About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 89. Chapters: Lakota people, Lakota mythology, Dances with Wolves, Whope, Iktomi, Anog Ite, Haokah, Skan, Cetan, h pa, Unhcegila, Wakinyan, Canotila, Untunktahe, Iya, Ghost Dance, Sweat lodge, End time, Wounded Knee Massacre, Republic of Lakotah, Lakota language, Black Hills Land Claim, Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, Great Sioux War of 1876, Red Cloud's War, Native American tribes in Nebraska, Devils Tower National Monument, Sioux Wars, Great Race, Crazy Horse Memorial, Heyoka, Bear Butte, Oglala Lakota, Massacre Canyon, Black Hills National Forest, Treaty of Fort Laramie, KILI, Winter count, Sinte Gleska University, White Buffalo Calf Woman, Red Cloud Agency, Black Elk Wilderness, Inipi, Hunkpapa, Standing Rock Indian Reservation, Standing Silent Nation, Wasi'chu, Brul, Lakota Woman, Miniconjou, Sans Arc, Two Kettles, Lakota Freedom Movement, Sihasapa, Yuwipi, Chununpa, Tate. Excerpt: The end time, end times, or end of days is a time period described in the eschatological writings in the three Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) and in doomsday scenarios in various other non-Abrahamic religions. In Christianity, the End Times are often depicted as a time of tribulation that precedes the Second Coming of the Christian "saviour" or a "hoped-for deliverer," Jesus, the Christian Messiah, who will usher in the fullness of the World to Come and Kingdom of God and bring an end to suffering and evil and all things wrong with the current world. In Islam, Yawm al-Qiy mah "the Day of Resurrection" or Yawm ad-Din "the Day of Judgement," Allah's final assessment of humanity, is preceded by the end of the world. In Judaism the term "End of Days" is a reference to the Messianic era and the Jewish belief in the coming of Mashiach and the Olam Haba. Various other religions also have eschatological beliefs associated with tur...