A master of eloquence and innovative language, Martin Prechtel is a writer, artist, and teacher who, through his work both written and spoken, hopes to promote the subtlety, irony, and premodern vitality hidden in any living language. A half-blood Native American with a Pueblo Indian upbringing, he left New Mexico to live in the village of Santiago Atitlan, Guatemala, eventually becoming a full member of the Tzutujil Mayan community there. For many years he served as a principal in that body of village leaders responsible for instructing the young people in the meanings of their ancient stories through the rituals of adult rites of passage. Once again residing in his native New Mexico, Prechtel teaches at his international school, Bolad's Kitchen. Through music, ritual, farming, sacred architecture, ancient textiles, tools, and story, Prechtel helps people in many lands to remember their own sense of place in the daily sacred through the search for the Indigenous Soul.
“The Unlikely Peace at Cuchumaquic is like one of the seeds Martín
Prechtel describes. When planted in fertile ground, the words and
thoughts and images and prayers will grow into a life-giving
complexity. This is a wondrous and powerful book.”—Derrick Jensen,
activist and author of Dreams and Endgame
“A brilliant writer, Martín Prechtel bears gifts from our
ancestors, gifts that are essential to awaken a wayward humanity to
the need for a spiritual ecology."—Michael Harner, author of
The Way of the Shaman
“Prechtel’s words are like the wildly colored heirloom kernels of
corn born of ancestral knowledge that traditional Maya farmers
prayerfully place into the holy earth. Once planted, the author
waters these sacred seeds of the Indigenous Soul with heartfelt
compassion for a spiritually disconnected humanity in this period
of global transformation. May these sprouts of indigenous awareness
flourish and produce vital seeds for a collective return to an
awareness of our oneness with nature.”—Robert Sitler, director of
Latin American Studies at Stetson University, Florida, and author
of The Living Maya
“A haunting and enchanting prose poem that encompasses a shattering
earthquake, the rapacious disaster capitalism that fed on it, and
the resilience of an indigenous culture whose authenticity carried
it through those dark times.… Martín Prechtel's deep wisdom has
given us a model that can be replicated everywhere, so that from
the moral bankruptcy and collapse of global capitalism a true human
culture, in union with the wild, can emerge.”—Toby Hemenway, author
of Gaia's Garden
“It is very important, especially nowadays in the face of the
monsters of GMO agribusnesses, that someone speaks out so clearly
and eloquently about saving the pure and strong seeds that nature
itself brought forth. And, of course, Martín Prechtel is also right
about the seeds we carry within us, given to us from our age-old
culture.…”—Wolf D. Storl, author of The Herbal Lore of Wise Women
and Wortcunners
"Martín Prechtel has seen it all: He grew up on a Pueblo Indian
reservation, was apprenticed to a Guatemalan medicine man and
settled in the United States after fleeing the Guatemalan civil
war. The Unlikely Peace at Cuchumaquic: The Parallel Lives of
People as Plants: Keeping the Seeds Alive (North Atlantic Books)
relates the preservation of seeds and plant life to the similar
seeds of spirituality in human life as he chronicles his own life
journey." —Indian Country
"The Unlikely Peace at Cuchumaquic: The Parallel Lives of People as
Plants: Keeping the Seeds Alive reflects the author's experiences
growing up on a Pueblo Indian reservation and his years of
apprenticing to a Guatemalan shaman, returning to the U.S. after
fleeing the country's civil war ... Real human culture is
exterminated when the non-genetically modified seeds of plants that
feed us are lost - and this appraoches the issue both
metaphorically and spiritually, discussing how such seeds of
spirituality and culture need to be cherished, replanted, and
harvested. Collections strong in tribal insights, ecology,
spirituality, and autobiography alike will find this a moving,
passionate work." —Midwest Book Review
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