Centros de capacitacion en medicina nativa

This blog is for internships and experiences in places where they conserve native medicine and traditional practices, mostly in the Amazon, but also the Andes and the Coast. (Este es un programa de pasantías y experiencia por lugares donde aun se conservan la medicina nativa y las practicas tradicionales, tanto en la Amazonía, en los Andes como en la Costa.)

Friday, April 20, 2007

Semana de la segunda excursión al Río Amazonas

CUADRO DE LOCALIZACION DE VOLUNTARIOS




COMUNIDAD San Jose El tambo Salango Comuna Santiago Cayapas La Chimba Chiguilpe
Director Local Orlando Montufar José Tenesaca Robinson Marbel caicedo Vinicio Quilo Alfonso Aguavil
telefono 88639456 098547845 (celular) t. 085578096 t.0854657303 t 091358342 t097501591
e. mail ecomorona@yahoo.com
1o. Contracto 27/03/2007 31/03/2007
voluntario Rafael Alvarez Rafael Alvarez Rafael Alvarez Rafael Alvarez Rafael Alvarez Brian Woods
E.mail raespejo@hotmail.com raespejo@hotmail.com raespejo@hotmail.com raespejo@hotmail.com raespejo@hotmail.com woodsbp@whitman.edu
Pais españa españa españa españa españa Estados Unidos
fechas 4 al 19/ 1-5 de Mayo 12-19 de mayo 12-19 de mayo 12-19 de mayo 1-7 de mayo
de llegada
recoorido especial 19-27 viaje al Amazonas Camino del Inca Vista a Isla de la Plata Canchimalero y Limones visita a comunidades trebajo de investigacion
de salida 28 a Cuenca-El tambo 6-9 de Mayo San Lorenzo para organizar el y construccion de huerto med
actividad explorar, enseñar explortar, enseñar explortar, enseñar traller de entrenamiento en taller de entrenamineto Informe sobre la mediciona
y deportes y deportes y deportes y deportes en deportes tradicional Tzachila
voluntario Emilie Desmars Jacopo Simoneto Adam Weymouth
E.mail emiliedesmara@hotamil jiacopo_13@gmail.com adamweymouth@gmail.com
Pais Francia Italia Inglaterra
fechas 4 al 19/ 13de Abrilr al 20 de Abril 15.21 de mayo
de llegada
recoorido especial 19 al 27 al Río Amazonas Vsitita al interior de la Visita a 15 comunidades
de salida 28 de Abril al la playa y al bosque seco
actividad Continuacion del proyecto Estudio de plantas Censo de posibles tutores
ingles aplicado a la conservacion medicinales, para recate de tradiciones
Giogio Veronese
voluntario Celine giorgio7v@email.it
E.mail Italia
Pais Francia 13de Abrilr al 20 de Abril
fechas 4 al 19/
de llegada
recoorido especial 19 al 27 al Río Amazonas Vsitita al interior de la
de salida estudios de medicina tradi- al la playa y al bosque seco
actividad cional y plantas medicinales Estudio de plantas
usadas por mujeres medicinales,
Voluntario Adam Weymouth
E.mail adamweymouth@gmail.com
Pais Inglaterra
fechas 15.21 de mayo
de llegada
recoorido especial Visita a 15 comunidades
de salida
actividad Recoger ideas de perspectivas
de desarrollo en el Río Moronoa

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Giacopo Simonese y Giorgio Veronese en el Cuyabeno para estudiar plantas medicinales

unedì 9 aprile 2007






1) Tucano
2) Buono lo zapote dopo un mese di digiuno, eh?
3) Preparazione di Chichita di Chontaruros
4) Tarantola
5) Allenamento con cerbottana lunga
Ora carico le altre foto su album picasa, così potrete cliccare in basso a destra e vederle tutte, oltre ad altre foto del Rio Morona fatte da altri compagni di viaggio..

Secoya, Rio Aguarico

Domenica
Dopo un lungo viaggio in autobus arriviamo a Shushufindi, una cittadina fatta da una sola strada e tante baracche, direi oscena e ultranoiosa città stile farwest. Ci vivono coloni meticci e neri che vengono dalle regioni povere come Esmeraldas e Manabì, attirati da improbabili fortune. La città è stata creata 15 anni fa dopo che gli americani scoprirono che l'Amazzonia poggia sopra un'enorme giacimento di petrolio. Il problema è che l'acqua pompata sotto al greggio per riempire lo spazio lasciato vuoto, si riempie di minerali estremamente cancerogeni e l'acqua si muove molto più velocemente del petrolio, quindi fiumi e acque, nonchè tutto ciò che vi cresce, sono contaminati. Sono solo le 5 di mattina, prendiamo un pulmino e sulla strada sterrata corriamo verso il Rio Aguarico, altre 2 ore di sballottamenti e musica latina obriobrievole. Le nuvole riflettono le altissime fiamme dei pozzi petroliferi e si tingono di rosso. Durante questo tratto la foresta primaria è completamente devastata e si vede solo in lontananza, al suo posto piantaggioni di palma da olio appoggiata da multinazionali che vendono le piantine, il diserbante, il pesticida, e si preoccupano della raccolta. Il contadino colono incassa un po' di soldi facili, poi quando il terreno è depauperato e non serve più a niente viene venduto alle stesse multinazionali per una miseria.. Per il legno è ancora più semplice. Tutti nella foresta vorrebbero avere una bella motosega, così da poter tagliare i duri alberi con facilità e senza spaccarsi le mani. Nessuno ha i soldi per comprarsele. Le multinazionali del legname sì. Te la regalano e la ripaghi in legname, e si instaura poi un circolo vizioso. Arrivati al porto sotto un'acquazzone tropicale saliamo su una lancia a motore che ci porta dopo un'altra ora di viaggio dal responsabile Secoya di Ecotrackers, Gustavo, che a sua volta ci porta alla famiglia di Basilio, indigeno di 66 anni. Casa palafitta a 2 piani, vive solo con la moglie, e vicino una casetta con la nuora e la nipotina.

Lunedì
Basilio è un uomo pieno di risorse, costruisce splendide amache in fibra vegetale da lui stesso ricavata dalla corteccia di un albero, amache familiare da tre persone. Sa tutto sugli animali, le piante, si costruisce le barche, gli atrezzi, tutto quello che può servire. E' una persona semplice e disponibile, una delle migliori incontrate nel nostro viaggio. Alleva un 4 mucche, si è fatto una piscina dove alleva pesci, ed è un dritto! Andiamo con lui a pescare in alcuni fiumiciattoli nella foresta che sono alimentati dalle piogge e non dal Rio Aguarico, dove lui non si fida più di pescare perchè ha visto strane morie di pesci dopo che a monte cominciarono a coltivare le palme. La sera troviamo una grossa tarantola nel nostro quarto dove dormiamo, prende la cerbottana lunga, le spara una dardo, lei cade al suolo e lui la fa a fettine col machete.

Martedì
Andiamo di nuovo a pesca tutto il giorno, prendiamo piccoli pesci, poi nel pomeriggio i cani fiutano qualcosa, e si lanciano verso la selva. Dopo un po' sentiamo che abbaiano fortissimo al chè Basilio ci fa un segnale e cominciamo a correre verso i cani. Lui nella foresta corre veloce, noi siamo un po' impacciati, così mi dà la sua canna da pesca e va col suo fucile a vedere che succede. Mentre torniamo verso casa sentiamo degli spari. Quando arriva Basilio ci dice di aver preso un Oso Miguel, un Formichiere gigante. Un cane è rimasto ferito dagli artigli e ha una gamba con un grosso buco. Nella notte i cani svegliano tutti e la mattina mancano dei pulcini.. è passato un tigrillo e se li è pappati..

Mercoledì
Come colazione zuppa piccante con costolette di saino, o pecari, e subito dopo arriva il nostro uomo con il frutto del precedente giorno di caccia, già tagliato in cosciotti e costate. Un po' di formichiere ce lo mangiamo in giornata, il resto viene affumicato per un giorno intero perchè dove non c'è il frigo è uno dei pochi modi di mantenere la carne. Nel pomeriggio andiamo a vedere alcune piante medicinali e mangiamo delle formiche dal gusto limone effervescente.
Alla sera arriva una barca che carica tutti e li porta alla messa evangelista, rimane solo Basilio, che non essendosi fatto battezzare non partecipa a nessuna funzione. Gli chiedo quale fosse la religione prima del cristianesimo e lui risponde che semplicemente non si credeva a nulla, si viveva e basta. La vera maestra è la natura, non i superman della chiesa. Suo nonno era sciamano così come moltissimi altri, ora rimangono solo 3 sciamani, tra cui Cesario di 95 anni. Lo stesso percorso si ripete, 30 anni fa arrivano gli americani con i missionari, si imboniscono e intontiscono gli indigeni raccontando per vere le cose fantasmagoriche che accaddero 2000 anni fa in quel di Palestina, poi arrivano altri americani amici che comprano terreni in cambio di 4-5 carriole colorate, portano via gli alberi, poi petrolio, palme e poi mi spiegheranno cosa è servito pregare il nulla tutti questi anni quando non avranno di che nutrirsi e il loro ambiente sarà definitivamente distrutto..

Giovedì
Da quando siamo arrivati, poi sappiamo che era da un mese, c'era una tartaruga di terra appesa ad un albero perchè non scappasse. A noi faceva una gran pena e abbiamo chiesto quanto costasse.. 5 dollari! L'abbiamo subito comprata, Basilio ci ha dato una mano a costruire un recinto, le abbiamo dato da mangiare banane e zapote con l'intento poi di liberarla una volta rifocillata. Ci penserà da sola a scappare dopo due giorni e tornarsene libera! Era un maschio (pancia cava e non piatta..) e si chiamano Kontigokou. Più tardi proviamo a farci insegnare ad andare in canoa ma riusciamo a fare pochi metri e ad affondare nel grande Rio Aguarico, avranno pensato che siamo delle mezze seghe! La sera troviamo in camera uno scorpione, dalla puntura più dolorosa di una formica konga e della durata di 3 giorni, lo catturo e così per un paio di giorni sono stato felicissimo di possedere due dei miei animali preferiti.. (ora sapete che chiunque mi regali una testuggine terrestre mi fa l'uomo più felice del pianeta.. bè non proprio, ma quasi..). Nella notte Giorgio sente cadere una bottiglia, accende la pila e ci ritroviamo un serpente rossonero in camera che scappa verso il tetto salendo le travi. Per sicurezza io dormivo già nell'amaca, Giorgio per terra con sopra la mia zanzariera, però dopo questo incontro, senza sapere se fosse velenoso o no, non abbiamo dormito sonni molto profondi!

Venerdì
La mattina Basilio mi mostra alcune piante medicinali che coltiva, tra cui ben 4 tipi differenti di erbe per migliorare l'olfatto dei cani (che prendono anche una bella stecca quando mangiano la zuppa con 'ste piante..).. una per cacciare guante e guatuse, altre due per il pecari etc.. Alla mia consueta domanda, quale cioè sia la pianta in assoluto più importante ed efficace, risponde "Iahè! Ayauasca, è per questo che mi mantengo così in forma! La bevo da quando ho 12 anni, la prima volta col mio nonnino, poi la bevo quando ho bisogno di pulirmi dentro dai vermi e per tutte le infermità in generale, e vedi dentro ai giaguari, vedi la tana dell'anaconda, e vedi tante altre cose. Per farla più forte, la cuciniamo otto ore con quell'altra pianta che ti ho mostrato prima, la Uaì-iahè.. " Minchia Basilio, siete tutti dei drogatacci, se venite in Italia andate subito a SanPatrignano a fare la muffa! Eppure questa pianta deve essere un potente antibiotico, antivirale, e anticancerogeno e antiparassitario, e la si usa per curare velocemente la tossicodipendenza da eroina e cocaina (l'ayauasca come tutti i psichedelici non dà alcuna dipendenza fisica). Troviamo un'altra tarantolona presso la camera e finisce trafitta da un dardo, con buona pace di animalisti e amanti dei ragni.. la peluria che ha sul corpo va nell'aria e la nipotina deve andare a lavarsi al fiumicello dietro casa per togliersi il prurito. Il morso della tarantola è molto pericoloso per i bambini in quanto può provocarne la morte, negli adulti invece da fortissimo dolore, febbre e allucinazioni.

Sabato
Facciamo una lunga camminata nella selva fino alla casa di Gustavo, vediamo scimmie leonine saltare tra gli alberi e incontro quello che mi mancava, una fantastica raganella grande come la mia mano che dorme a terra. La accarezzo dopo avere chiesto che non fosse velenosa, dopo un po' i punti toccati diventano azzurri e Basilio dice che forse un po' di veleno lo tiene.. la spostiamo dal sentiero e da Gustavo incontriamo anche un pecari semiaddomesticato. Tornati a casa ci accorgiamo che il cane ferito sta male, e difatti ha il buco sulla gamba pieno di larve di mosche che gli mangiano la carne. Lo legano ad un albero e cominciano a mettergli sulla ferita un liquido scuro tipo una sostanza petrolacea che amazza i bigattini e poi cominciano a toglierli.. ne avrà avute una trentina! Che schifo!

Domenica, Pasqua
Partiamo presto con una lancia a motore carica di indigeni e torniamo verso Shushufindi, dove rimaniamo 3 ore aspettando l'autobus per Quito.. non so come si possa vivere in un posto del genere!

Conclusioni
In questo viaggio ho potuto vedere come la foresta rischi di scomparire se non si farà qualcosa al più presto, ma si sa, l'uomo deve sbattere la testa milioni di volte prima di capire le cose. Gli indigeni secoya sono i migliori conosciuti, hanno tutti il pannello solare. Noi invece che di sole ne abbiamo anche di più e pure di vento, continuamo a comprare elettricità nucleare da francesi e crucchi perchè le pale eoliche rovinano l'estetica del paesaggio e perchè i pannelli sulle case non sono belli da vedere.. non sarà mica che l'Italia sta diventando un paese di frocetti interessati troppo alla moda? Pensare che se solo il 2% del nostro territorio fosse a panneli solari, saremmo completamente indipendenti dall'estero per la fornitura di energia..
Altra cosa che mi permetto di dire è che al mondo servono meno missionari e più ecologisti. Come sempre il problema non è l'indigeno che caccia solo quanto gli basta per vivere, ma il sistema occidentalistico che si cerca di imporre loro e che non è assolutamente ecosostenibile!
Anche loro tagliano la foresta, tagliano un'ettaro per coltivare yucca banane e mais, poi dopo 4-5 anni lasciano tutto alla foresta nuovamente e tagliano un'altro piccolo appezzamento senza mettere a rischio alcuna specie vegetale o animale.
Inoltre posso dire che sono rimasto affascinato dalle loro capacità artigianali, dalla loro vita semplice e naturale, dove lo stress ed il mal di testa sono pressochè sconosciuti.
Aloah!

Andreas Ery Myhre: The secoyas, their shamanism and the Yagé

The secoyas, their shamanism and the Yagé

The secoyas, their shamanism and the Yagé
After nearly 3 months in the culturally and naturally enormous Ecuador. Were nearly half of my time here has been used traveling in and out of the rainforest region with Ecotrackers. I can really recommend to all of you who might read this to do the same. Not just to experience the old culture and the beautiful nature close up, but also to remove illusions and to get a more realistic picture of the problems one faces in the work of maintaining this indispensable landscape and its cultures.
Through the last two weeks I have, with the help of ecotrackers, visited a community of secoya Indians on Rio Aguarico near the Columbian border in the region of Cuyabeno.
My goal with the visit was to study the secoya shamanism, their art of healing and the philosophy behind all of this as good as it can be done in just two weeks.

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The arribal at the secoya community

The arrival and the daily life.
I arrived in Sushufindi, a little city north in Ecuador, 10 o’clock in the morning, 14 hours after I left Quito, which means I were about 6 hours late. Luckily couldn’t the delay take away my excitement when I met Fausto, a secoya who I later found out is the oldest son in the house and the family I lived with.
Fausto was in town because of his sick mother. As the local shamans hadn’t managed to heal her, she had been sent to the local doctor and later to the hospital.
Fausto and I left sushufindi after a quick lunch and spent the to hour tractor ride to Rio Aguarico watching the colonists banana plantations a long side the road. A terrible sight with the fact in mind that this once was untouched rainforest.
When we arrived at the river port Fausto left me in the hands of his family and friends that were waiting us with a canoe, as the last hour of travelling had to be done up river.
In the beautiful little community with about 100 habitants I was at once introduced to the family I was going to live with and the traditionally secoya life. The family consisting of the father Roberto, five of his seven children and two grandchildren, are all living under the same traditional secoya roof in the only room in the house.
The days and time in the jungle passed by without a sound, as Roberto and I were wondering trough the almost to amazing forest, fishing the family dinners, planting corn and visiting and talking to friends and family alongside the violent river. A fantastic and easy way of life some where lost on the way in our time fighting, western society

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The traditional shamanism
Before the Spanish and Christian invasion of the rainforest and its original habitants, nearly all of the cultures in the region could be characterized by the shamanic religion and its worldview. Unbelievable enough is this worldview something most indigenous cultures all over the world have in common.
The daily -awake- life is just a small part of the much bigger reality. Where the spiritual worlds, the heavens and hells and their habitants all the time affects our lives in good and bad ways. This is the first foundation of the old shamanic worldview. The second -but as important- is that we humans have the opportunity and ability to affect these worlds trough our own senses. Mainly through our dreams, but also through something called the shamanic trance.
The shamanic trance can be reached in many ways through a big variety of methods. Lingering fast, dance and drum ritual, absence of sleep or the use of a hallucinogen plant are all well know methods. If one knows how to move in these eternal and timeless realities, one can experience the beginning and the end of the world, see the birth of stars and the end of the universe. One can transform one self into all the animals, bacteria’s and viruses. Talk to all the plants and learn about all their healing qualities. Meet angels, demons and yes, even the dead. And one can look into the future.
But to be able to control these experiences, to steer the car the right way, so to say, and get the help or visions you need, you have to know these worlds in and out. Something that only can be achieved through long lasting and hard training, or in other words through becoming a shaman.
In the shamanic tradition of the secoyas, like most of the indigenous people of the amazons, the hallucinogenic plant mix called ayahuasca, or in secoya yagé, is used to enter the shamanic trance. The tradition of using yagé may go as far as 5000 years back.
The shaman was in the old days both the communities priest and doctor. He was the man the community called on if they had any problems physically of mentally. Because he was the man with the right knowledge, experience and qualities in the spiritual worlds to heal and defense his people. Something he had achieved through hard schooldays consisting of violent doses of yagé.
Through his education the shaman meets and makes his allies in the other worlds. He meets the angels and the demons and gets the chance to choose the light or the dark road. This is another important part of the shamanic tradition. Because Brujeria, as the dark road is called, is a well known phenomena for all shamans. And is a road that leads to a well know phenomena in the western world, egoistic power. A brujera will do everything in his powers to reach his goals, even murders can take place.
Yet all the most powerful curanderas agree that the road of the light that leads to the most healing, powerful visions and allies are the by far most difficult one.
In the old days the secoyas would dress in their most beautiful cloths, paint traditional patterns in their faces and place their red and yellow crowns, graced with Tucan feathers, on their heads. Before a yagé ceremony the secoyas would meet in the yagé house at about 4 o’clock, lay down in their hammocks and wait for the ceremony, which always lasted from sunset to sunrise, to start.
Nobody would ever enter the yagéhouse without their ceremonial dresses.
The ceremonies would always be leaded by the shaman, who cooked the Yagé, sang and blew smoke over it before he gave it to the participants. If somebody was sick, he or she would be brought to the ceremony and laid down in a hammock in one of the corners in the house. The shaman would then, after reaching his trance, start to blow smoke and sing over the patient to call on his spiritual contacts. He would then in his visions get a picture of the patient’s condition, what had to be done, what plants or spirits he could use to threat the condition. After one of these ceremonies he would never accept anything but a presents, if the family was pleased.
The intentions of a good shaman were always to heal, not to earn money. An interesting point for us in the western society with a medical industry that heals, but at the same time earns more money than ever. In fact, last year the pharmaceutical industry earned more money than any other industry in the US, even more than the oil industry. With these facts in mind it’s easy to ask oneself what the actual intentions of the industry are? To earn the most money or heal the most people?
Another interesting picture of the difference between the traditional and the western medicine is the doctor or shaman himself. In the west, the doctor gives the medicine, or the magic bullets. In the jungle the shaman takes the medicine himself..
The history
After the Hispanic invasion of the timeless world of the rainforest more than 300 years ago, the secoya culture and their way of life have been through some huge changes. At one point the secoyas counted more than 30000, with a proud culture and spiritual tradition. From that point the population has dropped profoundly, and today no more than 500 secoyas are still alive. The Hispanic introduction of alcohol, Christianity and the European diseases, not only cut the population with nearly 98%, but changed ,at the same time, the secoyas relationship with their own spiritual and healing tradition forever.
The other big explosion hit the timeless world for no more than 30 years ago. With the first oil findings in the region in the seventies, the coming of the oil companies and later the colonists, forced the secoyas to change their way of life yet another time. From living in big communities, where as many as 15 families could share the same house. The secoyas had to divide themselves along all of their area to prevent further invasion. The families that traditionally had no more than 2 children decided to get bigger. Resulting in families today where it’s more common to see 7 than 4 children.
All of this has changed the traditional shamanism..
Shamanism today, my meeting with the two shamans and the Yagé
Traditionally the biggest shamanic festival is celebrated in the middle of august in the secoya communities. This is the time when the heavens are said to be closest to the earth, and have therefore always been the time to celebrate the newly graduated shamans. In the old times secoyas from close and far united, and everybody, men, women and children, participated in a huge yagé ceremony.
This festival is still an important part of secoya culture, but is today more than anything else a perfect picture on the problems the secoyas have with continuing their old traditions. To day no more than 10-20 %, most of them over 50 years, participate in the ceremony, and not in many years have any shamans graduated.
One of the reasons for this change is the fact that the young secoyas fear the Yagé. Christianities position through time and today must of course take some of the blame. As the Christians never have been easy on people traveling to the spirit worlds after drinking a hallucinogenic brew to visit angels and demons. But also the very popular alcohol has a lot to do with the change in the youngster’s mentality.
As Fausto, one of the strongest profiles in the community, strangely enough pointed it out for me.
-After my only experience with yagé I could tell that this stuff is much stronger than whiskey, in other words, to strong for me..

About half of the 500 still living secoyas can today be found on the Ecuadorian side of the boarder. Among these there are unfortunately just two shamans.
One of them is called Don. Cesario. He is a small and frail man around the age of 90 with a constant smile on his mouth. Unfortunately did I only get the chance to meet the experienced shaman a few short, but interesting hours.
Cesarios healing qualities have made him a big national and international reputation as a powerful shaman. And when I met him at his little farm, a family from Santo Domingo had just arrived. The mother of the three grown up children were sick, so sick that she couldn’t stand up. Their plan were to stay at don Cesarios farm for about a month, so that the shaman and the powerful nature could get time to put their healing hands on the sick women.
The very process of healing, hearing, breathing and seeing the enormous nature for a period of time, is as important as the shamans work in the healing process, could don cesario tell me.
Another interesting point for me in the middle of all this, was that don cesario, as the old shamans, just got paid in presents. In this case, a large quantity of salted and smoked fish and the working force of the three children for the whole month.
The other secoya shaman that lives in Ecuador is Julio. A private man in his early 60. who came to the community for no more than 4 years ago after his wife died. Julio was also the man to lead my only Yagé ceremony with the secoyas.
Before I came to the secoyas I had tasted the magical jungle medicine two times earlier, when I visited a community of indigenous tsatilas. That time I was given two beautiful experiences. But I never reached just the point I wanted, where the snakes and the spirits shows you what you just might see in your wildest dreams.

My expectations to the ceremony with Julio were therefore massive. And before Julio started out the preparations I made it clear to him that I didn’t want another tourist dose. He answered me with a big smile and made it quite clear to me that the night would be long and interesting. The preparations, cutting and cooking of the Yagé were then started as the sun was right over our heads.
Around 5 pm. everything was ready. Julio in his traditional shamanic clothing’s, but with a crown without tukan feathers, and I were both calm, but tired after a long and hot day without food. We therefore decided to lay down in the Yagé house in the outskirts of the community, wait and rest.
In one hammock were I, a man from a society where the brew we were about to drink, in the eyes of the law, is said to be as dangerous as Heroin. On the other side of the fire was Julio, with a maybe 5000 years old tradition and experiences from the age of 11 to support what he was doing. A really absurd meeting. Unfortunately didn’t Julio’s magical songs help on the strength of the Yagé. And even after 7-8 big glasses of the bitter brew I hadn’t reached the point I wanted to, even though the butterflies, snakes and colors were dancing a slow waltz when I closed my eyes.
The future
Today the secoyas are facing new big challenges and changes with a future that moves faster and faster, and closer and closer. And with just 500 secoyas still alive to take care of there rich and knowledgeable tradition of theirs, it is really clear to me that no help from the outside is too big.
Through my time with the secoyas I experienced some of the most fantastic mentality of solidarity i have ever seen. If a man is building a house or planting a field of corn, this is a job for everybody. And everybody is helping with their warmest smiles around their mouth. Feelings like this should inspire everybody with the same mentality and an interest in maintaining the old cultures, in the evermore chaotic and globalized culture landscape of today, to help.
The world can not afford to loose another culture like this.
Fortunately a lot of help is already coming. Political support to education in secoya language, documentation of old stories and legends and installation of solar panels in the community are all good and helpful projects.
The biggest part of the responsibility of maintaining the culture, and especially the shamanic part of it, lays, in any case, with the secoyas themselves. And with their continuing dreams about a stronger tourism, based especially in their culture and shamanic tradition, a master plan is needed. With only 4 relatively old shamans still living. With a Christianity that is continuing to get stronger, alongside the growing fear of drinking Yagé, something radically has to be done if the shamanic tradition of the secoyas shall be accessible outside the history books in the nearest future.
My final suggestion, with the terrible reality in mind that 2 small schoolgirls drowned in the river under my visit, is that somebody, with the right knowledge, should visit the community and teach them how to make life jackets of material from th


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In the shamanic tradition of the secoyas, like most of the indigenous people of the amazons, the hallucinogenic plant mix called ayahuasca, or in secoya yagé, is used to enter the shamanic trance. The tradition of using yagé may go as far as 5000 years back.The shaman was in the old days both the communities priest and doctor. He was the man the community called on if they had any problems physically of mentally. Because he was the man with the right knowledge, experience and qualities in the spiritual worlds to heal and defense his people. Something he had achieved through hard schooldays consisting of violent doses of yagé.

The batiful lillte community of secoya indigenous

In the beautiful little community with about 100 habitants I was at once introduced to the family I was going to live with and the traditionally secoya life. The family consisting of the father Roberto, five of his seven children and two grandchildren, are all living under the same traditional secoya roof in the only room in the house.
The days and time in the jungle passed by without a sound, as Roberto and I were wondering trough the almost to amazing forest, fishing the family dinners, planting corn and visiting and talking to friends and family alongside the violent river. A fantastic and easy way of life some where lost on the way in our time fighting, western society
The traditional shamanism
Before the Spanish and Christian invasion of the rainforest and its original habitants, nearly all of the cultures in the region could be characterized by the shamanic religion and its worldview. Unbelievable enough is this worldview something most indigenous cultures all over the world have in common.
The daily -awake- life is just a small part of the much bigger reality. Where the spiritual worlds, the heavens and hells and their habitants all the time affects our lives in good and bad ways. This is the first foundation of the old shamanic worldview. The second -but as important- is that we humans have the opportunity and ability to affect these worlds trough our own senses. Mainly through our dreams, but also through something called the shamanic trance.
The shamanic trance can be reached in many ways through a big variety of methods. Lingering fast, dance and drum ritual, absence of sleep or the use of a hallucinogen plant are all well know methods. If one knows how to move in these eternal and timeless realities, one can experience the beginning and the end of the world, see the birth of stars and the end of the universe. One can transform one self into all the animals, bacteria’s and viruses. Talk to all the plants and learn about all their healing qualities. Meet angels, demons and yes, even the dead. And one can look into the future.
But to be able to control these experiences, to steer the car the right way, so to say, and get the help or visions you need, you have to know these worlds in and out. Something that only can be achieved through long lasting and hard training, or in other words through becoming a shaman.
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The shamanic traditon of the Secoyas

In the shamanic tradition of the secoyas, like most of the indigenous people of the amazons, the hallucinogenic plant mix called ayahuasca, or in secoya yagé, is used to enter the shamanic trance. The tradition of using yagé may go as far as 5000 years back.
The shaman was in the old days both the communities priest and doctor. He was the man the community called on if they had any problems physically of mentally. Because he was the man with the right knowledge, experience and qualities in the spiritual worlds to heal and defense his people. Something he had achieved through hard schooldays consisting of violent doses of yagé.
Through his education the shaman meets and makes his allies in the other worlds. He meets the angels and the demons and gets the chance to choose the light or the dark road. This is another important part of the shamanic tradition. Because Brujeria, as the dark road is called, is a well known phenomena for all shamans. And is a road that leads to a well know phenomena in the western world, egoistic power. A brujera will do everything in his powers to reach his goals, even murders can take place.
Yet all the most powerful curanderas agree that the road of the light that leads to the most healing, powerful visions and allies are the by far most difficult one.
In the old days the secoyas would dress in their most beautiful cloths, paint traditional patterns in their faces and place their red and yellow crowns, graced with Tucan feathers, on their heads. Before a yagé ceremony the secoyas would meet in the yagé house at about 4 o’clock, lay down in their hammocks and wait for the ceremony, which always lasted from sunset to sunrise, to start.
Nobody would ever enter the yagéhouse without their ceremonial dresses.
The ceremonies would always be leaded by the shaman, who cooked the Yagé, sang and blew smoke over it before he gave it to the participants. If somebody was sick, he or she would be brought to the ceremony and laid down in a hammock in one of the corners in the house. The shaman would then, after reaching his trance, start to blow smoke and sing over the patient to call on his spiritual contacts. He would then in his visions get a picture of the patient’s condition, what had to be done, what plants or spirits he could use to threat the condition. After one of these ceremonies he would never accept anything but a presents, if the family was pleased.
The intentions of a good shaman were always to heal, not to earn money. An interesting point for us in the western society with a medical industry that heals, but at the same time earns more money than ever. In fact, last year the pharmaceutical industry earned more money than any other industry in the US, even more than the oil industry. With these facts in mind it’s easy to ask oneself what the actual intentions of the industry are? To earn the most money or heal the most people?
Another interesting picture of the difference between the traditional and the western medicine is the doctor or shaman himself. In the west, the doctor gives the medicine, or the magic bullets. In the jungle the shaman takes the medicine himself..







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The history of Seguaria or Remoino Grande

The history
After the Hispanic invasion of the timeless world of the rainforest more than 300 years ago, the secoya culture and their way of life have been through some huge changes. At one point the secoyas counted more than 30000, with a proud culture and spiritual tradition. From that point the population has dropped profoundly, and today no more than 500 secoyas are still alive. The Hispanic introduction of alcohol, Christianity and the European diseases, not only cut the population with nearly 98%, but changed ,at the same time, the secoyas relationship with their own spiritual and healing tradition forever.
The other big explosion hit the timeless world for no more than 30 years ago. With the first oil findings in the region in the seventies, the coming of the oil companies and later the colonists, forced the secoyas to change their way of life yet another time. From living in big communities, where as many as 15 families could share the same house. The secoyas had to divide themselves along all of their area to prevent further invasion. The families that traditionally had no more than 2 children decided to get bigger. Resulting in families today where it’s more common to see 7 than 4 children.
All of this has changed the traditional shamanism..
Shamanism today, my meeting with the two shamans and the Yagé
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Don Cesario

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Don Cesario. He is a small and frail man around the age of 90 with a constant smile on his mouth. Unfortunately did I only get the chance to meet the experienced shaman a few short, but interesting hours.
Cesarios healing qualities have made him a big national and international reputation as a powerful shaman. And when I met him at his little farm, a family from Santo Domingo had just arrived. The mother of the three grown up children were sick, so sick that she couldn’t stand up. Their plan were to stay at don Cesarios farm for about a month, so that the shaman and the powerful nature could get time to put their healing hands on the sick women.
The very process of healing, hearing, breathing and seeing the enormous nature for a period of time, is as important as the shamans work in the healing process, could don cesario tell me.
Another interesting point for me in the middle of all this, was that don cesario, as the old shamans, just got paid in presents. In this case, a large quantity of salted and smoked fish and the working force of the three children for the whole month.
The other secoya shaman that lives in Ecuador is Julio. A private man in his early 60. who came to the community for no more than 4 years ago after his wife died. Julio was also the man to lead my only Yagé ceremony with the secoyas.
Before I came to the secoyas I had tasted the magical jungle medicine two times earlier, when I visited a community of indigenous tsatilas. That time I was given two beautiful experiences. But I never reached just the point I wanted, where the snakes and the spirits shows you what you just might see in your wildest dreams.


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My expectations to the ceremony


My expectations to the ceremony with Julio were therefore massive. And before Julio started out the preparations I made it clear to him that I didn’t want another tourist dose. He answered me with a big smile and made it quite clear to me that the night would be long and interesting. The preparations, cutting and cooking of the Yagé were then started as the sun was right over our heads.
Around 5 pm. everything was ready. Julio in his traditional shamanic clothing’s, but with a crown without tukan feathers, and I were both calm, but tired after a long and hot day without food. We therefore decided to lay down in the Yagé house in the outskirts of the community, wait and rest.
In one hammock were I, a man from a society where the brew we were about to drink, in the eyes of the law, is said to be as dangerous as Heroin. On the other side of the fire was Julio, with a maybe 5000 years old tradition and experiences from the age of 11 to support what he was doing. A really absurd meeting. Unfortunately didn’t Julio’s
magical songs help on the strength of the Yagé. And even after 7-8 big glasses of the bitter brew I hadn’t reached the point I wanted to, even though the butterflies, snakes and colors were dancing a slow waltz when I closed my eyes.



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The Secoya´s future



The future
Today the secoyas are facing new big challenges and changes with a future that moves faster and faster, and closer and closer. And with just 500 secoyas still alive to take care of there rich and knowledgeable tradition of theirs, it is really clear to me that no help from the outside is too big.


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The solidarity the center of the secoya community

Through my time with the secoyas I experienced some of the most fantastic mentality of solidarity i have ever seen. If a man is building a house or planting a field of corn, this is a job for everybody. And everybody is helping with their warmest smiles around their mouth. Feelings like this should inspire everybody with the same mentality and an interest in maintaining the old cultures, in the evermore chaotic and globalized culture landscape of today, to help.
The world can not afford to loose another culture like this.
Fortunately a lot of help is already coming. Political support to education in secoya language, documentation of old stories and legends and installation of solar panels in the community are all good and helpful projects.


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the last secoya shamans

The biggest part of the responsibility of maintaining the culture, and especially the shamanic part of it, lays, in any case, with the secoyas themselves. And with their continuing dreams about a stronger tourism, based especially in their culture and shamanic tradition, a master plan is needed. With only 4 relatively old shamans still living. With a Christianity that is continuing to get stronger, alongside the growing fear of drinking Yagé, something radically has to be done if the shamanic tradition of the secoyas shall be accessible outside the history books in the nearest future.My final suggestion, with the terrible reality in mind that 2 small schoolgirls drowned in the river under my visit, is that somebody, with the right knowledge, should visit the community and teach them how to make life jackets of material from th


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The Ayawasca Vision

North Atlantic Books - Ayahuasca Visions

- [ Traduzca esta página ]Since 1977, North Atlantic Books has been meeting the needs of individuals who seek to improve and expand their knowledge about spiritual practice, health, ...
www.northatlanticbooks.com/store/1556433115.html - 36k



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