Answer:
The Pueblo thought Kachinas were ancestral spirits who returned with the clouds and rain to help their people. ... The Pueblos always had their own religion. Their religion taught respect for nature and provided all the things necessary for life. The Pueblos prayed to kachinas(Spirits) in under ground rooms called kivas.
Explanation:
Here in the brooding desert and high mesas, two sacred worlds collided: the Catholicism of the Spanish friars and the spirit-filled religion of the indigenous peoples known as the Pueblos. The Pueblos were a sedentary people who lived in towns and sustained themselves by planting corn and hunting small game.
When there's no more room in hell, the dead will walk the earth
The answer is C, as the torah was the original bible
“One of the strangest controversies in the history of Orientalism turned upon the “origin of bhakti”, as if devotion had at some given moment been a new idea and thenceforth a fashionable one. It would have been simpler to observe that the word bhakti means primarily a given share, and therefore also the devotion or love that all liberality presupposes; and so that inasmuch as one “gives God his share” (bhagam), i.e. sacrifces, one is his bhakta. Thus in the hymn, “If thou givest me my share” amounts to saying “If thou lovest me”. It has often been pointed out that the Sacrifice was thought of as a commerce between Gods and men: but not often realised that by introducing into traditional conceptions of trade notions derived from our own internecine commercial transactions, we have falsified our understanding of the original sense of such a commerce, which was actually more of the potlatsh type, a competition in giving, than like our competitions in taking.
The Politics of Mexico take place in a framework of a federal presidential representative democratic republic whose government is based on a congressional system, whereby the President of Mexico is both head of state and head of government, and of a multi-party system.