Today is our second day
in Warburton with Auntie Jennie and the Karith House of Prayer. Every morning on the Australian Tour, I get
up before the sun and run. Yesterday I
ran along the Upper Yarra River to Martyr Hill (a 27% grade) where I
painstakingly ascended to the top, then entered the Donna Buang Trail, a 70
kilometer hike, of which I sampled just the first bit. The songs of the birds spectacularly
surrounded me, resembling what I would expect from a rain forest, though in my
naivete, I expected monkeys to be part of the auditory scenery. I had the privilege to see a beautiful red
fox, which surprised me since I didn't think foxes lived in Australia. Later when I asked about the fox, I learned
that they had been brought to Australia by the British rulers for their classic
fox hunt. The foxes quickly overran the
local wildlife since they had no natural predators and became pests. (Just like the English, someone at the
breakfast table quipped.) I pointed out
that it wasn't actually the fault of the foxes, since they weren't the ones to
buy the tickets to Australia and probably didn't enjoy the journey either. You can get $10 for killing a fox and
presenting its pelt. It's equally not
the personal fault of those who have English ancestry for bringing the foxes
since they weren't alive when the fox idea was conceived and executed. I don't think we have to hold guilt for the
deeds of our ancestors. There's enough
in the world to make everyone dysfunctional without needing more. I agree with don Miguel Ruiz and Olivier
Clerc that we need to forgive and be forgiven more than we need to blame and be
blamed.
This part of Australia
superficially resembles Vermont, where I live.
The mountains are a bit higher in Vermont, but that's where the resemblance
ends. There's no rocks here. The forest floor is thickly filled with ferns
and exotic looking plants that resemble large pineapple plants without the fruit.
The major tree is the eucalyptus or gum.
As one ascends to the higher altitudes, pines appear, but not like any Vermont
pine. Last year we were running when it
was still dark and saw a wombat. I only
saw scat this year. Surprisingly given
daylight savings time, the sun rises late in Southeastern Australia.
This morning I took a
different route. I ran up a new road on
the same steep hill to get to the O'Shaunessy Aqueduct Trail. I ran along an old aqueduct for a ways before
turning up the hill on the Mt. Victoria Trail.
I wondered how one keeps the water out of the aqueduct even as streams
tumbled down the hill beneath it. Nature
was breaking up the concrete and taking back the land. A short ways up the last trail, I had to turn
around and ran back to Karith. I can
vouch that it's quicker to run downhill than uphill but it's harder on the thighs.
Warburton is a small
town, barely one row
of buildings on either side of the road. The architecture is one I
have only
encountered in Australia, a kind of combination between English country
homes
and Indonesian style. The closest I have
seen elsewhere is the French Quarter in New Orleans. The Upper Yarra
River runs behind one of
those rows, flowing all the way to Melbourne and into the ocean there.
I met a woman named Maya who wrote a marvelous
book on her hiking journey along the Upper Yarra River from its source
to the
sea. I asked her if she was going to
honor any other rivers, but she said, "No, this is my homeland. That
is my River. I wouldn't have authority or permission to
write about anyone else's river. She was
obviously aboriginal in her thinking about land and territory.
When we arrived at the
Village Hall where we were doing the workshop, the door was locked. We milled around in front of the movie
posters including George Clooney's latest film for the Town Hall doubled as the
Village Cinema. Since "the show must go
on", we had to improvise. Our hosts were
frantically trying to track down one of the City employees to open the
building. I suggested we go sit beside
the river and at least get started. We
meandered down our side of the river to the Brisbane Bridge and crossed over to
the other side where I had spotted a nice grassy area suitable for our group. Rocky and I proceeded to do the opening song
to honor the Four Directions after we had acknowledged the land, the aboriginal
people who were attached to this land along with their ancestors, and the
spirits who walked upon the land. Then
we did a spirit calling song to make sure that proper notice had been given to
the spirits that we were planning to do a ceremony. Auntie Jennie then spoke some about the
importance of men coming into the medicine.
In her family as in mine, there were at least two, if not three,
generations which were entirely lacking in men.
All the men were dead or in jail or lost. My grandfather was the only exception as was
Aunt Jennie's. She continued to talk
about the men in her family and her ancestors which inspired me to propose that
we do a tobacco ceremony in which we smoke for the spirits and anyone who
receives a message from them stands up and delivers it. This turned out to be a powerful
ceremony. I offered the tobacco and a
number of people stood and spoke in Quaker meeting fashion. In my mind's eye I saw my ancestors crossing
the great divide (the Pacific Ocean) and embracing Auntie Jennie's ancestors
and all sitting down in a circle and smoking together to signify unity and
peacefulness. One said that war actually
hadn't been on the planet all that long and could still be eradicated. I saw ancestors standing behind each person
present. Several others spoke of similar
sightings. We passed tobacco around the
circle for everyone to smoke just as I had seen. Then one of our hosts appeared and announced
that the employee who was supposed to open the hall had finally arrived and we
could return. Many of us did not want to
leave the river and its soothing sounds as it moved past the first rocks I had
seen in this countryside.
After we settled back
into the building, Rocky spoke about the untold and silent stories that become
physical illnesses. These stories need
to be elicited. The organs and the
tissues who manifest the diseases need to be engaged in conversation to tell
their stories. The lessons we were
learning were not just pertinent to mental health. He gave an example of working with a woman
who was having severe right hip pain. He
used acupuncture and some osteopathy while he encouraged her to let her hip
tell its story. As a surprising but
highly relevant story emerged, the pain moved to the left hip, then the left
knee, and then left her body. It had
been stuck in her hip. I suggested Brian
Broom's marvelous book, Meaning-full
Illness. Auntie Jennie confirmed
that this view was also consistent with what aboriginal people believe and how
they heal in her area of Australia.
After lunch we wanted people
to experience how ceremony builds community, so we chose a ceremony that I
created based upon my readings from ethnographies written before 1900 of a "Welcome
to Camp" ceremony. It hasn't been done
since 1880, as far as I can determine. I
can imagine someone getting ready to bristle, so I'll quickly say that I
believe it's acceptable to create ceremony for specific purposes as the need
arises. It's not a Native American
ceremony because it's not currently done and there's no model to follow or
elder to teach it. It may have some Native
American flavor (we can't help infusing our spirituality into the ceremonies we
create), but it's really an ecumenical attempt at experiencing some degree of
transcendence toward the spiritual, which is exactly what I would call it. Or, since I'm also a member of the
Unitarian-Universalist Church, perhaps I should call it a "U-U greeting
ceremony".
The inspiration for this ceremony comes from
Plains peoples of North America, before they were penned into
reservations. In those days, camps
frequently moved. During certain times
of the year camps would join each other for celebrations and larger rituals. A ceremony was done to oversee this
process. In one that I read, seven tipis
were set in each of the seven directions so that the person walked a spiral
toward the center. This was done outside
and to the East of the main camp. Those
people wanting admission to camp participated in the ceremony along with those
who controlled the admissions process.
The supplicant who wished to enter the camp started in the West and
passed to each of the directions. In the
original ceremony, the intent was that each person proved that he possessed the
virtue of that direction. In my
readings, only men participated, but that may have been a side effect of the
gender-nearsightedness of many of the ethnographers writing before 1880 who were
often sexist and might not have noticed women even if they outnumbered
men. At each direction, the applicant to
the camp tells a story about a deed that exemplifies the virtues of that
direction. In my ceremony, I used courage
for the west, strength and endurance for the north, receiving and following a
vision for the east, compassion for the south, protecting someone for the sky,
and nurturing someone for the earth.
Then he is welcomed in the center and led into camp. I'm going to guess no one was ever turned
away because the incoming group were known and had been previously vetted. This was just a formal way to say hello.
I use my ceremony with
Native American people though, as I said, it is not a traditional Native
American ceremony. I use it especially
with people who have drug and alcohol problems because they are not used to
saying anything positive about themselves.
The beauty of this ceremony is that it emphasizes one's good traits and
deeds. So many people are quick to tell
stories about their faults and misdeeds, but isn't it much harder to tell
stories about what we have done well, or times when we have been courageous, or
strong, or compassionate, or protected someone or something else? This ceremony forces people to reflect upon what
is good about them and to share it with another person who only listens,
standing in the position that symbolically represents one of the
Directions. Participants feel how it
changes them to tell good stories instead of bad stories and they feel the camaraderie
that comes from being heard without commentary or personal response and being
accepted. Those who have completed the
process are led to a nearby part of the room where they can sing, dance, or
help each other in some way. We keep a
continual steam of singing and dancing going, because, as a Sari elder told us
in Mexico, you can never sing or dance enough for the spirits. When we did ceremony with her, she would
exhort us with "mas bailando; mas cantando".
We did this ceremony with
the group and Auntie Jennie agreed that it did succeed in giving them some
flavor of the transcendence and sense of group membership that participation in
tradition ceremony in community provides.
People also spoke about how difficult it was at first to be positive
about oneself and how embarrassed they were.
Isn't it interesting that we are more embarrassed to tell positive
stories about ourselves than negative ones?!
They also spoke about how transformative it felt to actually get out the
positive story and for it to be accepted. They described the joy of completing
the process and being welcomed to the community. For some that community will continue, since
talking circles are held weekly for those who live in the area and efforts are
being made to find constructive ways for people to spend time with each other.
Later that evening after
the workshop, we talked with our hosts about the problem in aboriginal
communities for some people that family gathering was centered around drinking
or doing drugs. The physician in our party who worked in the aboriginal
community reported that she wasn't permitted by some families to make home
visits on Thursday, Friday, or Saturday because of the partying that they didn't
want her to see. In relation to this we talked about the power
of ceremony, even the ceremony of drinking together, for it is, after all, a
kind of eucharist or communion. It's no
accident that alcohol is called "spirits".
We talked about the necessity of engaging the elders to put healthier
ceremonies back into place in communities in such a way that people can notice
and can attend.
In Warburton, we finished
the day by offering traditional pipe ceremonies for those present. We left to return to Melbourne to prepare to
travel into the East Gippsland countryside early the next morning for Culture
Camp 2012.
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