Facilitating pura medicina

In this article, based on my doctoral research, I discuss the appropriation of religious elements from South America by Finnish ‘mystical tourists’. The plant medicine ceremonies are approached as spiritual commodities. Imagining local beliefs and practices as ancient cultural heritage, essentially...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tero Heinonen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Donner Institute 2023-12-01
Series:Approaching Religion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/131084
_version_ 1797387030970236928
author Tero Heinonen
author_facet Tero Heinonen
author_sort Tero Heinonen
collection DOAJ
description In this article, based on my doctoral research, I discuss the appropriation of religious elements from South America by Finnish ‘mystical tourists’. The plant medicine ceremonies are approached as spiritual commodities. Imagining local beliefs and practices as ancient cultural heritage, essentially and authentically spiritual, Finnish mystical tourists adapt these practices for their own therapeutic uses. They are accompanied by singing prayers to various plant spirits. Among the appropriated elements are the ceremonial ingestion of imported organic cacao, sacred tobacco and ayahuasca, as well as praying by singing to plant spirits understood in terms of animism. My findings indicate how the appropriated cultural elements are given therapeutic functions in collectively created musical and ritual spaces for individual well-being. I analyse appropriation in categories introduced by Richard A. Rogers (2006) and understand the ceremonies to provide ‘mystical tourists’ with a role as a racially privileged group over the subaltern indigenous peoples through processes of commercialization, where reimagined cultural elements become spiritual commodities to be bought and sold in commercial networks on the basis of access. I argue that the associated forms of cultural appropriation align with the individualistic spiritual well-being needs of the Finnish participants and are related to the theme of ‘sacralization of the self’.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T22:17:57Z
format Article
id doaj.art-12f724da66234f70adf768c53848ea02
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1799-3121
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T22:17:57Z
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher Donner Institute
record_format Article
series Approaching Religion
spelling doaj.art-12f724da66234f70adf768c53848ea022023-12-18T16:21:32ZengDonner InstituteApproaching Religion1799-31212023-12-0113310.30664/ar.131084Facilitating pura medicinaTero Heinonen0Åbo Akademi UniversityIn this article, based on my doctoral research, I discuss the appropriation of religious elements from South America by Finnish ‘mystical tourists’. The plant medicine ceremonies are approached as spiritual commodities. Imagining local beliefs and practices as ancient cultural heritage, essentially and authentically spiritual, Finnish mystical tourists adapt these practices for their own therapeutic uses. They are accompanied by singing prayers to various plant spirits. Among the appropriated elements are the ceremonial ingestion of imported organic cacao, sacred tobacco and ayahuasca, as well as praying by singing to plant spirits understood in terms of animism. My findings indicate how the appropriated cultural elements are given therapeutic functions in collectively created musical and ritual spaces for individual well-being. I analyse appropriation in categories introduced by Richard A. Rogers (2006) and understand the ceremonies to provide ‘mystical tourists’ with a role as a racially privileged group over the subaltern indigenous peoples through processes of commercialization, where reimagined cultural elements become spiritual commodities to be bought and sold in commercial networks on the basis of access. I argue that the associated forms of cultural appropriation align with the individualistic spiritual well-being needs of the Finnish participants and are related to the theme of ‘sacralization of the self’. https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/131084Contemporary spiritualityReligious appropriationShamanic tourism
spellingShingle Tero Heinonen
Facilitating pura medicina
Approaching Religion
Contemporary spirituality
Religious appropriation
Shamanic tourism
title Facilitating pura medicina
title_full Facilitating pura medicina
title_fullStr Facilitating pura medicina
title_full_unstemmed Facilitating pura medicina
title_short Facilitating pura medicina
title_sort facilitating pura medicina
topic Contemporary spirituality
Religious appropriation
Shamanic tourism
url https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/131084
work_keys_str_mv AT teroheinonen facilitatingpuramedicina