Madzoka Medicine: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Ethnobotanical]] |
Latest revision as of 01:46, 11 March 2015
Other Names
Among many African tribes, spirit possession is both known and culturally encouraged as a sacred or magical act. There are numerous possession cults in which special mediums-often or even primarily women-enter into a state of trance or ecstasy and allow their bodies to be possessed by a spirit being. The spirit-whether a deity, demon, bush spirit, animal spirit, ancestor, spirit of a deceased person, or something else-speaks through the body of the enraptured person, who shouts out oracles and prophecies, can perform magical healings, and so on (Lewis 1978). The African possession cults have become established in the New World in the form of Santeria, Umbanda, Candomble, voodoo, et cetera. From an anthropological point of view, the African possession cults are related to shamanism but must be regarded as a separate phenomenon (Goodman 1991). Nevertheless, there are a number of parallels and overlaps, particularly with the cults of Southeast Asia (van Quekelberghe and Eigner 1996). Also included in spirit possession are such spectacular practices as dervish dancing, walking on hot coals, sword swallowing, and transvestitism, not to mention such mysterious phenomena as 'automatic writing'" (Lewis 1989,42). In the literature on possession, it is often claimed that the state of possession occurs "on its own" or, at best, in the context of magical rituals, sacrificial ceremonies, ecstatic drumming ("voodoo drumming"), and dancing. The literature on possession has a very similar tone to the early literature on shamanism in that it ignores the significance of pharmacological stimuli. However, the use of incense, for example, has been documented in most possession cults. And psychoactive plants are clearly used during the initiation ceremonies of the African voodoo cult in Benin (Verger 1995). Substantial amounts of the psychoactive pennyroyal (Mentha pulegium; cf. Fabiana imbricata, kykeon) are used in the Brazilian Candomble cult (Voeks 1989, 123, 126*). In Haitian voodoo, hemp (Cannabis sativa) is said to playa specific role in triggering possession, and there are also reports of excessive rum drinking (see alcohol). ]usticia pectoralis and Cola acuminata are used in the Afro-Cuban Santeria cult (Gonzalez-Wippler 1981, 95). It is quite possible that the use of certain psychoactive plants or products from Indian ethnoflora was adopted by the Afro-American possession cults. The following plants are used to prepare the initiation drink of the Candomble cult: Ipomoea pescaprae Sweet [1402] (see Ipomoea spp.), Mimosa pudica 1. and Mimosa pudica 1. var. acerba Benth. (see Mimosa spp.), Vernonia bahiensis Tol., Hibiscus sp., Hibiscus rosa-sinensis 1., Mentha sativa 1., Ocimum micranthum Willd., Camellia sinensis, Vismia guinensis Pers., Vismia cayennensis" Pers., Urostigma doliarium Miq., Eugenia sp., and Eugenia jambosa 1. (Fichte 1985, 248). It was once believed that no use of psychoactive or hallucinogenic plants occurred in Africa or in its cultures. Only in the past two decades has this area of ethnobotany come under greater scrutiny (de Smet 1996*). It can be expected that a great deal of interesting information will come to light. The possession cult that serves for divination and healing in Malawi uses an herbal mixture, a madzoka medicine, to induce the trance that is required for spirit possession (madzoka). The fresh ingredients (presumably in equal parts) are crushed together, and the resulting paste is rubbed on the face, arms, and legs and sniffed into the nose. The trance is said to begin immediately. The mixture may be sniffed again during the trance (Hargreaves 1986,27). In South America, wormseed (Chenopodium ambrosioides) , a plant introduced from North America, is used as an additive to coca (see Erythroxylum coca). Securidaca longipedunculata is drunk in Mozambique by those who are "possessed by evil spirits." The powdered root acts as a potent sneezing powder when inhaled (cf. Veratrum album, snuffs). The Karanga people chew the root cortex to treat impotence. During their religious rites, the Balanta (Guinea-Bissau) use an aqueous extract from the root (which they call tchunfki) because of its alleged psychoactive effects (Samorini 1996). The root, which contains 40/0 saponins, tannin, steroid glycosides, and gaultherine, numbs the mucous membranes. The root was recently found to contain three ergot alkaloids: elymoclavine, dehydroelymoclavine, and a new ergoline derivative, called compound A (Samorini 1996). The bark of Annona senegalensis contains substantial amounts of tannin; mixed with palm oil, it is used as an antidote for poisoning (Assi and Guinko 1991, 30*). Asparagus africanus, the African asparagus, is used in Sotholand during circumcision rituals, when it is rubbed into artificially created wounds to give an initiate strength (Hargreaves 1986,30 f.). It is possible that mixing the four components together may result in synergistic effects that are psychoactive. |
Literature
Fichte, Hubert. 1985. Psycholeptica der "Obriga<;:ao da Consciencia." Curare, Sonderband 3/85:247-48. Goodman, Felicitas D. 1991. Ekstase, Besessenheit, Damonen: Die geheimnisvolle Seite der Religion. Gtitersloh: Gutersloher Verlagshaus. Gonzalez-Wippler, Migene. 1981. Santeria: African magic in Latin America. Bronx, N.Y.: Original Products. Hargreaves, Bruce J. 1986. Plant induced "spirit possession" in Malawi. The Society ofMalawi Journal 39 (1): 26-35. Lewis, loan M. 1978. Ecstatic religion: An anthropological study ofspirit possession and shamanism. Harmondsworth, U.K.: Penguin Books. ---.1989. Schamanen, Hexer, Kannibalen: Die Realitiit des ReligiOsen. Frankfurt/M.: Athenaum. Samorini, Giorgio. 1996. An African kykeon? Eleusis 4:40-41. van Quekelberghe, Renaud, and Dagmar Eigner, eds. 1996. Trance, Besessenheit, Heilrituale und Psychotherapie. In Jahrbuch fur Transkulturelle Medizin und Psychotherapie (1994). Berlin: VWB. Verger, Pierre. 1995. Del papel de las plantas psicoactivas durante la inici6n a ciertas religiones africanas. Takiwasi 3:80-87. |