My Tryst With Healers in the Himalayas (Satis Shroff)
My Tryst With Healers in the Himalayas (Satis Shroff)
It’s not easy to
meet a shaman,
Unless you know
someone who does.
Drove in a taxi
to Tibet Road,
Then to the
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi Marg,
And ended in
Chaangaon,
In the Gangtok
suburb.
The bongthing I
met,
Had grown old
and sick.
He showed me his
cardiac capsules and pills,
On the palm of
his big hand.
He was grateful
that his daughter looked after him.
He advised I
should go to another,
A bongthing in
the neighbourhood.
A Bhutia woman
was selling sausages and sweets.
The fat sausages
hung on strings from the ceiling.
Ah, it’s so good
to hear Nepali being spoken,
Where ever you
go in Sikkim.
I asked myself
whether I was in Nepal?
Sikkim was once
Nepali,
Now it belongs
to West Bengal.
The Bengalis
speak of ‘Amar shonar Bongal,
And in the same
breath ‘Amar Konchonjonga!’
When they come
to Darjeeling during the tourist season.
The Sikkimese
Kanchanzonga is controlled from Delhi,
And enjoys
privileges that Darjeeling can only dream of.
That was the
price of democratization of the Kingdom of Sikkim.
The Chogyal of
Sikkim and his love and hope
Were deprived of
their Chogyaldom by a fierce Indira Gandhi,
Who wanted no
nonsense in the sensitive Himalayas.
Some Gorkhalis
from Gorkhaland dream of being united with Sikkim,
Rather than
Kolkotta.
Like the Mun and
Bongthing,
The Lepcha
yukmuns (lamas) are facing extinction.
The religion of
the Lepchas of Sikkim resembles
The pre-Buddhist
faith of Tibet called Pon (Bon-religion).
Tibetan Buddhism
dates back to the 8th century.
The architect of
tantric Buddhism Padmasambhava
Is known to have
sojourned in Sikkim,
On his way to Tibet.
Red hat
Buddhists fled to Sikkim,
And speedily
converted the Lepchas.
Most Buddhist
Lepchas today practice animism.
The service of
the muns are needed by the Lepchas
At birth,
marriage and during death ceremonies.
The Lepcha
language is called Rongring.
A German named
Mainwaring went Native,
Lived with the
Lepchas and studied their language.
He came to a
conclusion that Lepcha
Was the oldest
language extant.
Belief and faith
is perpetuated by a chain of rituals.
‘Religion is
belief in spiritual being’ said Taylor back in 1871.
Mathew Arnold
came up with:
‘Religion is
morality touched with emotion.’
If religion is a
superstructure it is man
Who doesn’t
realize the complexities of the cosmos.
The Lepchas
believe in spiritual being,
A religion which
believes in the continuation of the soul,
Even after the
death of the carcass called the body.
You find the
soul in trees, rocks, rivers, hills and animals.
Where there is
good there is evil.
Evil spirits
abound in rocks, lakes, mountains
Are constantly
out to do mischief.
You are obliged
to pray to them for they hurt us,
If we don’t.
These malevolent
spirits are called Moong.
The Lepchas
believe in one supreme God
And other Gods
and Goddesses.
Some spirits are
good (sukyo rum) and bad (aami-moong).
The evil spirit
aami-moong gets ferocious
When someone
trespasses a garden or orchard.
The evil spirit
can paralyse someone.
The bongthing
took his time for a séance.
His pretty wife
organized the ritual objects.
A metal plate,
red rice corns, flowers.
Then he began to
pray and recite.
It was a long
monologue,
With all the
Gods and goddesses and Spirits,
Beckoning,
greeting, pleading and cajoling them,
To heal the
patient. The shaman’s monologue was carried out
In a falsetto
voice at high speed,
Interspersed
with hyperventilation
That involved
one deep inspiration
And three forced
expirations,
At the end of
each recitation.
I greet you the Gods of the Five Treasures of the
Snow,
I greet Shiva and Parvati who live in the Snow.
I greet Hanuman and Ganesh.
I greet the Gods from the snow capped peaks,
The spirits from the plunging waterfalls,
The spirits at the confluence of the Rangit and Teesta rivers.
I beckon the Gods and Spirits of the Lachenpas,
God Kirateswary and the twelve Jyotilingas
And Sai Baba.
Throughout the
ritual the rice corns were moved in small clusters,
Gathered and
dropped gently over the effigy of the main God in question,
Which was
symbolised by a metallic vase,
Filled with
flowers.
The shaman
touched the patient’s head
With a crude
broom made of leaves,
To bless the
head and shoulders of the patient.
At the end of
the séance the bongthing said:
‘There is
nothing wrong with this patient.
A naag is
running after him,
So I’ll have to
do a puja.
Thereafter,
he’ll get a charm with a mantra,
Which he’ll have
to carry around his neck
For the rest of
his life.
The patient
thanked him profusely
And the patient
and his sisters left for Gangtok
In their Bolero
jeep.
Glossary:
Jyoti: light
Lingas: lingam,
a well-polished sedimentary stone symbolizing Shiva.
bongthing:
Lepcha shaman, traditional healer
Naag: serpent
Puja: ritual
ceremony
I went to Sikkim recently to meet some traditional healers (shamans, dhamis, jhakris and Lepcha bongthings) and it was very interesting to meet them.
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