Halfcocked Jack --
Well, you are going off a little halfcocked there.
Sacagawea was not employed, rented, leased, sold, or trafficked for sex after the common meaning of the term "sex slave" as you used it. She was not sold as a "sex slave" to her husband, she was not a slave to the Lewis and Clark expedition, and Lewis and Clark did not abuse her as a "sex slave" either. She did not "manage to make her way back across the continent" -- she helped lead the Lewis and Clark Expedition from Saint Louis, Missouri, to the Pacific Ocean in Oregon, and back again. At no time did Sacagawea "gain freedom for her children," as you said -- because they were never enslaved. She has no metaphysical link to sex-slavery or to civil justice and legal matters.
BLACK HAWK AND THE INDIAN HEAD CENT
Indian Head cents have long been taken to be links to the spirit of Black Hawk, a Sauk warrior from the upper midwest. His veneration was introduced into the Spiritual Church Movement by Mother Leafy Anderson, the founder of the Eternal Life Christian Spiritualist Church, who was born in Wisconsin, in the region where Black Hawk had lived. He fought the US Government and had a lookout on a cliff, which entered into the Black Spiritual Church Movement song that calls him "a watcher on the wall." He aid is sought in matters of the law, police, customs officials, IRS, DEA, ICE, zoning departments, and process servers. See:
Black Hawk by Catherine Yronwode at AIRR
https://www.readersandrootworkers.org/wiki/Black_Hawk
And for more on Leafy Anderson and her mediumship channeling of Father Jones, Black Hawk, and Queen Esther, as well as her petitions to Black Hawk for civil justice. See:
Leafy Anderson by Papa Newt at AIRR
https://www.readersandrootworkers.org/w ... y_Anderson
I will be writing a LUCKY W Patreon page on this coin and it will be announced here and released to the public one year later.
AMU-USA-CENT
Genuine Copper Indian Head Cent (Indian Head Penny)
$4.00
You can order right here in the Forum by clicking on the blue Add To Cart button.
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SACAGAWEA AND THE "GOLDEN DOLLAR"
Sacagawea was a member of the Shoshone tribe, born in the region now called Idaho. She was captured by the Hidatsa tribe as a child and taken eastward to their homeland in what we now call North Dakota. She was fluent both in Shoshone and Hidatsa. She and her husband Toissaint Charbonneau, a Metis (a person of mixed French Canadian and Cree heritage) were hired by the Lewis and Clark Expedition as guides and translators. Their first child, Jean Baptiste "Pomp" Charbonneau, was born in North Dakota to 16-year-old Sacagawea in 1805 while the expedition was underway, and the baby accompanied the expedition as well. The treatment that Meriwether Lewis and William Clark accorded Sacagawea was respectful and Clark in particular seems to have befriended her. The couple's second child, Lizette Charbonneau, was born in 1812 in South Dakota, and Sacagawea died in South Dakota that same year from typhoid fever. In 1813, with the agreement of their father, Clark adopted both children in Saint Louis and raised them.
Sacagawea's gold-coloured one dollar coin, first minted in 2000, caught the attention of women, especially those with children, who, like her, were supporting themselves in the work force. I immediately devised the idea to add her coin to mojo hands made for women with children who also are employed outside the home. Because of her outstanding language skills and her work as an expedition guide, i have found that she may be petitioned by professional translators and tour guides as well.
I will be writing a LUCKY W Patreon page on this coin and it will be announced here and released to the public one year later.
AMU-USA-SACA
Sacagawea Dollar Coin, Brass
$1.00
Click the blue Add To Cart button to order right here in the forum!
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So, no, although these two Native Americans from different tribes and regions were roughly contemporaries, they lived very different lives, have different linkages to hoodoo, and are petitioned for different causes.
I know you are new to these things, and live elsewhere, so i will leave you with one further thought: Beware of the desire to "substitute." You say you cannot get an Indian Head Cent -- but we sell them, you know. See also this Forum thread for more on lucky coins and currency:
US Cent, Dime, Dollar, Two Dollar Bill, Lucky Coins, and Tokens Questions and Answers
us-cent-dime-dollar-two-dollar-bill-luc ... 13120.html
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P.S. The traditional American coin for escaping from slavery (sexual or otherwise) has always been a silver Liberty Head coin -- the Seated Liberty of the mid 19th century, the Winged Liberty ("Mercury") Dime of the early 20th century, and so forth. I have written about that elsewhere and will not go into it here, but for a brief look at American coin charms and other talismans, see:
Talismans by Catherine Yronwode, Nagasiva Yronwode, and Miss Bri at AIRR
https://www.readersandrootworkers.org/w ... :Talismans
Good luck to you!