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Shamanism |
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A
shaman is a medicine man or woman.
Shaman are spiritual beings with the ability
to heal, work with energies and 'see' visions.
The essential characteristics of shaman are mastery
of energy and fire as a medium of transformation.
Shamanism is a range of traditional beliefs and
practices that involve the ability to diagnose, cure, and sometimes
cause human suffering by traversing the axis mundi and forming
a special relationship with, or gaining control over, spirits.
Shamans have been credited with the ability to control the weather,
divination, the interpretation of dreams, astral projection, and
traveling to upper and lower worlds. Shamanistic traditions have
existed throughout the world since prehistoric times.
Shamanism is based on the premise that the visible
world is pervaded by invisible forces or spirits that affect the
lives of the living. In contrast to animism and animatism, which
any and usually all members of a society practice, shamanism requires
specialized knowledge or abilities. Shamans are not, however, organized
into full-time ritual or spiritual associations, as are priests.
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Etymology
The word shaman originated among the Siberian
Tungus (Evenks) and literally means he (or she) who knows; the
belief that the word may be derived from Sanskrit is perhaps
due to a confusion of the words 'shamanism' and 'shramanism',
from the sanskrit shramana, Pali and Prakrit samana; but the
samanas were ascetics, not shamans.
It has replaced the older English language term
witch doctor, a term which unites the two stereotypical functions
of the shaman: knowledge of magical and other lore, and the ability
to cure a person and mend a situation. However, at the present
time this term is generally considered to be pejorative and anthropologically
inaccurate. Medicine man is preferred, especially as not all traditional
peoples approve of the use of shaman as a generic term, given that
the word comes from a specific place and people.
History
Shamanistic practices are thought to predate
all organized religions, and certainly date back to the neolithic
period. Aspects of shamanism are encountered in later, organized
religions, generally in their mystic and symbolic practices. Greek
paganism was influenced by shamanism, as reflected in the stories
of Tantalus, Prometheus, Medea, Calypso among others, as well as
in the Eleusinian Mysteries, and other mysteries. Some of the shamanic
practices of the Greek religion were later adopted into the Roman
religion.
There is a strong shamanistic influence in the
Bön religion of central Asia, and in Tibetan Buddhism. Buddhism
became popular with shamanic peoples such as the Tibetans, Mongols
and Manchu beginning with the eighth century. Forms of shamanistic
ritual combined with Tibetan Buddhism became institutionalized
as the state religion under the Chinese Yuan dynasty and Qing dynasty.
One common element of shamanism and Buddhism is the attainment
of spiritual realization, at times mediated by entheogenic (psychedelic)
substances.
The shamanic practices of many cultures were virtually
wiped out with the spread of Christianity. In Europe, starting
around 400 CE, the Christian church was instrumental in the collapse
of the Greek and Roman religions. Temples were systematically destroyed
and key ceremonies were outlawed. Beginning with the middle ages
and continuing into the Renaissance, remnants of European shamanism
were wiped out by campaigns against witches. These campaigns were
often orchestrated by the Catholic Inquisition.
The repression of shamanism continued as Christian
influence spread with Spanish colonization. In the Caribbean, and
Central and South America, Catholic priests followed in the footsteps
of the Conquistadors and were instrumental in the destruction of
the local traditions, denouncing practitioners as "devil worshippers" and
having them executed. In North America, the English Puritans conducted
periodic campaigns against individuals perceived as witches. More
recently, attacks on shamanic practitioners have been carried out
at the hands of Christian missionaries to third world countries.
As recently as the nineteen seventies, historic petroglyphs were
being defaced by missionaries in the Amazon.
It has been postulated that modern state campaigns
against the use of psychedelic substances are the offshoot of previous
religious campaigns against shamanism.Today, shamanism, once universal,
survives primarily among indigenous peoples. Shamanic practice
continues today in the tundras, jungles, deserts, and other rural
areas, and also in cities, towns, suburbs and shantytowns all over
the world. This is especially widespread in Africa as well as South
America, where "mestizo shamanism" is widespread.
Many recent efforts have been made trying to link
shamanic practice and knowledge with Western, scientific beliefs.
Anthropologist Jeremy Narby has proposed that shamans take their
consciousness down to the molecular level, working with DNA and
viruses that they see as the twin serpents or malicious "darts".
The holomovement theory proposed by David Bohm is often seen as
an approach to create a scientific foundation for concepts such
as parallel worlds and alternative ways to traverse time and space.
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Aspects
of the Practice
Different forms of shamanism are found around
the world, and practitioners are also known as medicine men or
women, as well as witch doctors.
Initiation and Learning
In Shamanic cultures, the shaman plays a priest
like role; however, there is an essential difference between the
two, as Joseph Campbell describes:
The priest is the socially initiated, ceremonially inducted
member of a recognized religious organization, where he holds
a certain rank and functions as the tenant of an office that
was held by others before him, while the shaman is one who,
as a consequence of a personal psychological crisis, has
gained a certain power of his own.
A shaman may be initiated via a serious illness,
by being struck by lightning, or by a near-death experience (e.g.
the shaman Black Elk), and there usually is a set of cultural imagery
expected to be experienced during shamanic initiation regardless
of method.
According to Mircea Eliade, such imagery often
includes being transported to the spirit world and interacting
with beings inhabiting it, meeting a spiritual guide, being devoured
by some being and emerging transformed, and/or being "dismantled" and "reassembled" again,
often with implanted amulets such as magical crystals. The imagery
of initiation generally speaks of transformation and granting powers,
and often entails themes of death and rebirth.
In some societies shamanic powers are considered
to be inherited whereas in others shamans are considered to have
been "called" - Among the Siberian Chukchis one may behave in
ways that Western clinicians would characterize as psychotic, but
which Siberian culture interprets as possession by a spirit who
demands that one assume the shamanic vocation. Among the South
American Tapirape shamans are called in their dreams. In other
societies shamans choose their career: First Nations would seek
communion with spirits through a "vision quest"; South American
Shuar, seeking the power to defend their family against enemies,
apprentice themselves to accomplished shamans.
Practice and method
The shaman plays the role of healer in shamanic
societies; shamans gain knowledge and power by traversing the axis
mundi and bringing back knowledge from the heavens. Even in western
society, this ancient practice of healing is referenced by the
use of the caduceus as the symbol of medicine.
Oftentimes the shaman has, or acquires, one or
more familiar helping entities in the spirit world; these are often
spirits in animal form, spirits of healing plants, or (sometimes)
those of departed shamans. In many shamanic societies, magic, magical
force, and knowledge are all denoted by one word, such as the Quechua
term yachay.
While the causes of disease are considered to
lie in the realm of the spiritual, being effected by malicious
spirits or Witchcraft, spiritual methods as well as what we would
consider physical methods are used to heal. The shaman often will
enter the body of their patient to find the spirit making the patient
sick, and heal by removing the infectious spirit by the patient.
However, many shamans have expert knowledge of
the plant life in their area, and an herbal regimine is often perscribed
as treatment. In many places, the shamans claim to learn from the
plants directly, only being able to determine the effects of a
plant and use it to heal after meeting the spirit of the plant
and getting permission.
In South America, individual spirits are called
through singing icaros; to call the spirit, the spirit
must teach you their song.
The use of totem items such as rocks is common;
these items are believed to have special powers and an animating
spirit.
Such practices are presumably very ancient; in
circa 368 bc, Plato wrote in the Phaedrus that the "first prophecies
were the words of an oak", and that everyone who lived at that
time found it rewarding enough to "listen to an oak or a stone,
so long as it was telling the truth".
The belief in witchcraft and sorcery, known as brujeria in
South America, is prevalent in many shamanic societies.
Some societies distinguish shamans who cure from
sorcerers who harm; others believe that all shamans have the power
to both cure and kill; that is, shamans are in some societies also
thought of as being capable of harm. The shaman usually enjoys
great power and prestige in the community, renowned for their powers
and knowledge; but they may also be suspected of harming others
and thus feared.
In engaging in this work the shaman exposes himself
to significant personal risk, from the spirit world, from any enemy
shamans, as well as from the means employed to alter his state
of consciousness. Certain of the plant materials used can kill,
and the out-of-body journey itself can lead to non-returning and
physical death; spells of protection are common, and the use of
more dangerous plants is usually very highly ritualized.
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Shamanic
Technology
Generally, the shaman traverses the axis mundi
and enters the spirit world by effecting a change of consciousness
in himself, entering into an ecstatic trance, either autohypnotically
or through the use of entheogens. The methods used are diverse,
and often are used in conjunction with each other.
Some of the methods for effecting such altered
states of consciousness are:
- Drumming
- Singing
- Fasting
- Sweat lodge
- Vision quests /or vigils,
- Dancing or Spinning Games
Power Plants
- Tobacco
- Fly Agaric
- Psychedelic Mushrooms Alluded to euphemistically as "holy
children" by Mazatec shamans such as Maria Sabina
- Peyote
- San Pedro Named thus (St. Peter) by Andean natives because
he's the guardian of Gates of Heaven
- Ayahuasca Quechua for "Vine of the Dead"
- Iboga
Shamans often observe special diets or fasts and taboos particular
to their vocation. Sometimes these have physical purposes beyond
effecting a change in brain state or taboo; for example, the diet
followed by shamans and apprentices when drinking Ayahuasca includes
eating foods rich in serotonin as well as avoiding foods rich in
tyramine, which could cause a hypertensive crisis if ingested with
an MAOI such as Ayahuasca.
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Gender and Sexuality
Most shamans are men, but there are societies
in which women may be shamans. In Old Norse Religion, shamanism
was seen as un-manly and practiced mainly by women. However, in
Old Norse mythology, the supreme god Odin was also seen as the
foremost shaman. In some societies shamans exhibit a two-spirit
identity, assuming the dress and attributes of the opposite sex
from a young age, this may include a man taking on the role of
a wife in an otherwise ordinary marriage; this practice is common,
and found among the Chukchee, Sea Dyak, Patagonians, Aruacanians,
Arapaho, Cheyenne, Navaho, Pawnee, Lakota, and Ute, as well as
many other Native American tribes. Such two-spirit shamans are
thought to be especially powerful. They are highly respected and
sought out in their tribes, as they will bring high status to their
mates.
Shamanism und "New Age"
The New Age movement imported some ideas from
shamanism as well as Eastern religions. As in other such imports,
the original users of these ideas frequently condemn New Age use
as misunderstood and superficial.
At the same time, there is an endeavor in occult
and esoteric circles to re-invent shamanism in a modern form drawing
from core shamanism, a set of beliefs and practices synthesized
by Michael Harner and often revolving around the use of ritual
drumming and dance; various indigenous forms of shamanism, often
focusing on the ritual use of entheogens, as well as chaos magic.
Much of this is focused upon in Europe, where
ancient shamanic traditions was suppressed by the Christian church
and where people compelled to be shamans often find it improper
to use shamanic systems rooted in other parts of the earth. Various
traditional shamans express respect for this endeavor and in this,
separate it sharply from "light" New Age shamanism.
Sometimes people from Western cultures claim to
be shamans. This is considered offensive by many indigenous medicine
men, who view these new age, western "shamans" as hucksters out
for money or affirmation of self. Many shamanistic cultures feel
there is a danger that their voices will be drowned out by self-styled "shamans";
citing, for example, the fact that Lynn Andrews has sold more books
than all Native American authors put together.
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