to have started is phony. The same source says Crowther plagiarized the poems she claimed to write and largely copied the paintings and other artwork she did.

Even Kiesha Crowther’s online biography as an artist is filled with falsehoods. She claimed to have been awarded Poet of the Year in 2003, 2004, and 2005 in separate cities. The “awards” are given out by the International Society of Poets, a pay to publish outfit that will include you in vanity editions for twenty five dollars each. She claimed her poem “Reach For My Hands” was made into a song by the “Willow Folk Group.” There is no sign of such a group, but there is a Willow Folk Festival in England. She claimed one of her poems was published in a book, “Poems for Peace,” chosen by former First Lady Laura Bush. There is no sign of the book nor of Laura Bush’s involvement, unless one counts her refusing to show up at a gathering of poets reciting poems opposed to the Iraq War. Crowther’s bio also claims she was “awarded the Life Experience Bachelors and holds a Masters Degree of Art from Almeda University.” Almeda University is an unaccredited online degree mill. In a 2004 expose by CBS News, a reporter successfully got his dog awarded a degree from Almeda.


How It All Began For a Would Be Shaman

Kiesha Crowther/Krep’s claims of how she became a “shaman” have changed rapidly and dramatically in less than two years since she began. In April of 2010, Crowther made the claim she originally had gotten a phone call from a group of all the Salish elders who told her she was the “fair haired child of prophecy” and they had a sacred bundle waiting for her made centuries ago.

But in June of 2010, that account changed. She claims instead an unnamed “Sioux man” made her a shaman.

That same month, Crowther also claimed she was made shaman by a group of “grandmothers” of both the Salish and “Sioux” tribes.

(Note for non-Native people: Natives generally don’t refer to the “Sioux” since this is an outdated outsider’s term. The actual tribes are called the Dakota, Lakota, and Nakoda, often called collectively the Lakota. There are dozens of Lakota bands at reservations and reserves. The Salish is an entirely different people and culture.)

In December 2010, Crowther’s story changed dramatically. No longer was there any mention of groups of women elders, nor of “Sioux men.” Instead she now claims there was a single Salish elder she calls Falling Feathers who made her “shaman for the Sioux and Salish tribes.”

There is no evidence at all that Falling Feathers ever existed, other than Crowther’s claims. Crowther claims he was an important elder, so widely known she assumed he was speaking for all Salish elders. The Salish elders have never heard of him and neither have any other Salish contacted for this article. His alleged name does not fit typical Salish names, which are either Irish or traditional Salish names not translated into English.

Conveniently, Crowther claims Falling Feathers recently died. There is no mention on tribal sites of a prominent elder dying recently. Crowther’s supporter, manager, and longtime friend Jennifer Ferraro also claims Falling Feathers was a member of the “governing council” for the “Confederated Sioux Salish.” Neither of those exists, but there is a tribal council for the Confederated Salish and Kootenai. The Lakota bands and tribes, as mentioned before, are spread across over two dozen reservations and reserves.

Only a few days after her December statement, Crowther changed her story in the most drastic way yet. She now claims to have never been teaching Native ways at all. This despite dressing up in American Indian regalia (though it was a shirt only worn by Native males), using what she seems to have believed was American Indian face paint, using what she claims was a Native pipe, and claiming her initiation came from Native elders, or alternately, a single Native elder who has passed away no one else ever heard of.

Crowther has also continually claimed the endorsement of numerous indigenous elders and other religious leaders, without evidence. Many of those she claims are Native elders actually are imposters.

She claims the endorsement of Cherokee elders. None of the traditional Cherokee elders in the Eastern Band ever heard of her.

She claims to have been recognized as a shaman by “lamas of Nepal and Tibet.” There are hundreds of such Buddhist teachers, but the only one she ever named was Lakha Lama, whom she met in Sweden. Lakha Lama gave her a blessing when Crowther asked for one, but this is neither an endorsement nor recognition, only kind words. Buddhist lamas, like American Indian traditionalists, also condemn teaching for a fee, especially very high fees as Crowther does.

Crowther also for a time claimed Sammi elders in Sweden authorized and endorsed her. Then her claim was removed from her websites. She further claimed Inuit elders gave her a crystal “from the North Pole” and that she was “giving the crystal back to the Sammi” when she buried the crystal in Sweden. There is no land, only ice at the North Pole. Crystals do not form in ice, only in land. Geologists consulted for this story say it likely is an ordinary crystal bought in a shop for less than 200 dollars, one dug up by strip mining.

On one of her visits to Sweden she claimed all Native tribes recognized and endorsed her, and that she was shaman for all of them. Since there are over 500 tribes in the US alone, the absurdity of this claim is obvious.

More recently, Crowther also claimed she was made shaman by a “Sioux” named Grandmother Lota or Lootha. Crowther also claims to be related to “Sioux” she calls Ciqalah Lotah and Ciqala Jensen. Fluent Lakota speakers we spoke to pointed out those words do not exist in the Lakota language. No one in any of the Lakota communities we contacted ever heard of Crowther or the people she claims to be related to or authorized her.

Crowther also claims the endorsement of Don Alejandro Cirilo Perez, sometimes called Wandering Wolf. Perez is a Mayan leader who appears on a number of New Age sites. However, there is no evidence of Perez ever endorsing Crowther. Perez is actually on record as strongly disagreeing and even mocking the claims of Crowther and other that the world will end in 2012. The maker of a documentary on Perez and Crowther denounced in fierce terms the “exploitation” of Perez by New Agers such as Crowther.

Crowther also is an associate of and claims the endorsement of two imposters who falsely claim to be Native elders, Adam DeArmon, a white New Age operator in Sedona, and John Kimmey, a white New Ager barred from the Hopi reservation and condemned by Hopi spiritual leaders for selling ceremony and making false claims.



The (All White) Tribe of Many Colors

Why would a self styled “shaman” who spent most of two years claiming Native elders authorized her suddenly claims to have never been doing Native teachings? Numerous family and friends of Crowther’s followers, as well as former followers, began to ask Native activists about the authenticity of her claims. By September of 2010, the chorus of criticism began to rise and put Crowther and her management on the defensive.

Crowther’s following she dubbed the Tribe of Many Colors has some striking characteristics. It has absolutely no Native members at all (including Crowther.) Outside of a member of Crowther’s management team, all seem to be exclusively white. Much like the Tea Party, they are also prone to throwing around the claim that they are hated supposedly for being white.

Such a claim falls apart because many of her critics are themselves white, especially former followers. The claim is even more striking because of the racism in some of the imagery and words used by Crowther and her “tribe.” In one trip to Sweden, Crowther spoke about the alleged superiority of Swedish people over all others. Crowther frequently claims all Native elders, or even all Native people, are supporting her, waiting for her, and depend upon her and her message even for their very survival. Of course, nothing could be further from the truth. Most Natives never heard of her. Those that have are strongly opposed to her.

Who is behind Crowther’s rapid rise among New Age leaders? Our source very close to the family says Crowther has no computer skills nor business or organizing acumen, nothing that could account for her success except a vivid imagination. The same source attributes everything Crowther has done to two people and one group; Adam DeArmon AKA Adam Yellowbird, a white New Age operator in Sedona; Santa Fe Soul, which sponsors some of Crowther’s talks; and especially Crowther’s longtime friend Jennifer Ferraro. Our source described Fierro as a failed performance artist who claims to be Native but is actually Italian and Greek. Online discussions between Crowther and Ferraro seem to show Ferraro as the real brains of the operation, the power behind the throne, her manager, website operator, and even her director. Crowther defers to her in public talks, and Ferraro frequently talks in one messages to Crowther like a mother to a small child.

Our source close to the family is worried the Tribe of Many Colors will "become another Jonestown" and is at a loss for how her family can get her to see sense. Whether the “tribe” self destruct violently is yet to be seen, but they are extraordinarily intolerant of dissent or criticism of any kind. Its website was heavily censored, with any daring to question Crowther kicked out. Recently their website was so overwhelmed by dealing with criticism it was taken down entirely. Crowther’s inner circle, especially Ferraro, have begun throwing around legal threats at any who dare to critique Crowther. Ferraro, though she is not a lawyer, sent threats to sue to at least five people. The “tribe” also sent infiltrators to sites critical to Crowther to gather information on critics.

There are currently plans for a book by Crowther, and two documentaries, one favorable to her and one critical. There are also ongoing plans for protests of Crowther’s ceremony selling by Native activists and her many non-Native critics. The Salish tribal council is considering legal action. The controversy is not going away.


Dr. Al Carroll is a historian, professor, former Fulbright Scholar, and activist for Native causes. His first book is Medicine Bags and Dog Tags: American Indian Veterans From Colonial Times to the Second Iraq War from University of Nebraska Press.

Research for this article includes contributions by numerous activists, former followers, Sky Davis and T. Tavares, and a source very close to the Crowther family. Annika Banfeld translated articles and radio interviews from Swedish to English.


Statement of the Salish Elders:

"The Culture and Elders Committee of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation protect the intangible cultural resources of the tribes including language, songs, stories etc.

"No tribal Elders or elders have met with nor do they condone the claims and actions made by Kiesha Crowther.

"She is not their 'shaman', she has no right to claim this title and the Elders and elders of CSKT of the Flathead Reservation would like her to cease and desist immediately from making such false claims that erode the traditions that members of the CSKT Culture and Elders Committee are trying to preserve."

The posting of this statement came with the permission and urging of the Salish elders. Anyone doubting this message's authenticity can contact the Flathead Reservation.

Offline luciddreamer

  • Posts: 0
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #725 on: January 11, 2011, 10:08:06 pm »
Excellent - will post and spread...thank you!

Offline nemesis

  • Posts: 526
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #726 on: January 11, 2011, 10:24:03 pm »
Excellent work Al!   8)

Let's see how Crowther and her handlers try to squirm out of this considered and well researched expose.

Offline luciddreamer

  • Posts: 0
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #727 on: January 11, 2011, 10:48:01 pm »
So the article was posted on her page by someone  :-X and this is her response thus far:
"my goodness, this stuff just keeps getting better and better lol.. now im a millionare... someone should have told me lol.. someone has a good imagination... laughs.. how absurd...  if you have questions please ask.. but please i beg you to be a little more inteligent than what was written on that link..."


Offline luciddreamer

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Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #728 on: January 11, 2011, 10:49:06 pm »
and then she deleted it....nay worries

Offline AlaskaGrl

  • Posts: 195
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #729 on: January 11, 2011, 11:23:10 pm »
Great article!!

Don't forget to Tweet it all around.   
#Pagans   #Shaman  #NewAge  #Spirituality

This is a list of popular Twitter Hash Tags #   
http://listorious.com/tags    Click on the topics to see a list of groups and tags to use.
Make Twitter a part of your Activism tools, as well as your local FB pages to reach your towns and cities
as well as groups.   
 

Linda.

Teacher

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Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #730 on: January 12, 2011, 01:01:29 am »
what a super article!  I posted it to my FB page under "notes" then "shared" it on the page ... hopefully it will go somewhere :-)

Offline goozih

  • Posts: 34
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #731 on: January 12, 2011, 02:03:19 am »
The Article is brilliant! No stone left unturned. 8)
Her response on the other hand can only be described as deranged. :-\

Offline luciddreamer

  • Posts: 0
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #732 on: January 12, 2011, 02:14:30 am »
I like how intelligent is typed wrong...sorry being  nonspiritual now  ;D

The article is also posted here http://www.indiancountrytoday.com/yourict/113315469.html

I won't be able to see how she responds now, I had to defriend her, couldn't stomach it anymore

Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #733 on: January 12, 2011, 02:58:18 am »
Awesome.

press the little black on silver arrow Music, 1) Bob Pietkivitch Buddha Feet http://www.4shared.com/file/114179563/3697e436/BuddhaFeet.html

Offline Superdog

  • Posts: 440
Re: Re: Kiesha Crowther - "Little Grandmother"
« Reply #734 on: January 12, 2011, 03:02:10 am »
I kinda wondered about all the claims about Kiesha's artwork made on the artwanted.com page so I looked into the Jack Dempsey Stamp she says she designed here.

http://www.artwanted.com/artist.cfm?ArtID=22948&Tab=Bio

"Kiesha Crowther, born and currently residing in Colorado's beautiful San Luis Valley, has been recognized in both of the mediums she chooses to work in, Art and Poetry. At the young age of 23 her rendition of Jack Dempsey, The Manassa Mauler, was chosen by the United States Postal Service for replication on a postage stamp honoring the great boxer. Her art work has been featured in galleries from Taos, New Mexico to Edinburgh, Scotland. Kiesha's poetry has brought both national and international acclaim and recognition. She has been awarded Poet of the year in Washington DC for 2003. Philadelphia PA in 2004, Orlando, FL in 2005 and last year received the prestigious award again in Las Vegas NV. Part of her work is now contained in a book/project spearheaded by First Lady, Laura Bush entitled "Poems for Peace". Many of her poems have been included on a soon to be released CD entitled "Creative Poetic Expressions" which will be released worldwide in the near future. One of her poems has now been used as the lyrics of a popular song released during the summer of 2006. The poem "Reach for my Hand" has become the lyrics of a song by the same name recorded and released by the Willows Folk Group from Warwickshire, United Kingdom. It has been heard on radios all across the United Kingdom. Her poetry has been included in numerous books distributed world wide including, Colors of the Heart, Eternal Portraits, Letters from the Soul, The Sound of Poetry, Theater of the Mind and has been featured in the annual publication "The best Poets of 2002, 2004 and 2005. The reception and success of her writing in poetry has led to the publication of two books solely devoted to her work and demonstrates her love of poetry. "Whispers in the Wind" printed in 2003 and "Secrets of the Soul" printed in 2006. Both books have been sold here in the United States and in Europe. A part of Kiesha's success is reflected in her giving nature. She has been asked to share her talents by giving art instruction for the public in her home area including teach of art classes in several southern Colorado rural schools. She has participated as an art judge and critic at numerous art Fairs and competitions. Her credentials include a Bachelors in Small Business and a degree in Animal Science. She has recently been awarded the Life Experience Bachelors and holds a Masters Degree of Art from Alameda University "
---------------------------------

I kind of left it alone because it didn't necessarily go with the forum subject, but the Jack Dempsey stamp stood out to me....so I looked into it a little.  Kiesha is 32 right now and she states in her bio above that the stamp was commisioned when she was 23.  That's 9 years ago making that somewhere around 2001.  The problem is the Jack Dempsey stamp came out in 1998 after a lengthy campaign started by his widow in 1995.  Anyone can confirm the stamp's date here (just scroll down or do a page search for dempsey):

http://www.stampcatalogue.org/2008/10/us-stamps-1998.html

It's from the "Celebrate the 1910's" series stamp #13 originally sold for $.32.

Even if I'm wrong on the year for Crowther claim I'd only be off by 1 year making it...at the earliest 2000 when she claims her art was commissioned for this stamp.  2 years after the stamp was actually issued.

I've also checked into the "Poems for Peace" project she claims to have been part of....I can't find any existence of it either.  There is a project Laura Bush is associated with called "Poets Against War".  Close, Kiesha...but no cigar for that one.  The site contains over 22,000 poems submitted since it's inception, has a search engine and lists the names of every poet along with the poem and where the poet is from.  She's not listed there.  
http://www.poetsagainstthewar.org/

As for the two books "Whispers in the Wind" and "Secrets of the Soul"....can't find those books either.  *Modifying the post to add something here*  These two titles are not uncommon titles for poems.  There's more than one of the same name.  For books of poetry I found a few...none of them by Kiesha, or featuring Kiesha or having anything to do with her.
"Whispers in the Wind" by Jeanine Allison
http://www.amazon.com/Whispers-Wind-collection-Jeanine-Allison/dp/0759671362

and "Secrets of the Soul" by Paula Lafran Gillian-Williams
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/books/product.aspx?r=1&isbn=9781449080563&cm_mmc=Google%20Product%20Search-_-Q000000630-_-Secrets%20of%20the%20Soul-_-9781449080563

Seems the "elaborate liar" title given by a family member may be a sufficient description of her behavior and it's obvious it didn't start with the outrageous claim about being "initiated as a shaman over the Sioux/Salish tribes."

AND even the Almeda University claims are complete are completely dubious

It is an online diploma mill and widely regarded as such as Al had pointed out....the life experience degrees entails applying, paying, listing your life experiences and work, they don't verify any of your claims and then offer you a degree based on what you told them.  One persons experience with them is chronicled here.

http://www.viewpoints.com/Almeda-University-Experiential-Learning-Degrees-review-68c3


Superdog
« Last Edit: January 12, 2011, 03:51:20 am by Superdog »