| The Use of Psychoactive Plants Among the Hupda-Maku |
| Written by Pedro; translated to English by Joshua Callaghan and Cynthia Simss | |
| Tuesday, 12 August 1997 | |
|
This paper is the fruit of a twenty day stay in four different villages of the Hupda population, known as the Maku, located in the region between the Japu and Uaupés rivers in the northwest Amazon.
Recently settled as a result of contact with occidental society and the influence of Salesian missionaries (a Catholic order), the Hupda have small, incipient fields, but they are skilled hunters and specialists in the collection and cultivation of psychoactive and poisonous plants used not only by them but also by other neighboring groups with whom they interact. It is about these plants that we will speak, specifically, those related to Banisteriopsis caapi in the Hupda cosmology. I will begin speaking about the Erythroxylum coca var. ipadu known by the Hupda as Patu. There are three distinct types: Ipadu de Peixe, Ipadu de Pau, and Ipadu Abiú, which are valued according to flavor, Abiú being the most flavorful. In spite of being the same plant, Banisteriopsis caapi, the Hupda distinguish seven different types of Carpi in accord with the maturity of the plant, the part utilized and the general appearance of the vine: if it is smooth, if it has knots, if it is twisted, etc.
Each one has its own specific use; there is one which is drunk to learn, another to give knowledge, another is a stimulant to be taken before work or war, one is used to relate and listen to the tribal myths, and finally, those which are used for dancing at parties and for healing. To ingest Carpi with the goal of having good visions it is necessary to observe certain procedures. For some days before you cannot eat anything roasted, salted, warm, or food prepared by a menstruating woman. It is necessary to clean the body repeatedly by ingesting an emetic drink, as well as maintaining sexual abstinence. In keeping with the use for which the vine is being prepared, the plant additives are changed, however, generally the preparation is similar. The vine is scraped and the bark, the only part utilized, is put in a pan of water to cook while the other desired plants are added. As soon as the liquid boils the pan is removed from the fire and left to sit in the sun. The Hupda believe that the sun has an active role in the birth of the Carpi, boiling and cooking it. Both the preparation and the ingestion of Carpi are realized far from the indiscrete eyes of women and children, otherwise the drinker may get sick. The vine is cultivated and harvested by the shaman, or by a dancer, who always must be the oldest of his sibling group. The oldest brother brings the vine, tied in a bundle, and drops it at the entrance to the maloca (communal hut) and sings and dances around the vine before its preparation. In the Dabacouri celebration (ritual exchange between siblings and/or village), the drink is ingested by the dancers so that they will lose their shame, chanting and dancing to meet the expectations of the village. The songs, in these cases, have as their objective the fertility and growth of animals and fruits. When the effects of Carpi start to be felt, the Hupda encourage each other by saying: Its started, we must be strong, we must be men, and eventually they discuss the visions they are having. In these situations, the Carpi is used not as an end in itself, but as a tool, a necessary aid to the harmony of the song and the dance. Huamp Carpi on the other hand, used by the shaman to heal, is drunk for its capacity to show sickness and its causes. Under the effects of Huamp Carpi the shaman sees illness in the form of a venomous substance foreign to the patient, and also who has sent the illness. The shaman then sucks the back of the left hand of the patient, taking away his/her evil, meaning the cause of the illness, an invisible poison which the shaman then spits away. The illness, however, cant be left there alone where it could contaminate someone else passing by. The Shaman then takes the illness in his hand, as if it were solid, and puts it in a magical invisible bag which is possessed by the shaman. To drink Carpi is also thought of as a preventative medicine, turning the blood of the drinker bitter, thus making him immune to any external aggression. During the healing ceremonies, a specific song is sung which lists different flowers from which water comes to extinguish the fire which represents illness. Those who want to be good hunters also drink this kind of Carpi which will show where to find game and how not to be perceived by them. Therefore, the Carpi plays an important role in Hupda society being the principal medicine and also the primary conduit for all tribal knowledge which is acquired directly through its use or through the oral transmission of the elders under its effects in specific ceremonies with this goal. To the Carpi are added various plants such as tobacco, whose leaves are mixed into the drink and its smoke blown above the liquid to avoid any evil influence, as well as other plants depending on the use intended. Among the traditional additive plants, we also find Diplopterys cabrerana and Psychotria viridis. The Hupda also use the Vismia guienensis, in Hupda Há Routen. It is dried, pulverized, and added to the Carpi for dance during boiling. Nampiá, a species of the genus Spathiphyllum of the Araceae family, serves both for the Carpi for dance and the shaman's Carpi. It is believed that this plant offers particularly bright visions, being even stronger than Carpi. The men rub their bodies with its leaves to be scented as a spell to conquer women. The Hupda regard both plants, Há Routen and Nampiá, as psychoactives, but I am not familiar with any conclusive phytochemical studies on these species. So we have seen how the use of psychoactive plants is important to the Hupda, reinforcing their social links and their distinctive beliefs; representing a factor of social cohesion, of transmission and reproduction of the tribal wisdom, but being restricted to the male sphere of the society.
|