
Tolteca Arte Sanador
Our mission: To rescue the historical memory of our community, reconnecting it with its identity through self-recognition as an integral part of its culture, through education and the integration of holistic complementary health techniques for self-care.
Our vision: " Let a Healer be made in every home."
Impact: Being a remarkable contribution that leaves others empowered, skilled, and present to their own greatness.
“Education doesn’t change the world, it changes the people who are going to change the world.”
Pablo Freire
Who are we?
We are a nonprofit organization whose mission is to help the Hispanic community recover its historical memory and strengthen its cultural identity.
Our motto is:
“Let a healer be formed in every home.”
Why the name Toltec?
Contrary to what many believe, Toltec is not the name of an ethnic group in Mexico.
Toltec—or Toltecáyotl—is an ancient concept that describes a wise, cultured person from any era and any part of the world. It's not just about accumulating information, but about living a path of profound transformation and spiritual transcendence.
To be Toltec is to aspire to human perfection according to the vision of Anáhuac—the original name that extends from Canada to Tierra del Fuego.
What is a Toltec?
The Toltec is an artist of life, a being who cultivates his existence on all levels:
the physical, the emotional, the energetic and the spiritual.
It is said that the Toltec “works the stone,” a metaphor that represents the art of transforming matter into essence, of refining jade, that is, polishing the deepest aspects of our Being.
Toltecáyotl is the art of living in the here and now—Nikan Nahs—and is also the path to the Feathered Serpent (Quetzalcóatl).
Be a Toltec: a person with their own experience.
“The attempt summons the will.”
Our logo
The Toltec symbol is a flower: Xóchitl.
This symbol represents Venus and is associated with Quetzalcoatl. In its apparent movement across the sky, Venus draws an X, a symbol of cycles and universal balance. The flower represents the closing and fulfillment of a cycle, the point at which nothing is missing.
The chosen color is Shiwitl, a greenish blue, aqua blue, or turquoise blue, which means "water grass." It symbolizes the warrior, the hero, the norm, and what is right.
The central X represents development and expansion, while the four petals represent the four sacred directions: the cardinal and the points of being.
It is also a symbol of development potential.
“The first thing is not to achieve something…
The first thing is to empty yourself of what prevents you from achieving it.”
— Popol Vuh
Who are we?
We are a nonprofit organization whose mission is to help the Hispanic community recover its historical memory and strengthen its cultural identity.
Our motto is:
“Let a healer be formed in every home.”
Why the name Toltec?
Contrary to what many believe, Toltec is not the name of an ethnic group in Mexico.
Toltec—or Toltecáyotl—is an ancient concept that describes a wise, cultured person from any era and any part of the world. It's not just about accumulating information, but about living a path of profound transformation and spiritual transcendence.
To be Toltec is to aspire to human perfection according to the vision of Anáhuac—the original name that extends from Canada to Tierra del Fuego.
What is a Toltec?
The Toltec is an artist of life, a being who cultivates his existence on all levels:
the physical, the emotional, the energetic and the spiritual.
It is said that the Toltec “works the stone,” a metaphor that represents the art of transforming matter into essence, of refining jade, that is, polishing the deepest aspects of our Being.
Toltecáyotl is the art of living in the here and now—Nikan Nahs—and is also the path to the Feathered Serpent (Quetzalcóatl).
Be a Toltec: a person with their own experience.
“The attempt summons the will.”
Our logo
The Toltec symbol is a flower: Xóchitl.
This symbol represents Venus and is associated with Quetzalcoatl. In its apparent movement across the sky, Venus draws an X, a symbol of cycles and universal balance. The flower represents the closing and fulfillment of a cycle, the point at which nothing is missing.
The chosen color is Shiwitl, a greenish blue, aqua blue, or turquoise blue, which means "water grass." It symbolizes the warrior, the hero, the norm, and what is right.
The central X represents development and expansion, while the four petals represent the four sacred directions: the cardinal and the points of being.
It is also a symbol of development potential.