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Mt. Shasta

Sacred Mountain: Mt. Shasta

 

Mt. Shasta, part of the Cascade Range in northern California, has long been sacred to the Native Americans of the area.

Today, Shasta is sacred to New Age followers who regard the great mountain as a source of mystical power. For both its beauty and sacred importance, Mt. Shasta has been compared to Mt. Fuji in Japan.

Mt. Shasta is located about 60 miles south of the California-Oregon border and about 77 miles north of Redding, California. At 14,162-feet (4,322 m), the mountain is the second-highest peak in the Cascade Range. Geologically speaking, Mt. Shasta is is a stratovolcano, with four cones buried atop one another. Shastina 12,300 ft (3,749 m) is the most evident of these cones and forms a second peak.

History

Sacred mountain: Mt. Shasta

The north side of Mt. Shasta has been inhabited since at least 600 BC, possibly 2500 BC. Artifacts in the greater area suggest 9,000 years of Native American habitation. Mt. Shasta was a corner territorial boundary for four Native American peoples — the Shasta, Modoc, Ajumawi/Atsuwegi, and Wintu — and within the view of the Karuk Tribe on the mid-Klamath River and the Klamath Tribe of the upper Klamath River.

 

For all these native peoples, Mt. Shasta was the center of creation. The Shasta people believed that the Great Spirit first created the mountain, by pushing down ice and snow through a hole from heaven, then using the mountain to step onto the earth. He created trees and called upon the sun to melt snow to provide rivers and streams. He breathed on the leaves of the trees and created birds to nest in their branches. He broke up small twigs and cast them into streams, where they became fish; branches cast into the forest became animals.

 

The nearby Modoc people shared this creation account and taught that the Great Spirit lived on Mt. Shasta after creation. His daughter fell from the mountain and was raised by grizzly bears. She married one of their clan, and their children were the first humans. In punishment, the Great Spirit condemned the bear to walk on four legs and scattered their children all over the world.

Sacred Mountain: Mt. Shasta

Today, these Native American tribes have largely disappeared, either moved away or absorbed into other groups through intermarriage. But Mt. Shasta has taken on a new religious meaning in recent years. Over 100 New Age sects and groups now regard the impressive mountain as sacred.

Regarded as a source of harmony and peace, Mt. Shasta has been identified by various groups as a cosmic power point, a UFO landing spot, the entry point into the fifth dimension (which is characterized by "playful tenderness"), a source of magic crystals, and one of the Seven Sacred Mountains of the World.

In 1932, the Rosicrucians popularized the belief that Shasta is the dwelling place of the Lemurians, super-humans who are so spiritually advanced that they can change themselves from material to spiritual at will. They were described as tall, graceful and agile, with larger heads and much larger foreheads than average humans. Their power is enhanced by a cache of crystals they brought with them to Mt. Shasta when they fled their original home of Lemuria, a lost continent off the Pacific coast that was destroyed by a volcanic eruption. (The name "Lemuria" was first coined in a scientific context in 1864, by zoologist Philip L. Sclaterby, as a hypothetical sunken continent which could account for the migration of lemurs between existing continents.)

Mt. Shasta

In 1930, Guy Ballard, founder of the "I AM" movement, reported that he met the Ascended Master St. Germaine on the slopes of Mt. Shasta. Ascended Masters are spiritually advanced beings who manifest "the luminous essence of divine love" and assist human evolution. These teachings have been especially popularized by Elizabeth Clare Prophet, a prominent New Age teacher.

In 1971, a Buddhist monastery was founded on Mt. Shasta by Houn Jiyu-Kennett. Mt. Shasta was one of the sites of the 1987 Harmonic Convergence, a gathering at a number of power points in the hope that united spiritual energy might avert world catastrophe and usher in an age of harmony and peace.

In recent years, revived Native American religion has once again begun to venerate Mt. Shasta. Each year a sweat lodge ceremony is conducted halfway up the mountain. The Wintu invoke the mountain's spirit with ritual dances.

There is a belief that if you visit Mount Shasta and Sedona within a year of each other that your life will change!

 

Description

Mount Shasta City, at 3,500 feet above sea level next to Mt. Shasta, is the headquarters of most of these religious movements and home to several study centers at which seekers can explore mystical teachings centering on the sacred mountain.

A highway climbs up Mt. Shasta's slopes to 8,000 feet (2,400 metres). The Mount Shasta Ski Park, opened in 1985, offers 1,400 vertical feet of descent serviced by three chair lifts. Mt. Shasta is popular with mountain climbers, about 50% of whom reach the summit.

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