Veia de Pajé KUNTANAWA

Rapé Kuntanawa Veia de Pajé is a ceremonial blend of deep, transformative power — created for one purpose: to work with truth.
Not the soft kind of truth, but the kind you can no longer run from.

This Rapé is for those who feel the inner calling to meet themselves fully — without masks, without illusions, without compromise.

It’s made from Sabiá and Tsunu ash, but at its core lies a sacred vine known as Veia de Pajé — “the shaman’s vein”, also called “Heart of the Boa Constrictor” or “Jiboinha” (“little serpent”), because of its heart-shaped leaves.
Used by shamans in rites of passage and threshold work, this fine vine brings a focused, alert, penetrating energy into the blend.

This is not a Rapé that soothes.
It reveals — everything that is not in alignment with your truth. And it gently invites you to witness it.

Price range: €12,00 through €62,00

Delivery within Europe:10 - 12 business days
Other continents: up to 20 business days
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Description

Sabiá

A plant of Earth’s wisdom.
It grounds you — not by dulling the senses, but by bringing you back into your body, the present moment, and what is real.
Traditionally used during emotional overwhelm, chaos, or fragmentation.
It is the anchor of this blend — holding the space in which truth can emerge.

Tsunu

Shamans don’t recognize Tsunu trees with their eyes, but with their intuition.
This is a spiritual tree — its ash cleanses energy fields, purifies the space, and amplifies the power of other ingredients.
It clears the background so that what must be seen can fully appear.

Veia de Pajé

Shamans say this plant “knows the path of the soul.”
It is a guardian of thresholds — teaching that one can be open and safe at the same time.
Its leaves resemble veins, its shape is serpentine, and its spirit enters gently, but with unwavering clarity.
It doesn’t let you hide.
It opens the door to the place where pretending is no longer possible.

The snake, with which this plant is symbolically entwined, is one of the most ancient and potent spirit animals.
It represents transformation, death, and rebirth — the sacred cycles that lead to growth.
In shamanic traditions, it carries ancestral memory, intuitive wisdom, and deep connection to the body.
It moves close to the Earth, reminding us to stay rooted in what is real, and yet it knows how to travel through invisible realms to bring back insight that truly changes us.
It is a teacher of shadow and light — showing that healing doesn’t come from avoiding pain, but from meeting it fully and integrating it.
The snake arrives when you’re ready to leave behind what no longer serves and step across the threshold of inner initiation.
It won’t shield you from the fire — but it will walk with you through it.

 

Effect

This is Rapé of radical truth.
It doesn’t soften the experience.
It confronts. Clears. Realigns.
In its presence, all that is out of balance starts to show itself.
The body reveals its tensions.
The mind uncovers thoughts long suppressed.
The heart begins to feel what you’ve been avoiding.

It works deeply with the root chakra – Muladhara.
It brings you back to your base.
To what is stable, solid, real.
To the truth of whether you are truly grounded, present, and ready to stand fully on your own two feet.
Without this foundation, all spirituality becomes escape.

At the same time, it opens the crown chakra — in stillness, in presence, in the silent knowing that everything is connected.
Control dissolves.
Trust emerges.
Chaos quiets.
Direction appears.

This is Rapé that unites heaven and earth — within you.
It doesn’t lead you outward.
It leads you inward — to where everything already is, only hidden.

Veia de Pajé is not for everyone.
But if you are ready to meet yourself without filters — she will walk with you.
Not down the easy path — but the real one.

 

The Kuntanawa Tribe

The Kuntanawa people were nearly wiped out during the latex boom of the early 20th century, and for almost 100 years, were believed to be extinct.
But in the early 2000s, descendants came forward — reclaiming their identity, their rights, and their sacred land.

Today, the Kuntanawa number between 100 and 400 members.
They are slowly rebuilding their language, culture, memory, and presence.

To survive and share their wisdom, they connect with other tribes and host festivals, where they offer medicine like Rapé as a living part of their tradition.

Though their ancestral language may be irrecoverable, their land is now protected, fertile, and thriving.
Their energy is returning — and their Rapé carries this strength.

For the Kuntanawa, Rapé is a tool of clarity, strength, and alignment — helping them choose wisely, walk cleanly, and remember who they are.

 

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