For a number of years we have been exploring the highlands of
southern Mexico in a study of the role played by hallucinogenic
mushrooms in the religious life of the Indians. We began by visiting
the Sierra Mazateca in 1953, in the northernmost part of the state of
Oaxaca, returning there in 1955 and every year thereafter through 1962.
At an early date we learned of of a psychtropic plant that the Mazatecs
consume when mushrooms are not available. But as we and our
collaborator Roger Heim were concentrating on the difficult task of
locating and identifying the various species of hallucinogenic
mushrooms, we had to neglect forr some time this plant that the Indians
employ as a less desirable substitute. In 1960 and 1951, we brought
back specimens and submitted them for determination to Schultes and to
Epling. All of the specimens available proved to be unsatisfactory for
specific identification. Finally in September and October of 1962,
satisfactory herbarium material reached us. when we were in San Jose
Tenango, on which Dr. Epling could base his specific description.
Tenango, at about 1200 meters altitude, is close to and above the
tierra caliente of Vera Cruz.
We now identify a species of Salvia new to botanists, S. Divinorum
Epling & Jativa, as a psychotropic drug used traditionally by the
Mazatec Indians of Oaxaca, Mexico, in their divination rites. To the
ever growing family of Mexican phantastica a new member is thus added,
and for the first time a species of the Labiatae joins this interesting
group.
The plant is familiar to virtually all Mazatecs. In Huautla de
Jimenez (1800 meters) we saw two or three plants growing, and a
specimen taken to Mexico City is still alive there in the open air; but
these plants do not flower. We have never seen the seeds, and no Indian
has been able to tell us about them. The plant is reproduced
vegetatively from a shoot stuck into the ground. It requires black
soil, rather than clay, and for the plant to prosper moisture must be
steady. Many, prehaps, most, Mazatec families possess a private supply
of the plants, but almost invariably they are not near the home nor
near trails where the passers-by might see them. We were on the watch
for Salvia divinorum as we criss-crossed the Sierra Mazateca on
horseback in September and October of 1962, but never once did we see
it. The Indians choose some remote ravine for the planting of it and
they are loath to reveal the spots. No Indian in San Jose Tenango was
willing to take us to the plants whence the
brought back specimens to us. Salvia divinorum seems to be a cultigen;
whether it occurs in a wild state (except for plants that have been
abandoned or have escaped) we do not know.
In former times the proprietors of land paid no attention to growths
of hallucinogenic mushrooms and Salvia divinourm; but in the last four
or five years the market for the mushrooms and the possibility of a
market for the Salvia have made them conscious of a potential value
here. Several episodes have recently taken place in the vicinity of
Huautla in which the owner has enforced his right to the plants. The
Mazatecs who speak Spanish refer to Salvia Divinorum as hojas de la
Pastora, or hojas de Maria Pastora ("leaves of the Shepherdess" or
"leaves of Mary the Shepherdess"), and this is also the translation of
the name in Mazatec : ska Pastora. The Mazatec name is curious. In
Christian tradition the Virgin Mary is not thought of as a shepherdess.
Is the "Pastora" concept a survival of the pre-Christian dueno de los
animales, "the Lord of the animals," that figures large in the folk
tradition of the Middle American Indians? A pagan association would
thus be sanctified by the addition of the Virgin's name.
Salvia divinorum is, in the minds of the Mazatecs, only the most
important of several plants, all Labiatae, that they regard as members
of the same "family." Salvia divinorum is known as la hembra, "the
female." El macho, or "the male" is Coleus pumila, of European origin.
Then there is el nene, "the child," and el ahijado, "the godson," which
are both forms of Coleus Blumei. Some Indians insist that these others
are likewise psychotropic, but we have not tried them; others say these
are merely medicinal.
We have found no reference to the use of the leaves of Salvia
divinorum in the 16th and 17th Century writers. We have found only two
passages that may refer to them in modern writers. Dr. Blas Pablo Reko,
a pioneer in Mexican ethnobotanical field work, discussing the
hallucinogenic mushrooms, adds (Mitobotanica zapoteca, Mexico, 1945,
p.17) a sentence that, translated, says:
We cannot fail to mention here another magic plant whose leaves
produce visions and which the Cuicatecs and Mazatecs (in the disctricts
of Cuicatlan and Teotitlan) call "divination leaf." The loose leaves
that I have received do not premit their scientific identification.
This refers probably to the Salvia divinorum of the Mazatecs. There
is a longer reference in a paper by Ing. Robert J. Weitlaner
("Curaciones Mazatecas" in An. Inst. Nac. Anthrop. Hist. 4, No. 32
(2952, 283). While Weitlaner was in Ojitlan, a Chinantec village, he
encountered a native of Jalapa de Diaz, a neighboring Mazatec town, who
told him of the use among his fellow townsmen of a plant known as Yerba
de Maria. This informant's account, in a shortened
paraphrased translation, follows:
Yerba Maria resembles somewhat the yerba mora, but it has slightly
wider leaves. Only the leaves are used, putting them in water. First
the leaves are rubbed together in the hands, the water in not boilded,
and they are used for very specific purposes. When the curandero goes
to the forest in search of this plant, before cutting it he must kneel
and pray to it. They are not witch-doctors; but the leaves cut only
when they are needed after praying.
For example, if someone is suffering from a sickness, and the
doctors do not know what is the matter, then with this plant they
divine the disease. The curandero who brings the leaves first asks the
sick person if he is addicted to taking alcohol, because, when a man
does not take alcohol, fifty leaves are prescribed; when he takes
alcohol, then 100 leaves are prescribed. The sick person drinks the
water in which the leaves have been rubbed. At midnight, the curandero
goes with him and another person to a place where there is no noise, as
for example an isolated house, where the patient takes the potion. They
wait 15 minutes for the drug to take effect, and the patient himself
begins to state the kind of sickness from which he suffers. The patient
finds himself in a semi-delirious state, he speaks as in a trance, and
the others listen attentively to what he says. He shakes his clothes,
as though with the aid of the plant he would free himself from the
little beasties [presumed cause, in the Indian mind, of the illness].
At dawn the curandero bathes the patient with the water of which he has
drunk, and thereupon the patient is cured. People say that with this
bath goes away the drunken state produced by the plant that the patient
has taken. When is it a question of theft, or a thing lost, the
curandero listens to what is said by the man who has taken the plant,
and thus the facts are disclosed.
There is in Jalapa de Diaz an individual named Felipe Miranda, who
every three or six months goes to the mountains to gather the plant. He
makes wonderful cures and finds himself in good economic situation.
They say he cultivates and tends to the plant, but he does not reveal
the kind of plant that it is.
The identification of Salvia divinorum is long overdue. The plant is
present the whole year round, and the Mazatecs do not hesitate to
discuss it, since they are much less inhibited with respect to this
plant that they used to be when talking about the sacred mushrooms. In
recent years Huautla has changed greatly, the highway having reached
there in 1958-9 and the new-born traffic in the psychotropic mushrooms
having its focus there. Among the visitors to Huautla there have been a
number of botanists and mycologists. In Mexico City the hojas de la
Pastora are a frequent theme of discussion in botanical circles. It is
hard to understand how the plant has avoided classification until now.
So far as our information goes, the area of diffusion of the hojas
de la Pastora is confined to the Mazatec country and possibly the
immediately contiguous Cuicatec and Chinantec areas. But it may well be
known and used elsewhere. We shall await with curiousity the reports of
informants from other regions following the publication of this
article. Ololiuqui (Rivea corymbosa (L.) Hallier filius) is known among
the Mazatecs, but they seem to prefer for divination the hojas de la
Pastora to the semilla de la Flor de la Virgen, "Seed of the Flower of
the Virgen," as the Mazatecs call ololiuqui.
On Wednesday, July 12, 1961, I ate the hojas de la Pastora" and
experienced their effects. I was in Ayautla, stopping in the home of
Dona Donata Sosa de Garcia. She introduced me to a number of
curanderas: Augustina Borja, Clementia Unda, Maria Sevastiana Carrera,
and Sara Unda de la Hoz.
On the evening of that day, the first two came to the house shortly
before 11 o'clock, and Augustina Borja performed the ceremony in a
large space room. Those present were Irmgard Weirlaner Jouhnson, my
daughter ary X. Britten ('Masha'), Dona Donata, and her daughter
Consuelo ('Chelo').
Augustina Borja was the daughter of a curandero who had died about
ten years before. Her own daughters often accompany her on her healing
visits and are themselves budding curanderas. On the evening that we
spent with her, she came along with Clementina Unda. They were careful
to orient themselves to the east as they set the stage for the
ceremony. In the Mazatec country rites are always so orientated or as
near as possible in that direction; never to the west, which is
considered sinister. Augustina was performing - she took the mushrooms,
rather than the hojas; these I had requested especially as I had never
taken them. Both mushrooms and leaves are counted in pairs. The leaves
are paired off, care being exercised to assemble leaves that are
flawless, without parasitic growths. In preparation for the ceremony,
the leaves are placed on top of each other, each pair being face to
face.
It is customary for the Indians to consume the leaves by nibbling at
the dose with their incisor teeth. This proved to be impossible for me,
owing to the taste; and I was treated as a toothless person. There
being no metate (stone grinding board) handy, Augustina squeezed the
leaves with her hands and collected the juice in a glass. This was
certainly an inefficient method. Some water was added. I drank the dark
fluid, about half a glass full, the result of squeezing 34 pairs or 68
leaves in all. I was told that frequently Indians vomit on eating the
leaves, which is easy to believe. It was impossible for me, however to
retain the fluid.
After having eaten her mushrooms, without more ado our curandera
launched into singing, intoning in Mazatec with vigor. She kept this up
for two hours, in a rather monotonous voice. I tape-recorded her
singing but have yet to find someone who will give a rendering
in English or Spanish.
The effect of the leaves came sooner than would have been the case
with the mushrooms, was less sweeping, and lasted a shorter time. There
was not the slightest doubt about the effect, but it did not go beyond
the initial effect of the mushrooms - dancing colors in elaborate,
three-dimensional designs. Whether a larger dose would have produced a
greater effect, I do not know.
A day or two before the evnts that I have narrated, the curandera
Maria Sebastiana Carrera had supplied us with many details about the
use of the leaves and had even chanted the words of the ceremony after
her usage. She had declined to admit us to an actual ceremony because
her neighbors (and doubtless she herself) would have considered the
performance before outsiders a desecration and scandalous. Even as it
was, when her session with us was drawing to a close, she burst into
uncontrollable tears, fell on her knees, and begged forgiveness for
what she had done. She had also given us valuable cosmological legends
that are still beleived in among the villagers, which I hope to publish
elsewhere.
On October 9, 1962, our party was in San Jose Tenango. This time it
consisted of Dr. Albert Hofmann, his wife Anita, Irmgard Weitlaner
Johnson, Herlinda Martinez Cid (who served as Mazatec interpreter), and
me. Through the good offices of Roberto Carrera, the son of Aurelio
Carrera of Huauntla, we were introduced to Consuelo Garcia, about 85
years old, a vigorous, good-looking curandera, who that night performed
for us a divinatory rite. She used only the leaves, not mushrooms. She
ground them on her metate, after passing them through the smoke of
copal, and she did a thorough job of it. Water is added to the mass
that comes off the metate, the whole is put through a strainer, and
then we drank the liquor. I took the juice of five pair and Mrs.
Hofmann of three pair. We both felt the effects, which were as I
described them in the ceremony in Ayautla the year before.
It would seem, in summary, that we are on the threshold of the
discovery of a complex of psychotropic plants in the Labiatae of Mint
Family. We know that Salvia divinorum is so employed in the Sierra
Mazateca, and Coleus pumila and two "forms" of C. Blumei are said by
some of the Indians to be similiarly used.
(Originally OCR'd by GluckSpilz)