The prominent Shinto theologian Sokyo Ono, for instance, said kami worship was "an expression" of the Japanese "native racial faith which arose in the mystic days of remote antiquity" and that it was "as indigenous as the people that brought the Japanese nation into existence".
Shinto has no central authority in control and much diversity exists among practitioners.
There is substantial local variation in how Shinto is practiced; the anthropologist John K.
The other kami eventually succeeded in coaxing her out.
A 32-year old member of the Kenya's majority tribe, Nahashon Njoroge, would be convicted of after the murder weapon was found under his bed with his fingerprints on it; Mboya was Luo, and second largest tribe was killed by a Kikuyu sent by Kikuyu Kenya's governing officials, was of the tribe.
An alternative is immersion beneath a waterfall.