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Part of the marketing of ayahuasca ceremonies to foreigners involves
appealing to the foreigners’ notion of traditional tribal culture. For
example, the curandero I worked with over the week wore a baseball
cap turned backwards, baggy jeans, and a t-shirt, while others wore
feathers, beads, and face paint; those in the exotic garb attracted far
more participants than the curandero who did not dress up. |
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An Energetic Atomic Bomb of Good:
A Review of the First Annual Amazonian Shamanism Conference
Julia Onnie-Hay
At the July 2005 Amazonian Shamanism Conference in Iquitos, Peru,
the Eagle and the Condor flew together, fulfilling an ancient prophecy
respected by many Native Americans of the western hemisphere. This,
anyway, is how some curanderos characterized the meeting of healers
from North and South America to exchange knowledge and power. Most
of the several hundred participants, dominated by European-Americans,
came with strong interest in the psychedelic brew ayahuasca, the “vine
of the soul” or “vine of the dead,” a foul-tasting,
brown liquid made from many plants of the Amazon rainforest, but always
including “the vine” (Banisteriopsis caapi) and “the
leaf” (usually Psychotria viridis). Many came in search of healing
and visions. Although the Amazonian Shamanism Conference did not have
the word “ayahuasca” in the title, the masses were drawn
to the conference by the chance to drink the brew in the Amazon and
to listen to famous researchers, such as Dr. Dennis McKenna, talk
about ayahuasca.
Presentations and Ceremonies
Alan Shoemaker and his wife Mariella de Shoemaker organized the
week-long conference by alternating days of conference talks with
opportunities to visit a curandero for ayahuasca ceremonies. The conference
itself was an ambitious project, facilitated with the help of many
local Peruvian students who acted as hosts and resources. Indigenous
peoples from the Bora, Yagua, Shapibo and other Amazonian tribes sold
crafts in an open-air market area where the conference participants
browsed between talks in the open-air auditorium. The conference offered
dense scientific and artistic presentations given by famous European-American
experts and other researchers of ayahuasca. Among them were the well-known
anthropologist Luis Eduardo Luna, Ph.D., Clinical Psychology researcher
at the California Institute of Integral Studies, John Heuser, French
ethnologists Annick Darley, Ph.D. and Frederick Bois-Mariage, Ph.D.,
and Richard Doyle, Ph.D. professor of rhetoric at Unicersity of California-Berkley.
Dennis McKenna, Ph.D. was a major headliner of the conference, giving
the first presentation, “Ayahuasca and Human Destiny” based
on his recent article in the latest edition of the Journal of Psychoactive
Drugs. That opening talk oriented the audience toward the shared
vision of ayahuasca as a tool in developing sustainable culture. “We
must learn to become stewards of nature, to nurture nature, so we
may learn to nurture ourselves,” explained McKenna. Throughout
all of the talks, ayahuasca was collectively regarded, in McKenna’s
words, as a “great tool of the culture of life.” Some
presentations, such as the one by Dr. Roberto Inchaustegui Gonzales,
proclaimed there is evidence that ayahuasca may be able to cure HIV/AIDS
and cancer.
The scientists and shamans presented similar anecdotal data on
ayahuasca, and the scientists’ presentations appeared to support
statements made by some of the curanderos. For example, a curandero
said to a group of participants at the dinner table, “Ayahuasca
makes our brain more intelligent and improves circulation.”
Later in the conference, Dr. Frank Echenhoffer of the California Institute
of Integral Studies presented research on the EEG brain scans of twelve
long-time users of ayahuasca (from the Brazilian Uniao de Vegetal
church) under the influence of ayahuasca, showing increased neurological
complexity during ayahuasca sessions compared to their brain scans
while sober.
Participating in the ayahuasca ceremonies was the highlight of nearly
everyone’s experience at the conference. It was in these ceremonies
that we really had the chance to learn about Amazonian shamanism.
About ten curanderos (and only one female shaman, famous curandera
Norma Paduro) were at the conference, representing Peru, Ecuador,
Colombia, and Brazil.
Planning on drinking ayahuasca on maybe one or two nights, I participated
in four ceremonies over the week. As a participant in the Santo Daime
church, where the rituals are very structured, with uniforms, specific
hymns, prayers, and dances, the first ceremony I partook in, at a site
in the forest with about thirty other people, struck me as unstructured
and touristy. I decided to participate in another ceremony in a new
environment, at the home of a recommended curandero near the airport
in Iquitos, and had such a productive session that I went back to
that home for two more ceremonies.
On those three nights, about ten of the conference participants showed
up at the humble family house around sunset. When night fell and the
curandero’s children were going to sleep, we sat in plastic
chairs or on the concrete floor around the perimeter of the curandero’s main living room. The curandero spoke for a while in
Spanish about ayahuasca and the healing work, then we drank about
a half cup of the most potent, earthy ayahuasca I had ever encountered. The lights went off, and while the curandero sang icaros in
a fusion of languages to facilitate the healing work. About midway
through the ceremony, the curandero called each participant up one
by one to sit on a wooden table in front of him (which could be quite
a feat in the pitch-dark room), where he did personal healing work,
speaking with the person, shaking his shirapas over the body, and
singing specialized icaros. The gringo apprentice would come around
the room doing energetic healing work, whistling and sucking and blowing
tobacco smoke over each person. After about five or six hours, the
lights were turned back on and the participants quietly socialized
or reflected in the curandero’s beautiful, tropical yard.
Diversity, Dieta, and Ayahuasca Tourism
From what I witnessed, the healing styles, ethnic backgrounds and
lifestyles of the curanderos were diverse but there was significant
common ground. A strong example of the diversity in healing practices
of contemporary Amazonian shamans was in the case of marijuana use;
some curanderos forbid the use of marijuana before, during, and after
the ceremonies, whereas a minority do use it to facilitate the healing.
One explained, “Marijuana is a teacher plant when used in the
right way but it can produce a negative energy when used to escape
or for fun. It can make you imbalanced and you think you’re
well, but no, you become fearful and depressed and even violent, but
in the people this happens to, they don’t notice. If the person
has good discipline, marijuana can be a teacher plant.” This
also corresponds to the teaching of some Santo Daime leaders.
In discussions regarding dietas (purification diets) at the conference,
there were lots of variation over when the dieta should be taken and
what foods and behaviors were taboo, but the avoidance of sugar, salt,
and sex was
shared. One curandero explained, “Sex is like electricity, it
has positive and negative energies that scare away the spirits…garlic
and hot peppers also have this current and are to be avoided.”
While taboo on garlic and hot peppers did not elicit much protest
from the participants, the most frequently protested taboos were those
on sex, sugar, salt, alcohol, and caffeine.
The indigenous and mestizo ethnicities of the curanderos contrasted
with the mostly European-American audience. The explosive interest
of European-Americans in the ayahuasca-using shamanistic traditions
of South America was not generally seen as cultural appropriation
by the curanderos with whom I spoke. Both positive and negative effects
of this surge in ayahuasca and shamanistic tourism were expressed
by the curanderos, other South Americans, as well as some conference
participants. Many participants were uncomfortable with the fact that
visitors foreign to the Iquitos area and the Amazon in general spoke
on the podium more than the Amazonian shamans themselves.
Indigenous peoples all over the world are losing their cultural
ties to and respect of their healing traditions, but at the same time
are able to profit economically from such traditional and tribal performances.
These performances, while touristy and staged, do encourage the younger
generations to reintegrate shamanism into their modern lives; the
Peruvian young adults that were assistants at the conference were
all intrigued by the interest of European-Americans in ayahuasca and
several chose to drink ayahuasca for the first time with some of the
conference participants. In that sense, ayahuasca tourism helps
to keep the ayahuasca healing arts alive.
On the other hand, in nations where most people must struggle to
earn a basic living, ayahuasca tourism also has given rise to a whole
slew of essentially fake shamans who do not have the knowledge and/or
healing intention in the ceremonies they conduct. In one of the precious
moments when one of the shamans had the microphone, Elias Mamallacta,
son of another famous curandero, stated, “Ayahuasca is the sacred
mother of humanity and that is why we must take care of her. She can’t
be sold. Many use her as a business. These are not pure, true people.”
Part of the marketing of ayahuasca ceremonies to foreigners involves
appealing to the foreigners’ notion of traditional tribal culture.
For example, the curandero I worked with over the week wore a baseball
cap turned backwards, baggy jeans, and a t-shirt, while others wore
feathers, beads, and face paint; those in the exotic garb attracted
far more participants than the curandero who did not dress up. A rise
in brujoismo (competitive sorcery) was also cited as a major problem
with the popularization of ayahuasca by resource-laden foreigners.
Still, in spite of all of the competition and diversity, a curandero
speaking at the conference earned much applause when he said, “If
we are not united, they will blow us up. Together, we are an energetic
atomic bomb of good.”
Science and Spirituality
The Amazonian Shamanism conference, like the San Francisco Mindstates
conference this summer, was a celebration of the bridge between
science and spirituality that has been re-evaluated in the West over
the past century. A strong example of the dance between scientific
and spiritual or intuitive insights about ayahuasca came through
John Heuser’s presentation, “Internet-Reported Ayahuasca
and Analogue.” Heuser presented a very scientific, objective
study of the trends in symbols arising in ayahuasca visions as reported
on www.ayahausca.com, and he was reluctant to venture beyond the objective
walls of science to express his subjective/personal observation when
asked if there exist similarities between entities reported in the
study and traditional South American entities reported outside the
study. He did answer the question, at the audience’s encouragement;
it was, as many there with personal experience felt, a resounding,
“Yes.” Not scientific, but true by consensus.
One participant reflected his reaction to the conference talks after
an intense night of ayahuasca when he remarked to me in the midst
of a long presentation about the neuroscience of DMT, “Ayahuasca
laughs at our science.” The need for scientific research on
ayahuasca was perhaps overshadowed by the emphasis on direct personal
experience; ayahuasca was not described as a psychedelic drug as much
as it was a plant medicine or plant teacher. As unscientific as it
is, the sentiment that the psychoactive properties of plants are beyond
scientific explanation was expressed frequently in discussions I heard.
By the end of the conference, McKenna said during his concluding presentation about DMT, “Science does not and will not hold all
the answers.”
This sentiment grew in popularity as the week progressed. When
my roommate at the hotel described the extraction of two demons from
her back at an ayahuasca ceremony she participated in the previous
night, I wasn’t surprised or skeptical at all. A neuroscientist
from England, she had come to experience healing of her physical and
spiritual self, intentions of which I was aware. I had already heard
about the exorcism from other conference participants; there had been
about a dozen witnesses to my roommate’s apparent possession,
manifested by her speaking in rapid Spanish with two male, demonic-sounding
voices also coming from her mouth. After the ceremony, she reported
that she felt better than she had in years.
For me, ayahuasca is divine medicine from the forest, a very beautiful
and valuable gift to humanity in these times. At the first Amazonian
Shamanism Conference, I felt at home; many conference participants
who came for a variety of reasons related to interest in ayahuasca
expressed their experiences as ones of profound healing and growth.
The opening words of the conference, spoken by Alan Shoemaker, had
been, “They said it couldn’t be done!” Yet it was,
thanks to the hard work and important vision of Alan Shoemaker, his
wife Mariella, their friendly staff, participating curanderos and
the hundreds of people interested enough in ayahuasca to travel to
Iquitos. It was a deep honor to attend this conference and the ceremonies.
I was delighted by the supportive response from many Peruvian conference
participants, some of whom requested information about MAPS in Spanish.
A local artist stated that the work of MAPS to culturally reintegrate
psychedelics into society is important even in Peru, saying, “Ayahuasca
is legal here, but most people think that we who drink ayahuasca are
crazy.” At the Amazonian Shamanism Conference, I found that
MAPS is truly becoming an international organization with a global
vision. I traveled back home to the MAPS office in Sarasota, Florida,
energized to continue our work of build- ing a culture of life and
a world where shamanistic healing practices, such as those witnessed
at the Amazonian Shamanism Conference, are legal and available to
all. |