Organizadores
Beatriz Caiuby Labate
Wladimyr Sena Araújo
|
|
O Uso Ritual da Ayahuasca (The Ritual Use of Ayahuasca)
by Beatriz Caiuby Labate and Wladimyr Sena Araújo (Eds.)
Publisher:
Mercado de Letras
Year:
2002
ISBN:
85-7591-049-3
Reviewed by Mauricio Fiore / Translation by Robin M. Wright, 5/26/2008
The publication of a collection of articles involves risks that are
proportional to the level of ambition of the editors. In the case
of the collection O uso ritual de ayahuasca, edited by the anthropologists
Beatriz Labate and Wladimyr Araújo, the objectives of the undertaking
seem to have been fulfilled, notwithstanding the problems that can
be pointed out in the 25 articles (besides the Introduction) that
comprise the book. The first objective, to publish the papers presented
at the First International Conference on the Ritual Use of Ayahuasca,
held at the State University of Campinas in November, 1997, was expanded,
since more than half of the articles were written by researchers who
did not participate in the event. The more audacious objective, to
assess the state of the art of research and debates on the use of
ayahuasca, promoting discussions on the question, yielded satisfactory
results. The researchers who specifically deal with the question no
doubt will find lacunae — not surprising in a volume of this
type — but the important point is that, for researchers and
any other interested people, the book not only serves as a sophisticated
and broad introduction to the theme, but it also serves as a reference
work.
“Ayahuasca”, a Quechua term that means roughly the vine
of the dead or of the spirits, is one of the names given to the beverage
prepared by the mixing of two main ingredients, the Banisteriopsis
caapi vine and the leaves of the Psychotria viridis bush. Its use
by native South American peoples of the Amazonian region is pre-Colombian,
and it has psychoactive properties, that is, it affects in some way
the functioning of the central nervous system in human beings. This
property is the result of the action of DMT (N, N-dimethyltryptamine),
which is present in the leaves of the bush and of the Beta-carbolines
and other substances which are present in the vine. Although the DMT
can be quickly neutralized when it is ingested orally, the Beta-carbolines
act directly on neuron-receptors, which neutralize it, opening the
way to its brain activity, which would explain its psychoactive effects.
At the beginning of the 20th century, during the great migratory movement
into Amazônia, principally as a result of the rubber boom, contact
with the Indians led the “whites” to incorporate ayahuasca
into their religious beliefs and therapeutic practices. The first
sect which was founded on the consumption of the beverage was organized
by Raimundo Irineu Serra in the 1920s and ’30s, and it was after
that that other sects were created, on through the 1960s. The sects
attracted followers from the great urban centers of the country, thus
expanding the use of the beverage throughout Brazil and the world.
The set of general and introductory certainties seems to end there.
Controversies and debates that involve different scientific disciplines,
religious dogmas and legal concepts make ayahuasca and its consumption
a rich topic, which the book by Labate and Araújo develops
into three groups of articles: the first deals with the indigenous
or “native” use of the beverage, dialoguing directly with
Ethnology; the second goes through the different sects in which the
beverage plays a central role, such as the Santo Daime and the União
do Vegetal; and a final set of articles considers the pharmacological
and psychological aspects of ayahuasca. If one of the objectives of
the book was to engage in a dialogue with other researchers who are
not just specialists in the area, that is what we will be looking
for here in discussing, even if briefly, the data and analyses presented
in this work.
The articles in the first part of the book systematically describe
the format of the rituals that involve the use of ayahuasca —
or “yagé”, the name given to the beverage by several
Amazonian tribes. The discussion of such classic themes in Anthropology
as shamanism and anthropomorphism are associated with the debate over
the consumption of hallucinogens by indigenous tribes. The articles
by Pedro Luz and Esther Langdon consider the meaning of the use of
the beverage in various Amazonian tribes, which forms a kind of “psycho-integrity”
(Langdon, p. 68), that is, a type of primordial social link established
by this practice (Luz, p. 63). The ritual of taking ayahuasca reaches
its high point at the moment when daily life is surpassed in order
to attain a world of “truth” (Luz, p. 61), in which all
elements of nature exist in the same dimension.
Along the same line, the articles by Bárbara Keifenheim and
Luis Eduardo Luna seek to place the use of ayahuasca into the cosmological
system of indigenous societies, getting out of the evolutionist separation
between magic and religion, which is responsible for a series of errors
in understanding shamanic rituals or their equivalents. The first
author perceives amongst the Kaxinawá a synaesthetic ritual
involving the use of ayahuasca, which is not necessarily shamanic
(the latter involving, above all, the use of tobacco), in which the
Indians re-enact a primordial myth the perspective of which ties together
all the dimensions of nature, very similar to what Luna discusses
in the next article with regard to anthropomorphism. The article by
Mariana Franco and Osmildo Conceição reveals the curative
aspect that rubber-gatherers perceive in ayahuasca, moreso than an
established religious character.
Two articles written by medical professionals complete this first
part; their intent is to defend native “causes” but, in
doing so, they end up sliding on their analyses. Germán Zuluaga
argues that the indigenous peoples who discovered ayahuasca (according
to him, located in the Amazonian “foothills”) were supposedly
robbed by the “white man”, who has used the beverage in
a “flippant” way. Since he is much more concerned with
“charlatan healers” than with biopiracy — an urgent
question that he only mentions — the author ignores well-established
theoretical reflections from the social sciences and overly essentializes
terms such as “culture” and “knowledge”, sounding
an alert for the cultural theft of ayahuasca from its “true”
traditional, indigenous, and culturally “pure”, context.
It would have been much more useful, perhaps, to have discussed the
rights of indigenous peoples to pharmacological knowledge that is
being systematically used by science in a very unregulated way. Despite
his good survey on the ritual and the effects caused by the beverage,
Jacques Mabit confuses his proposal to do medical or psychological
analysis with the possible revelations occasioned by ayahuasca. In
criticizing the use of the concept of hallucination to refer to the
effects of the beverage, which would imply an error or product of
fantasy, the French medical doctor is accomplice to the error of imagining
that the “efficacy” of ayahuasca can be measured by the
degree of veracity of its visions. His discussion on the clinical
potentials of the beverage is certainly provocative, but the lack
of specification of the subject-object relation, so dear to psychiatry,
potentially diminishes more objective debates.
The second and larger part of the book is dedicated to the ayahuasca
religions in Brazil, and from the very beginning of the good bibliographic
review by Beatriz Labate one fact calls attention: only here (in Brazil)
have there developed non-indigenous popular religions based on the
use of the beverage. Although the number of followers is not demographically
significant on the national level, with only around 10 thousand adepts
(p. 232), these religions have become very visible to the public.
If their origins go back to contact between the Indians and pioneer
rubber-gatherers who occupied Amazonia, Labate identifies the existence
today of a possible process of “daimization” of the native
populations, that is, the ritual of “Santo Daime” (another
of the numerous names for ayahuasca) has attracted the descendants
of those who originally are supposed to have presented the beverage
to the whites. Under the generic term “Santo Daime” are
included those religions that claim fidelity to the primordial teachings
of Master Irineu, the Cefluris (Eclectic Center of Flowing Universal
Light) and the Alto Santo, whose differences are well presented in
the reading of the book.
Eight articles provide a detailed discussion of the symbolic elements
that make up the ritual of Santo Daime. In the case of the new sects
one can observe, along with a shamanic process, a fusion of elements
from Spiritualism and Umbanda with a strong Christian base, more accurately
Catholic — and on this point the article by Sandra Goulart is
of special interest because it highlights in the origins of the Daime
cults traces of traditional Catholicism from the rural regions of
Brazil, which is marked by relations of godparenthood and alliance.
Meanwhile, Clodomir Monteiro relativizes the “syncretism”
that is at the base of Santo Daime, to the extent that incorporation
by spirits could be a direct introduction by African descendants coming
from the Northeast, without concurrence from Umbanda or Kardecismo.
It should also be remembered that the massive contact with urban populations
from the 1960s on, which resulted in the expansion of Santo Daime
to beyond the Amazonian frontiers, also exercised an influence on
the organization of sects, with the incorporation, for example, of
the use of marijuana. Among the followers of Master Sebastião,
founder of one of the Daimist lines, the Cefluris (MacRae, pp. 455-457),
“Holy Mary”, the name the sect gives to marijuana, is
considered sacred.
But while the analysis of the symbolic process and the organization
of Santo Daime is a strong point of the articles, the lack of a certain
objectivity seems to prevent deeper discussions. As a response to
the constant discrimination suffered by the Daime religions, several
articles insist on starting from responses based on the belief itself
in order to legitimate the use of ayahuasca, in such a way that, as
Lévi-Strauss stated, the native theory ends up serving as an
explanation for the reality precisely because it seems closer to the
reality that one wishes to explain1. Thus, the value of the ritual
is overestimated: at one moment it is argued that it is only by means
of the ritual that one can in fact get out of the territory of simple
hallucinations (Monteiro, p. 389), at another moment value judgments
are made that delimit good and bad uses of psychoactive substances,
Daime being situated among the good uses (Dias, p. 422). The same
thing can be said about the articles that deal with the União
do Vegetal, two of which were written by members of the organization
and one other by an ex-member. Neither of them escapes a certain propaganda
tone which prevents analytic reflection that goes beyond the idle
question of “Is UDV good or bad?” — to the point
that the book is now the object of a lawsuit filed by the UDV itself!
In any case, the descriptive density of the articles enables the reader
to get a reasonably good notion of the forms of the major ayahuasca
religions of Brazil, which stimulates future research.
The medico-pharmacological discussion is the central discussion of
the last part of the book. A bit uneven, the last five articles represent
much more of a direction in which new research can be done than a
source of definitive data. The UDV is the central focus of the first
three texts. Interested in demonstrating the “positiveness”
of the use of “hoasca” (the name used by the followers
of Master Gabriel, the founder of the UDV), the Medical Scientific
Department of the sect has stimulated the production of research by
its members: from psychiatric tests to general clinical studies, they
insistently seek to demonstrate that among them, hoasca has no effect
whatsoever on a healthy life; to the contrary, it is supposed to,
among other benefits, facilitate abstinence among dependents, from
other “drugs.” The article by the multidisciplinary Benny
Shanon is far too audacious: it seeks to demonstrate that certain
universal archetypes come to light when activated by ayahuasca. The
discussion in fact is interesting, but the radical psychologyzing
by the author — “the study of ayahuasca belongs, in very
first place, to the domain of psychology and, more specifically, to
cognitive psychology” (p. 633) — doesn’t take into
consideration various anthropological works that have dealt with the
topic in very different ways. Closing the book, whoever is looking
for a specific discussion on the pharmacology of DMT — in ayahuasca
as in other plants — will find in the article by Jonathan Ott
an excellent introductory discussion.
If the objective of this part of the book was to introduce the weight
of psychopharmacological studies, a suggestion for future work may
perhaps be useful here: include a more in-depth discussion of the
concept of hallucinogen, in which ayahuasca fits in general terms,
which is a question that is far from being settled and has to do directly
with the relation between the medical and social sciences. It is enough
to remember that, while many scholars or members of the ayahuasca
religions prefer to use the term “entheogen”, directly
connected to a mystical conception of the so-called “plants
of power”, medicine uses terms such as, besides “hallucinogen”,
“psychodysleptic”, “psychoto-mimetic” or”
psycholytic”2.
* * *
To conclude we wish to reflect on a question that could have been
debated more throughout the text, and that was only touched on in
the article by Edward MacRae, which is in fact a plea for tolerance
in relation to the ayahuasca religions. The logic that seems to guide
the articles of the book is that the use of ayahuasca cannot be seen
as just any sort of consumption of psychoactives, given that it involves
traditional religious rituals. The very title of the book restricts
the type of use of ayahuasca — ritual — that is under
discussion. Now, rituals are a classic object of study in the Social
Sciences, principally in Anthropology, although there is no consensus
on a precise definition of the term. The fact that rituals have been
thought of primarily as directly related to religious or mystical
aspects should not lead to the false idea that they are always related
to the domains of the sacred3. For Edmund Leach, one can understand
ritual as an act or series of prescribed and non-instinctive acts
that are not rationally explained, since, in this case, according
to him, the idea of rationality has to be relativized: “A psychiatrist
could qualify as a ‘private ritual’ a compulsive neurotic’s
constant washing of his hands, while for the neurotic it is nothing
more than rational hygienic procedure”4.
Besides that, it’s necessary to remember that in 1986, after
a hardline repressive legal process against the use of the beverage,
ayahuasca was legalized by the (now defunct) National Council on Narcotics.
After a strong vindicatory movement on the part of various ayahuasca
religions — and based on a study involving anthropologists,
psychologists, medical doctors, police officials, legal experts, etc.
that came to the conclusion that the use of ayahuasca did not present
risks to the participants of these sects — the legalization
of its specific use for religious rituals was established, in the
name of the preservation of constitutionally guaranteed religious
freedoms. The two plants used in the preparation of the beverage were
exempted from prohibition, but not DMT – the principal psychoactive
- in its isolated form, which continues to be prohibited until the
present day. This special statute of ayahuasca has faced contestations,
and on December 31, 2002, the National Anti-Drugs Secretary commissioned
a new study on the question.
Nevertheless, it seems to me to be wrong to imagine that such peculiarities
in the use of ayahuasca could prevent treatment of the question through
a wider and deeper discussion, that involves the contemporary consumption
of legal and illegal psychoactive substances. Just for that reason
the article by MacRae — which follows up on a reflection he
had already developed in another work5 and whose studies have had
a critical role in the struggle for the legalization of the religious
use of ayahuasca — highlights the role of the social control
exercised internally among the members of Santo Daime, which avoids
a destructive pattern of use of the beverage. The concepts MacRae
works with are inspired by the studies of the North American medical
doctor Norman Zinberg and the Dutch social scientist Jean-Paul Grund,
who perceived among users of psychoactive substances three decisive
elements in the definition of what could be called a “use pattern”:
the substance utilized, the setting and the set6. Roughly speaking,
one can summarize these elements as follows: the desired biochemical
effects that each specific substance provides vary decisively; the
setting is the social context of use, the environment in which the
substance is consumed and the way in which it is acquired; the set
however is understood as the individual characteristics of the user,
which involves his notion of the world and psychological characteristics.
Another previous work, by Howard Becker, identified among North American
marijuana users a network of information on the effects of the herb
that served as common knowledge transmitted by experienced users to
newly-initiated users, preventing certain conditions and forms of
use considered to be negative from being maintained7.
These examples demonstrate the possibilities for a more intense debate
in studies on ayahuasca and other psychoactives. The hierarchical
separation between what is supposed to belong to the religious domain
and what to the secular makes the discussion on the consumption of
ayahuasca move further away from the more productive debate on the
consumption of psychoactive substances in the contemporary world.
Suspending the prohibition on the beverage, which was based exclusively
on the idea of freedom to practice religion, created a contradiction
that had consequences in the very relations among the ayahuasca religions,
besides threatening the stony separation between religions, the individual
and the State. The conflicts between the UDV and its sympathizers,
which even involves the use of marijuana, provides evidence that the
State, in conferring exclusive freedom to certain religions which
make sense only in their context, grants these religions the power
to decide what is a “true” ritual and what is not, as
well as denying to the individual the freedom to choose between whatever
type of mystical, philosophical or religious perception, even if it
is entirely unknown.
Evidently the freedom to consume ayahuasca represented an unprecedented
advance if we really take into account the influence of sociocultural
factors in the official policy regarding psychoactive substances8,
but today we are witnessing a dispute for a certain kind of purity
or religious truth in which, as is well-known in Anthropology, there
are no winners. As a rough analogy, we could think of a State that
prohibited the consumption of alcohol for all its citizens except
during Christian services, but only those authorized by the Vatican,
excluding for example the rituals of the Orthodox Church… If
at some time the argument for religious freedom became strategic for
the very survival of the groups, it’s already past the hour
for ayahuasqueiros and researchers to confront the question from a
broader point of view, that doesn’t exclude the wealth of the
social and religious repertoire involving the use of ayahuasca and
tries to think of it within a society that does not allow the individual
to choose which substances he/she can use, either by prohibiting them,
or by stimulating them. As MacRae himself states, this is necessary
“in order to come to terms with the view, which is still prevalent
in our society, that insists on approaching the question of the use
of psychoactives in a simplistic way, attending only to pharmaceutical
type definitions, and putting off to one side its psychical and socio-cultural
dimensions, as well as demonstrating a great intolerance to the idea
that there may be a spiritual use of any of these substances, which
are all generically considered as “drugs’” (p. 458).
(1) Lévi-Strauss, Claude. “Uma introdução
à obra de Marcel Mauss”. In: Mauss, Marcel. Sociologia
e antropologia. São Paulo: EPU, 1974 (esp. pp. 25-26).
(2) See for example Karniol, Isac G. “Cannabis sativa e derivados”.
In: Seibel, Sérgio D. e Toscano, Alfredo Jr. (orgs.). Dependência
de drogas. São Paulo: Atheneu, 2000; Carneiro, Henrique. Amores
e sonhos da flora: afrodisíacos e alucinógenos na botânica
e na farmácia. São Paulo: Xamã, 2002.
(3) Cf. Benedict, Ruth. “Ritual”. In: Encyclopedia of
the social sciences. New York: Macmillan, 1948, p. 396.
(4) Leach, Edmund. “Ritual”. In: Enciclopedia internacional
de las ciencias sociais. Madri: Aguilar, 1976, pp. 383-384.
(5) MacRae, Edward. Guiado pela Lua. São Paulo: Brasiliense,
1992.
(6) Zinberg, Norman. Drug, set and setting. New Haven: Yale University
Press: 1984; Grund, Jean-Paul C. Drug use as a social ritual. Roterdam:
IVO, 1998.
(7) Becker, Howard S. Outsiders: studies in the sociology of deviance.
New York: The Free Press, 1966.
(8) Cf. MacRae, Edward. “A importância dos fatores socioculturais
na determinação da política oficial sobre o uso
ritual de ayahuasca”. In: Zaluar, Alba. Drogas e cidadania:
repressão ou redução de danos. São Paulo:
Brasiliense, 1994.
Mauricio Fiore has a Master´s in Anthropology at the FFLCH-USP
and is a member of the NEIP - Nucleus for Interdisciplinary Studies
on Psychoactives (www.neip.info).
Originally Published In : Revista Novos Estudos CEBRAP, nº 66,
July, 2003, pp. 198-202.
This review
was originally published at Erowid, in: http://www.erowid.org/library/review/review.php?p=260