
A compassionate family, dedicated to sharing their care and Healing Tradition
The Temple is blessed to work with an incredible team of warmhearted, highly skilled, and experienced female and male Shipibo healers. We are privileged to work with healers who have each practiced the ancient art of ayahuasca shamanism for decades.
Our Healers

The healing of Shanenawa shamans are profound expressions of their spiritual connection with nature and the invisible worlds.
Through sacred chants called Pakari and the ritual use of power plants such as ayahuasca, the shamans— or txanas— channel ancestral wisdom, promote healing, and keep the people's memory alive. Their practices are inseparable from art: each chant, body painting, or graphic design carries spiritual messages, healing paths, and teachings about the balance between human beings and the forest.


Tsatsani Shanenawa
Peyrani Shanenawa
Naynawa Shanenawa
Cacique
Curandeira
Curandeiro
Txanas
Txana is the name given to healing spirits, enchanted beings, or spiritual entities with whom ceremonial singers channel the power of the txana birds, thus connecting Indigenous people during rituals and sacred chants.
They are considered allied spirits who transmit spiritual and medicinal knowledge and guidance for living in balance with nature. They are invoked and channeled in ritual chants, which have spiritual and therapeutic power. The txanas are often contacted during the ritual use of Uni (ayahuasca), a sacred plant used in spiritual and healing ceremonies. During these ceremonies, chants guided by the txana (the shaman or spirit) invoke the healing spirits and help one "see" and "understand" the spiritual world.
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Axi Shanenawa
Txana

Muka Shanenawa
Txana

Tuim Shanenawa
Txana
Integration Team
The integration team is a group of dedicated facilitators who offer support during and after the indigenous ceremonies.
Their role is to help participants navigate and make sense of the experiences they are going through, offering a safe and grounded space for emotional, mental, and spiritual processing. Through practices such as yoga, meditation, sharing circles, and one-on-one support, the integration team helps bridge the gap between the ceremonial space and daily life, ensuring that the insights and transformations can be fully embodied and integrated.

Lucas Bragagnollo
Yoga Teacher

Alexandre Tondo
Integration Facilitator
Remember, we're not in a hotel; we're a family living in a village. So you'll be welcomed as part of this family, with comfort, affection, and security.
