Hank Wesselman


Henry Barnard Wesselman is an American anthropologist known primarily for his Spiritwalker trilogy of spiritual memoirs. In them, he claims to have been in contact with "Nainoa", an ethnic Hawaiian kahuna living some 5,000 years in our future. The books envision the imminent collapse of Western civilization as a result of Global Warming. On a more positive note, Wesselman perceives an ongoing "wide-spread spiritual reawakening" which he dubs the "Modern Mystical Movement."
Together with his wife Jill Kuykendall, Wesselman leads shamanic training workshops for the Omega Institute and other, similar institutions. They divide their time between northern California, Oregon, and Captain Cook, Hawaii.

Professional background

Wesselman is a native New Yorker who received his undergraduate degree in zoology from the University of Colorado at Boulder, and his doctorate in anthropology from the University of California at Berkeley. During the 1960s he served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Nigeria, among the Yoruba. He has participated in paleoanthropology research in east Africa's Great Rift Valley. His research speciality is involved with the reconstruction of the paleo-environments of early man sites and the cover story of National Geographic, July 2010.
He was an instructor at American River College and Sierra College, both in California, and has also taught classes for the University of California at San Diego; the University of Hawaii at Hilo; the Kiriji Memorial College in Igbajo, Nigeria; and Adeola Odutola College in Ijebu-ode, Nigeria. The Omega Institute Faculty.
He is the author of The Spiritwalker Trilogy—Spiritwalker 1995, Medicinemaker 1998, and Visionseeker 2001—as well as The Journey to the Sacred Garden 2003; Spirit Medicine 2004; Awakening to the Spirit World, The Bowl of Light 2011, and The Re-Enchantment: A Shamanic Path to a Life of Wonder

Publications

Spiritwalker trilogy

Spiritwalker has been published in 15 languages abroad.
2008: "Hawaiian Perspectives on the Nature of the Soul." The Journal of Shamanic Practice 1: 21-25.
2014a: Australian Aboriginal Wisdom. A Journal of Contemporary Shamanism 7 : 6-8.
And more...