Whenever a group of people have to deal
with extremes of geography and climate, it become especially important
that they be able to interpret anything in the environment that could help
or hinder the chances of survival. In all primitive
cultures, human qualities were ascribed to animals and other natural
phenomena in order to gain some insight into what might likely be expected
to happen.
The more extreme the geography and climate,
the more importance this interpreting of "the signs" became. The early
desert and arctic cultures both had intricately anthropomorphic
traditions. Anthropologists
have been able to reconstruct some knowledge of Egyptian, Siberian, and
other mythologies. The word shaman
comes from the early Russian,
and is a belief in various forms of nature spirit which may effect health
and disease luck and misfortune and one's state of awareness in relation
to natural phenomena.
Shamanism
is very widespread across human cultures, but has a distinct strong historical
tradition in the Mongol
areas from Siberia south. These traditions
are very old, and run back into the paleolithic,
emerging with the earliest
fertility
goddess figurines, and representing the skills of the hunt as seen
in caves such as Lascaux.
From this Mongol source area shamanistic practice spread west to Eastern
Europe, south to Tibet, where shamanism underlies Tibetan
Buddhism. It spread ever east and south, down the Americas.
A shaman
is both priest and medium and often develops a variety of psychic faculties
including aura
reading, clairvoyance, divination, etc. Everywhere, in ethic tribal
societies, shamanistic practices have been commonplace. It usually involves
magical
trance
states and the souls of natural entities such as power
animals and allies. For thousands of years there was no science or
medicine, or religion as we know it. Only the shaman
stood
between the known and the unknown. They were consulted in times of crisis
and in matters of life and death.
During the great Ice
Ages, the continents were covered by glaciers.
As the climate gradually warmed and the glaciers melted and receded, nomadic
tribes followed the herds of animals living in the lush greenbelts
at
the glaciers edges. It was a harsh and precarious existence. The vissitudes
of the animals and the climate were often fatal. It was easy to suppose
that the
elemental
deities were capricious.
Evidence of the
first agricultural communities dates back ten thousand years or more,
when people learned to sustain themselves by planting seeds in the fertile
deltas. The freedom from having to follow the roaming animal herds gave
rise to more enduring pursuits like architecture
and commerce.
However, as the great glaciers dwindled,
so did the great rivers, and in some places forests gave way to deserts
and climactic extremes of a different sort. In these areas the mythologies
and deities concerned with animals and hunting gradually gave way to plant
and agrarian themes. When the regular seasonal
flooding of the deltas was interrupted by drought, the result was famine,
and the deities of the harvest required supplication and placation. There
is growing evidence that many if not most early civilizations collapsed
because of environmental
abuses.
The
rites of passage, particularly among more primitive peoples are quite
rigorous, and in general, have the intention of renewing the senses and
investing attention and awareness with the sober reality of a responsible
adult. In fact the rites of passage into adulthood often involve
various occult rituals that may border on the very fringes on mortality.
The inner child is symbolically killed and the care-free attitude of innocence
necessarily gives way to the more sober responsibilities of an adult member
of the community who is capable of being entrusted with parenthood and
peerage.
The blood-letting, scarification, and otherwise
harrowing rites of passage for the ordinary person may indeed be mild in
comparison to what a shaman may undergo as his initiation into the spirit
world. In the antique cultures the shaman often assumed the responsibilities
of the spiritual leader, physician and sometimes even chieftain of the
community.
Shamanic cultures require the development
of internal vision
as a prerequisite for becoming a shaman. Rather extreme means of obtaining
and holding onto this essential vision were frequently employed, and came
to be considered requisite. An error in judgment often was a matter
of life and death. Dreams and visions had heightened significance.
It should be remembered that before there
was any science or modern medicine there were very few alternatives available.
The various techniques for obtaining these visions are usually quite hazardous
and often even fatal. In some traditions, extreme fasting and potions
of all sorts were employed, and even poisons and hallucinogens
became something of a sacrament
in the practice of some shamism. They risked their sanity and even their
lives. Many lost both.
A Druid
is a Celtic priest and
shaman who inhabited the ancient Breton area (Gaul, southern England, Wales,
Ireland), with legendary abilities of prophecy and sorcery. Wicca
is also a ancient religious cult based on love, worshipping a Goddess,
and rituals of witchcraft
and wizardry. Most of the rituals involved in Wicca are based on Celtic,
Norse or Druid magickal
practices. A ritual, or rite is a prescribed act, or series of acts,
conducted during a religious or solemn ceremony. Rituals are generally
formulated as a route to knowledge.
The correspondence between shaman and the
ascetic
in Sanskrit illustrates the deep relationship also between shamanism and
Eastern mysticism. In Indian philosophy, the body's vital "airs," or energies
is known as PRANA
(a Sanskrit word meaning "breath"). A central conception in early
Hindu philosophy, particularly as expressed in the Upanishads, prana was
held to be the principle of vitality and was thought to survive as a person's
"last breath" for eternity or until a future life. In Yoga
philosophy, emphasis is placed on full control of the prana, through
the practice of pranayama, in order to enable one to meditate without
respiratory distraction and also for its therapeutic effect on disorders.