Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
__________________________________________________________________________
The Sacred Mushroom Teonanacatl
excerpts
from "LSD: My Problem Child" - Albert Hofmann
Late in 1956 a notice in the daily paper caught my interest.
Among some Indians in southern Mexico, American researchers
had discovered mushrooms that were eaten in religious ceremonies
and that produced an inebriated condition accompanied by
hallucinations.
Since, outside of the mescaline cactus found also in Mexico,
no other drug was known at the time that, like LSD, produced
hallucinations, I would have liked to establish contact
with these researchers, in order to learn details about
these hallucinogenic mushrooms. But there were no names
and addresses in the short newspaper article, so that it
was impossible to get further information. Nevertheless,
the mysterious mushrooms, whose chemical investigation would
be a tempting problem, stayed in my thoughts from then on.
As
it later turned out, LSD was the reason that these mushrooms
found their way into my laboratory, with out my assistance,
at the beginning of the following year.
Through
the mediation of Dr. Yves Dunant, at the time director of
the Paris branch of Sandoz, an inquiry came to the pharmaceutical
research management in Basel from Professor Roger Heim,
director of the Laboratoire de Cryptogamie of the Museum
National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, asking whether we
were interested in carrying out the chemical investigation
of the Mexican hallucinogenic mushrooms. With great joy
I declared myself ready to begin this work in my department,
in the laboratories for natural product research. That was
to be my link to the exciting investigations of the Mexican
sacred mushrooms, which were already broadly advanced in
the ethnomycological and botanical aspects.
For
a long time the existence of these magic mushrooms had remained
an enigma. The history of their rediscovery is presented
at first hand in the magnificent two-volume standard work
of ethnomycology, Mushrooms, Russia and History (Pantheon
Books, New York, 1957), for the authors, the American researchers
Valentina Pavlovna Wasson and her husband, R. Gordon Wasson,
played a decisive role in this rediscovery. The following
descriptions of the fascinating history of these mushrooms
are taken from the Wassons' book.
The
first written evidence of the use of inebriating mushrooms
on festival occasions, or in the course of religious ceremonies
and magically oriented healing practices, is found among
the Spanish chroniclers and naturalists of the sixteenth
century, who entered the country soon after the conquest
of Mexico by Hernan Cortes. The most important of these
witnesses is the Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagun,
who mentions the magic mushrooms and describes their effects
and their use in several passages of his famous historical
work, Historia General de tas Cosas de Nueva Espana, written
between the years 1529 and 1590. Thus he describes, for
example, how merchants celebrated the return home from a
successful business trip with a mushroom party:
Coming at the very first, at the time of feasting, they
ate mushrooms when, as they said, it was the hour of the
blowing of the flutes. Not yet did they partake of food;
they drank only chocolate during the night. And they ate
mushrooms with honey. When already the mushrooms were taking
effect, there was dancing, there was weeping.... Some saw
in a vision that they would die in war. Some saw in a vision
that they would be devoured by wild beasts.... Some saw
in a vision that they would become rich, wealthy. Some saw
in a vision that they would buy slaves, would become slave
owners. Some saw in a vision that they would commit adultery
[and so] would have their heads bashed in, would be stoned
to death.... Some saw in a vision that they would perish
in the water. Some saw in a vision that they would pass
to tranquility in death. Some saw in avision that they would
fall from the housetop, tumble to their death. . . . All
such things they saw.... And when [the effects of] the mushroom
ceased, they conversed with one another, spoke of what they
had seen in the vision.
In
a publication from the same period, Diego Duran, a Dominican
friar, reported that inebriating mushrooms were eaten at
the great festivity on the occasion of the accession to
the throne of Moctezuma II, the famed emperor of the Aztecs,
in the year 1502. A passage in the seventeenth-century chronicle
of Don Jacinto de la Serna refers to the use of these mushrooms
in a religious framework:
And
what happened was that there had come to [the village] an
Indian . . . and his name was Juan Chichiton . . . and he
had brought the red-colored mushrooms that are gathered
in the uplands, and with them he had committed a great idolatry....
In the house where everyone had gathered on the occasion
of a saint's feast . . . the teponastli [an Aztec percussion
instrument] was playing and singing was going on the whole
night through. After most of the night had passed, Juan
Chichiton, who was the priest for that solumn rite, to all
of those present at the flesta gave the mushrooms to eat,
after the manner of Communion, and gave them pulque to drink.
. . so that they all went out of their heads, a shame it
was to see.
In
Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, these mushrooms were
described as teonanactl, which can be translated as "sacred
mushroom."
There are indications that ceremonial use of such mushrooms
reaches far back into pre-Columbian times. So-called mushroom
stones have been found in El Salvador, Guatemala, and the
contiguous mountainous districts of Mexico. These are stone
sculptures in the form of pileate mushroom, on whose stem
the face or the form of a god or an animallike demon is
carved. Most are about 30 cm high. The oldest examples,
according to archaeologists, date back to before 500 B.C.
R.
G. Wasson argues, quite convincingly, that there is a connection
between these mushroom stones and teonanacatl. If true,
this means that the mushroom cult, the magico-medicinal
and religious-ceremonial use of the magic mushrooms, is
more than two thousand years old.
To
the Christian missionaries, the inebriating, vision- and
hallucination-producing effects of these mushrooms seemed
to be Devil's work. They therefore tried, with all the means
in their power, to extirpate their use. But they succeeded
only partially, for the Indians have continued secretly
down to our time to utilize the mushroom teonanacatl, which
was sacred to them.
Strange
to say, the reports in the old chronicles about the use
of magic mushrooms remained unnoticed during the following
centuries, probably because they were considered products
of the imagination of a superstitious age.
All
traces of the existence of "sacred mushrooms"
were in danger of becoming obliterated once and for all,
when, in 1915, an Americanbotanist of repute, Dr. W. E.
Safford, in an address before the Botanical Society in Washington
and in a scientific publication, advanced the thesis that
no such thing as magic mushrooms had ever existed at all:
the Spanish chroniclers had taken the mescaline cactus for
a mushroom! Even if false, this proposition of Safford's
served nevertheless to direct the attention of the scientific
world to the riddle of the mysterious mushrooms.
It
was the Mexican physician Dr. Blas Pablo Reko who first
openly disagreed with Safford's interpretation and who found
evidence that mushrooms were still employed in medicinal-religious
ceremonies even in our time, in remote districts of the
southern mountains of Mexico. But not until the years 19338
did the anthropologist Robert J. Weitlaner and Dr. Richard
Evans Schultes, a botanist from Harvard University, find
actual mushrooms in that region, which were used there for
this ceremonial purpose; and only in 1938 could a group
of young American anthropologists, under the direction of
Jean Bassett Johnson, attend a secret nocturnal mushroom
ceremony for the first time. This was in Huautla de Jimenez,
the capital of the Mazatec country, in the State of Oaxaca.
But these researchers were only spectators, they were not
permitted to partake of the mushrooms. Johnson reported
on the experience in a Swedish journal (Ethnotogical Studies
9, 1939).
Then
exploration of the magic mushrooms was interrupted. World
War II broke out. Schultes, at the behest of the American
government, had to occupy himself with rubber production
in the Amazon territory, and Johnson was killed after the
Allied landing in North Africa.
It
was the American researchers, the married couple Dr. Valentina
Pavlovna Wasson and her husband, R. Gordon Wasson, who again
took up the problem from the ethnographic aspect. R. G.
Wasson was a banker, vice-president of the J. P. Morgan
Co. in New York. His wife, who died in 1958, was a pediatrician.
The Wassons began their work in 1953, in the Mazatec village
Huautla de Jimenez, where fifteen years earlier J. B. Johnson
and others had established the continued existence of the
ancient Indian mushroom cult. They received especially valuable
information from an American missionary who had been active
there for many years, Eunice V. Pike, member of the Wycliffe
Bible Translators. Thanks to her knowledge of the native
language and her ministerial association with the inhabitants,
Pike had information about the significance of the magic
mushrooms that nobody else possessed. During several lengthy
sojourns in Huautla and environs, the Wassons were able
to study the present use of the mushrooms in detail and
compare it with the descriptions in the old chronicles.
This showed that the belief in the "sacred mushrooms"
was still prevalent in that region. However, the Indians
kept their beliefs a secret from strangers. It took great
tact and skill, therefore, to gain the confidence of the
indigenous population and to receive insight into this secret
domain.
In
the modern form of the mushroom cult, the old religious
ideas and customs are mingled with Christian ideas and Christian
terminology. Thus the mushrooms are often spoken of as the
blood of Christ, because they will grow only where a drop
of Christ's blood has fallen on the earth. According to
another notion, the mushrooms sprout where a drop of saliva
from Christ's mouth has moistened the ground, and it is
thcrefore Jesus Christ himself who speaks through the mushrooms.
The
mushroom ceremony follows the form of a consultation. The
seeker of advice or a sick person or his or her family questions
a "wise man" or a "wise woman," asabio
orsabia, also named curandero orcurandera, in return for
a modest payment. Curandero can best be translated into
English as "healing priest," for his function
is that of a physician as well as that of a priest, both
being found only rarely in these remote regions. In the
Mazatec language the healing priest is called co-ta-ci-ne,
which means "one who knows." He eats the mushroom
in the framework of a ceremony that always takes place at
night. The other persons present at the ceremony may sometimes
receive mushrooms as well, yet a much greater dose always
goes to the curandero. The performance is executed with
the accompaniment of prayers and entreaties, while the mushrooms
are incensed briefly over a basin, in which copal (an incense-like
resin) is burned. In complete darkness, at times by candlelight,
while the others present lie quietly on their straw mats,
the curandero, kneeling or sitting, prays and sings before
a type of altar bearing a crucifix, an image of a saint,
or some other object of worship. Under the influence of
the sacred mushrooms, the curandero counsels in a visionary
state, in which even the inactive observers more or less
participate. In the monotonous song of the curandero, the
mushroom teonanacatl gives its answers to the questions
posed. It says whether the diseased person will live or
die, which herbs will effect the cure; it reveals who has
killed a specific person, or who has stolen the horse; or
it makes known how a distant relative fares, and so forth.
The
mushroom ceremony not only has the function of a consulation
of the type described, for the Indians it also has a meaning
in many respects similar to the Holy Communion for the believing
Christian. From many utterances of the natives it could
be inferred that they believe that God has given the Indians
the sacred mushroom because they are poor and possess no
doctors and medicines; and also, because they cannot read,
in particular the Bible, God can therefore speak directly
to them through the mushroom. The missionary Eunice V. Pike
even alluded to the difficulties that result from explaining
the Christian message, the written word, to a people who
believe they possess a means - the sacred mushrooms of course
- to make God's will known to them in a direct, clear manner:
yes, the mushrooms permit them to see into heaven and to
establish communication with God himself.
The
Indians' reverence for the sacred mushrooms is also evident
in their belief that they can be eaten only by a "clean"
person. "Clean" here means ceremonially clean,
and that term among other things includes sexual abstinence
at least four days before and after ingestion of the mushrooms.
Certain rules must also be observed in gathering the mushrooms.
With nonobservance of these commandments, the mushrooms
can make the person who eats it insane, or can even kill.
The
Wassons had undertaken their first expedition to the Mazatec
country in 1953, but not until 1955 did they succeed in
overcoming the shyness and reserve of the Mazatec friends
they had managed to make, to the point of being admitted
as active participants in a mushroom ceremony. R. Gordon
Wasson and his companion, the photographer Allan Richardson,
were given sacred mushrooms to eat at the end of June 1955,
on the occasion of a nocturnal mushroom ceremony. They thereby
became in all likelihood the first outsiders, the first
whites, ever permitted to take teonanacatl.
In
the second volume of Mushrooms, Russia and History, in enraptured
words, Wasson describes how the mushroom seized possession
of him completely, although he had tried to struggle against
its effects, in order to be able to remain an objective
observer. First he saw geometric, colored patterns, which
then took on architectural characteristics. Next followed
visions of splendid colonnades, palaces of supernatural
harmony and magnificence embellished with precious gems,
triumphal cars drawn by fabulous creatures as they are known
only from mythology, and landscapes of fabulous luster.
Detached from the body, the spirit soared timelessly in
a realm of fantasy among images of a higher reality and
deeper meaning than those of the ordinary, everyday world.
The essence of life, the ineffable, seemed to be on the
verge of being unlocked, but the ultimate door failed to
open.
This
experience was the final proof, for Wasson, that the magical
powers attributed to the mushrooms actually existed and
were not merely superstition.
In
order to introduce the mushrooms to scientific research,
Wasson had earlier established an association with mycologist
Professor Roger Heim of Paris. Accompanying the Wassons
on further expeditions into the Mazatec country, Heim conducted
the botanical identification of the sacred mushrooms. He
showed that they were gilled mushrooms from the family Strophariaceae,
about a dozen different species not previously described
scientifically, the greatest part belonging to the genus
Psilocybe. Professor Heim also succeeded in cultivating
some of the species in the laboratory. The mushroom Psilocybe
mexicana turned out to be especially suitable for artificial
cultivation.
Chemical
investigations ran parallel with these botanical studies
on the magic mushrooms, with the goal of extracting the
hallucinogenically active principle from the mushroom material
and preparing it in chemically pure form. Such investigations
were carried out at Professor Heim's instigation in the
chemicaI laboratory of the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle
in Paris, and work teams were occupied with this problem
in the United States in the research laboratories of two
large pharmaceutical companies: Merck, and Smith, Kline
and French. The American laboratories had obtained some
of the mushrooms from R. G. Wasson and had gathered others
themselves in the Sierra Mazateca.
As
the chemical investigations in Paris and in the United States
turned out to be ineffectual, Professor Heim addressed this
matter to our firm, as mentioned at the beginning of this
chapter, because he felt that our experimental experience
with LSD, related to the magic mushrooms by similar activity,
could be of use in the isolation attempts. Thus it was LSD
that showed teonanacatl the way into our laboratory.
As
director of the department of natural products of the Sandoz
pharmaceutical-chemical research laboratories at that time,
I wanted to assign-the investigation of the magic mushrooms
to one of my coworkers. However, nobody showed much eagerness
to take on this problem because it was known that LSD and
everything connected with it were scarcely popular subjects
to the top management. Because the enthusiasm necessary
for successful endeavors cannot be commanded, and because
the enthusiasm was already present in me as far as this
problem was concerned, I decided to conduct the investigation
myself.
Some
100 g of dried mushrooms of the species Psilocybe mexicana,
cultivated by Professor Heim in the laboratory, were available
for the beginning of the chemical analysis. My laboratory
assistant, Hans Tscherter, who during our decade-long collaboration,
had developed into a very capable helper, completely familiar
with my manner of work, aided me in the extraction and isolation
attempts. Since there were no clues at all concerning the
chemical properties of the active principle we sought, the
isolation attempts had to be conducted on the basis of the
effects of the extract fractions. But none of the various
extracts showed an unequivocal effect, either in the mouse
or the dog, which could have pointed to the presence of
hallucinogenic principles. It therefore became doubtful
whether the mushrooms cultivated and dried in Paris were
still active at all. That could only be determined by experimenting
with this mushroom material on a human being. As in the
case of LSD, I made this fundamental experiment myself,
since it is not appropriate for researchers to ask anyone
else to perform self-experiments that they require for their
own investigations, especially if they entail, as in this
case, a certain risk.
In
this experiment I ate 32 dried specimens of Psilocybe mexicana,
which together weighed 2.4 g. This amount corresponded to
an average dose, according to the reports of Wasson and
Heim, as it is used by the curanderos. The mushrooms displayed
a strong psychic effect, as the following extract from the
report on that experiment shows:
Thirty minutes after my taking the mushrooms, the exterior
world began to undergo a strange transformation. Everything
assumed a Mexican character. As I was perfectly well aware
that my knowledge of the Mexican origin of the mushroom
would lead me to imagine only Mexican scenery, I tried deliberately
to look on my environment as I knew it normally. But all
voluntary efforts to look at things in their customary forms
and colors proved ineffective. Whether my eyes were closed
or open, I saw only Mexican motifs and colors. When the
doctor supervising the experiment bent over me to check
my blood pressure, he was transformed into an Aztec priest
and I would not have been astonished if he had drawn an
obsidian knife. In spite of the seriousness of the situation,
it amused me to see how the Germanic face of my colleague
had acquired a purely Indian expression. At the peak of
the intoxication, about 1 1/2 hours after ingestion of the
mushrooms, the rush of interior pictures, mostly abstract
motifs rapidly changing in shape and color, reached such
an alarming degree that I feared that I would be torn into
this whirlpool of form and color and would dissolve. After
about six hours the dream came to an end. Subjectively,
I had no idea how long this condition had lasted. I felt
my return to everyday reality to be a happy return from
a strange, fantastic but quite real world to an old and
familiar home.
This
self-experiment showed once again that human beings react
much more sensitively than animals to psychoactive substances.
We had already reached the same conclusion in experimenting
with LSD on animals, as described in an earlier chapter
of this book. It was not inactivity of the mushroom material,
but rather the deficient reaction capability of the research
animals vis-a-vis such a type of active principle, that
explained why our extracts had appeared inactive in the
mouse and dog.
Because the assay on human subjects was the only test at
our disposal for the detection of the active extract fractions,
we had no other choice than to perform the testing on ourselves
if we wanted to carry on the work and bring it to a successful
conclusion. In the self-experiment just described, a strong
reaction lasting several hours was produced by 2.4 g dried
mushrooms. Therefore, in the sequel we used samples corresponding
to only one-third of this amount, namely 0.8 g dried mushrooms.
If these samples contained the active principle, they would
only provoke a mild effect that impaired the ability to
work for a short time, but this effect would still be so
distinct that the inactive fractions and those containing
the active principle could unequivocally be differentiated
from one another. Several coworkers and colleagues volunteered
as guinea pigs for this series of tests.
Psilocybin and Psilocin
With the help of this reliable test on human subjects, the
active principle could be isolated, concentrated, and transformed
into a chemically pure state by means of the newest separation
methods. Two new substances, which I named psilocybin and
psilocin, were thereby obtained in the form of colorless
crystals .
These results were published in March 1958 in the journal
Experientia, in collaboration with Professor Heim and with
my colleagues Dr. A. Brack and Dr. H. Kobel, who had provided
greater quantities of mushroom material for these investigations
after they had essentially improved the laboratory cultivation
of the mushrooms.
Some
of my coworkers at the time - Drs. A. J. Frey, H. Ott, T.
Petrzilka, and F. Troxler - then participated in the next
steps of these investigations, the determination of the
chemical structure of psilocybin and psilocin and the subsequent
synthesis of these compounds, the results of which were
published in the November 1958 issue of Experientia. The
chemical structures of these mushroom factors deserve special
attention in several respects. Psilocybin and psilocin belong,
like LSD, to the indole compounds, the biologically important
class of substances found in the plant and animal kingdoms.
Particular chemical features common to both the mushroom
substances and LSD show that psilocybin and psilocin are
closely related to LSD, not only with regard to psychic
effects but also to their chemical structures. Psilocybin
is the phosphoric acid ester of psilocin and, as such, is
the first and hitherto only phosphoric-acid-containing indole
compound discovered in nature. The phosphoric acid residue
does not contribute to the activity, for the phosphoric-acid-free
psilocin is just as active as psilocybin, but it makes the
molecule more stable. While psilocin is readily decomposed
by the oxygen in air, psilocybin is a stable substance.
Psilocybin
and psilocin possess a chemical structure very similar to
the brain factor serotonin. As was already mentioned in
the chapter on animal experiments and biological research,
serotonin plays an important role in the chemistry of brain
functions. The two mushroom factors, like LSD, block the
effects of serotonin in pharmacological experiments on different
organs. Other pharmacological properties of psilocybin and
psilocin are also similar to those of LSD. The main difference
consists in the quantitative activity, in animal as well
as human experimentation. The average active dose of psilocybin
or psilocin in human beings amounts to 10 mg (0.01 g); accordingly,
these two substances are more than 100 times less active
than LSD, of which 0.1 mg constitutes a strong dose. Moreover,
the effects of the mushroom factors last only four to six
hours, much shorter than the effects of LSD (eight to twelve
hours).
The
total synthesis of psilocybin and psilocin, without the
aid of the mushrooms, could be developed into a technical
process, which would allow these substances to be produced
on a large scale. Synthetic production is more rational
and cheaper than extraction from the mushrooms.
Thus
with the isolation and synthesis of the active principles,
the demystification of the magic mushrooms was accomplished.
The compounds whose wondrous effects led the Indians to
believe for millennia that a god was residing in the mushrooms
had their chemical structures elucidated and could be produced
synthetically in flasks.
Just
what progress in scientific knowledge was accomplished by
natural products research in this case? Essentially, when
all is said and done, we can only say that the mystery of
the wondrous effects of teonanacatl was reduced to the mystery
of the effects of two crystalline substances - since these
effects cannot be explained by science either, but can only
be describe.
I have also mentioned the occurrence of Mexican motifs in
psilocybin inebriation during my first selfexperiment with
dried Psilocybe mexicana mushrooms, as was described in
the section on the chemical investigation of these mushrooms.
The same phenomenon has also struck R. Gordon Wasson. Proceeding
from such observations, he has advanced the conjecture that
ancient Mexican art could have been influenced by visionary
images, as they appear in mushroom inebriation.
The
"Magic Morning Glory" Ololiuhqui
After we had managed to solve the riddle of the sacred mushroom
teonanacatt in a relatively short time, I also became interested
in the problem of another Mexican magic drug not yet chemically
elucidated, olotiuhqui. Ololiuhqui is the Aztec name for
the seeds of certain climbing plants (Convolvulaceae) that,
like the mescaline cactus peyotl and the teonanacatl mushrooms,
were used in pre-Columbian times by the Aztecs and neighboring
people in religious ceremonies and magical healing practices.
Ololiuhqui is still used even today by certain Indian tribes
like the Zapotec, Chinantec, Mazatec, and Mixtec, who until
a short time ago still led a geniunely isolated existence,
little influenced by Christianity, in the remote mountains
of southern Mexico.
An excellent study of the historical, ethnological, and
botanical aspects of ololiuhqui was published in 1941 by
Richard Evans Schultes, director of the Harvard Botanical
Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It is entitled "A
Contribution to Our Knowledge of Rivea corymbosa, the Narcotic
Ololiuqui of the Aztecs." The following statements
about the history of ololiuhqui derive chiefly from Schultes's
monograph. [Translator's note: As R. Gordon Wasson has pointed
out, "ololiuhqui" is a more precise orthography
than the more popular spelling used by Schultes. See Botanical
Museum Leaflets Harvard University 20: 161-212, 1963.]
The
earliest records about this drug were written by Spanish
chroniclers of the sixteenth century, who also mentioned
peyotl and teonanacatl. Thus the Franciscan friar Bernardino
de Sahagun, in his already cited famous chronicle Historia
General de las Cosas de Nueva Espana, writes about the wondrous
effects of olotiuhqui: "There is an herb, called coatl
xoxouhqui (green snake), which produces seeds that are called
ololiuhqui. These seeds stupefy and deprive one of reason:
they are taken as a potion."
We
obtain further information about these seeds from the physician
Francisco Hernandez, whom Philip II sent to Mexico from
Spain, from 1570 to 1575, in order to study the medicaments
of the natives. In the chapter "On Ololiuhqui"
of his monumental work entitled Rerum Medicarum Novae Hispaniae
Thesaurus seu Plantarum, Animalium Mineralium Mexicanorum
Historia, published in Rome in 1651, he gives a detailed
description and the first illustration of ololiuhqui. An
extract from the Latin text accompanying the illustration
reads in translation: "Ololiuhqui, which others call
coaxihuitl or snake plant, is a climber with thin, green,
heart-shaped leaves.... The flowers are white, fairly large....
The seeds are roundish. . . . When the priests of the Indians
wanted to visit with the gods and obtain information from
them, they ate of this plant in order to become inebriated.
Thousands of fantastic images and demons then appeared to
them...." Despite this comparatively good description,
the botanical identification of ololiuhqui as seeds of Rivea
corymbosa (L.) Hall. f. occasioned many discussions in specialist
circles. Recently preference has been given to the synonym
Turbina corymbosa (L.) Raf.
When
I decided in 1959 to attempt the isolation o the active
principles of ololiuhqui, only a single report on chemical
work with the seeds of Turbina cormbosa was available. It
was the work of the pharmacologist C. G. Santesson of Stockholm,
from the year 1937. Santesson, however, was not successful
in isolating an active substance in pure form.
Contradictory
findings had been published about the activity of theololiuhqui
seeds. The psychiatrist H. Osmond conducted a self-experiment
with the seeds of Turbina corymbosa in 1955. After the ingestion
of 60 to 100 seeds, he entered into a state of apathy and
emptiness, accompanied by enhanced visual sensitivity. After
four hours, there followed a period of relaxation and well-being,
lasting for a longer time. The results of V. J. Kinross-Wright,
published in England in 1958, in which eight voluntary research
subjects, who had taken up to 125 seeds, perceived no effects
at all, contradicted this report.
Through
the mediation of R. Gordon Wasson, I obtained two samples
of ololiuhgui seeds. In his accompanying letter of 6 August
1959 from Mexico City, he wrote of them:
. . . The parcels that I am sending you are the following:
. . .
A small parcel of seeds that I take to be Rivea corymbosa,
otherwise known as ololiuqui well-known narcotic of the
Aztecs, called in Huautla "la semilla de la Virgen."
This parcel, you will find, consists of two little bottles,
which represent two deliveries of seeds made to us in Huautla,
and a larger batch of seeds delivered to us by Francisco
Ortega "Chico," the Zapotec guide, who himself
gathered the seeds from the plants at the Zapotec town of
San Bartolo Yautepec....
The first-named, round, light brown seeds from Huautla proved
in the botanical determination to have been correctly identified
as Rivea (Turbina) corymbosa, while the black, angular seeds
from San Bartolo Yautepec were identified as Ipomoea violacea
L.
While Turbina corymbosa thrives only in tropical or subtropical
climates, one also finds Ipomoea violacea as an ornamental
plant dispersed over the whole earth in the temperate zones.
It is the morning glory that delights the eye in our gardens
in diverse varieties with blue or blue-red striped caiyxes.
The
Zapotec, besides the original ololiuhqui (that is, the seeds
of Turbina corymbosa, which they call badoh), also utilize
badoh negro, the seeds of Ipomoea violacea. T. MacDougall,
who furnished us with a second larger consignment of the
last-named seeds, made this observation.
My
capable laboratory assistant Hans Tscherter, with whom I
had already carried out the isolation of the active principles
of the mushrooms, participated in the chemical investigation
of the ololiuhqui drug. We advanced the working hypothesis
that the active principles of the ololiuhqui seeds could
be representatives of the same class of chemical substances,
the indole compounds, to which LSD, psilocybin, and psilocin
belong. Considering the very great number of other groups
of substances that, like the indoles, were under consideration
as active principles of ololiuhqui, it was indeed extremely
improbable that this assumption would prove true. It could,
however, very easily be tested. The presence of indole compounds,
of course, may simply and rapidly be determined by colorimetric
reactions. Thus even traces of indole substances, with a
certain reagent, give an intense blue-colored solution.
We
had luck with our hypothesis. Extracts of ololiuhqui seeds
with the appropriate reagent gave the blue coloration characteristic
of indole compounds. With the help of this colorimetric
test, we succeeded in a short time in isolating the indole
substances from the seeds and in obtaining them in chemically
pure form. Their identification led to an astonishing result.
What we found appeared at first scarcely believable. Only
after repetition and the most careful scrutiny of the operations
was our suspicion concerning the peculiar findings eliminated:
the active principles from the ancient Mexican magic drug
ololiuhqui proved to be identical with substances that were
already present in my laboratory. They were identical with
alkaloids that had been obtained in the course of the decadeslong
investigations of ergot; partly isolated as such from ergot,
partly obtained through chemical modification of ergot substances.
Lysergic
acid amide, lysergic acid hydroxyethylamide, and alkaloids
closely related to them chemically were established as the
main active principles of olotiuhqui. (See formulae in the
appendix.) Also present was the alkaloid ergobasine, whose
synthesis had constituted the starting point of my investigations
on ergot alkaloids. Lysergic acid amide and lysergic acid
hydroxyethylamide, active principles of ololiuhqui, are
chemically very closely related to lysergic acid diethylamide
(LSD), which even for the nonchemist follows from the names.
Lysergic
acid amide was described for the first time by the English
chemists S. Smith and G. M. Timmis as a cleavage product
of ergot alkaloids, and I had also produced this substance
synthetically in the course of the investigations in which
LSD originated. Certainly, nobody at the time could have
suspected that this cornpound synthesized in the flask would
be discovered twenty years later as a naturally occurring
active principle of an ancient Mexican magic drug.
After
the discovery of the psychic effects of LSD, I had also
tested lysergic acid amide in a selfexperiment and established
that it likewise evoked a dreamlike condition, but only
with about a tenfold to twentyfold greater dose than LSD.
This effect was characterized by a sensation of mental emptiness
and the unreality and meaninglessness of the outer world,
by enhanced sensitivity of hearing, and by a not unpleasant
physical lassitude, which ultimately led to sleep. This
picture of the effects of LA-l 1 1, as lysergic acid amide
was called as a research preparation, was confirmed in a
systematic investigation by the psychiatrist Dr. H. Solms.
When
I presented the findings of our investigations on ololiuhqui
at the Natural Products Congress of the International Union
for Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) in Sydney, Australia,
in the fall of 1960, my colleagues received my talk with
skepticism. In the discussions following my lecture, some
persons voiced the suspicion that the ololiuhqui extracts
could well have been contaminated with traces of lysergic
acid derivatives, with which so much work had been done
in my laboratory.
There
was another reason for the doubt in specialist circles concerning
our findings. The occurrence in higher plants (i.e., in
the morning glory family) of ergot alkaloids that hitherto
had been known only as constituents of lower fungi, contradicted
the experience that certain substances are typical of and
restricted to respective plant families. It is indeed a
very rare exception to find a characteristic group of substances,
in this case the ergot alkaloids, occurring in two divisions
of the plant kingdom broadly separated in evolutionary history.
Our
results were confirmed, however, when different laboratories
in the United States, Germany, and Holland subsequently
verified our investigations on the ololiuhqui seeds. Nevertheless,
the skepticism went so far that some persons even considered
the possibility that the seeds could have been infected
with alkaloid-producing fungi. That suspicion, however,
was ruled out experimentally.
These
studies on the active principles of ololiuhqui seeds, although
they were published only in professional journals, had an
unexpected sequel. We were apprised by two Dutch wholesale
seed companies that their sale of seeds of Ipomoea violacea,
the ornamental blue morning glory, had reached unusual proportions
in recent times. They had heard that the great demand was
connected with investigations of these seeds in our laboratory,
about which they were eager to learn the details. It turned
out that the new demand derived from hippie circles and
other groups interested in hallucinogenic drugs. They believed
they had found in the ololiuhqui seeds a substitute for
LSD, which was becoming less and less accessible.
The
morning glory seed boom, however, lasted only a comparatively
short time, evidently because of the undesirable experiences
that those in the drug world had with this "new"
ancient inebriant. The ololiuhqui seeds, which are taken
crushed with water or another mild beverage, taste very
bad and are difficult for the stomach to digest. Moreover,
the psychic effects of ololiuhqui, in fact, differ from
those of LSD in that the euphoric and the hallucinogenic
components are less pronounced, while a sensation of mental
emptiness, often anxiety and depression, predominates. Furthermore,
weariness and lassitude are hardly desirable effects as
traits in an inebriant. These could all be reasons why the
drug culture's interest in the morning glory seeds has diminished.
Only
a few investigations have considered the question whether
the active principles of ololiuhqui could find a useful
application in medicine. In my opinion, it would be worthwhile
to clarify above all whether the strong narcotic, sedative
effect of certain ololiuhqui constituents, or of chemical
modifications of these, is medicinally useful.
My
studies in the field of hallucinogenic drugs reached a kind
of logical conclusion with the investigations of ololiuhqui.
They now formed a circle, one could almost say a magic circle:
the starting point had been the synthesis of lysergic acid
amides, among them the naturally occurring ergot alkaloid
ergobasin. This led to the synthesis of lysergic acid diethylamide,
LSD. The hallucinogenic properties of LSD were the reason
why the hallucinogenic magic mushroom teonanacatl found
its way into my laboratory. The work with teonanacatt, from
which psilocybin and psilocin were isolated, proceeded to
the investigation of another Mexican magic drug, olotiuhqui,
in which hallucinogenic principles in the form of lysergic
acid amides were again encountered, including ergobasin-with
which the magic circle closed.
In Search of the Magic Plant "Ska Maria Pastora"
in the Mazatec Country
R. Gordon Wasson, with whom I had maintained friendly relations
since the investigations of the Mexican magic mushrooms,
invited my wife and me to take part in an expedition to
Mexico in the fall of 1962. The purpose of the journey was
to search for another Mexican magic plant. Wasson had learned
on his travels in the mountains of southern Mexico that
the expressed juice of the leaves of a plant, which were
called hojas de la Pastora or hojas de Maria Pastora, in
Mazatec ska Pastora or ska Maria Pastora (leaves of the
shepherdess or leaves of Mary the shepherdess), were used
among the Mazatec in medico-religious practices, like the
teonanacatl mushrooms and the ololiuhqui seeds.
The question now was to ascertain from what sort of plant
the "leaves of Mary the shepherdess" derived,
and then to identify this plant botanically. We also hoped,
if at all possible, to gather sufficient plant material
to conduct a chemical investigation on the hallucinogenic
principles it contained.
Ride through the Sierra Mazateca
On 26 September 1962, my wife and I accordingly flew to
Mexico City, where we met Gordon Wasson. He had made all
the necessary preparations for the expedition, so that in
two days we had already set out on the next leg of the journey
to the south. Mrs. Irmgard Weitlaner Johnson, (widow of
Jean B. Johnson, a pioneer of the ethnographic study of
the Mexican magic mushrooms, killed in the Allied landing
in North Africa) had joined us. Her father, Robert J. Weitlaner,
had emigrated to Mexico from Austria and had likewise contributed
toward the rediscovery of the mushroom cult. Mrs. Johnson
worked at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico
City, as an expert on Indian textiles.
After a two-day journey in a spacious Land Rover, which
took us over the plateau, along the snow-capped Popocatepetl,
passing Puebla, down into the Valley of Orizaba with its
magnificent tropical vegetation, then by ferry across the
Popoloapan (Butterfly River), on through the former Aztec
garrison Tuxtepec, we arrived at the starting point of our
expedition, the Mazatec village of Jalapa de Diaz, lying
on a hillside.
There
we were in the midst of the environment and among the people
that we would come to know in the succeeding 2 1/2 weeks.
There
was an uproar upon our arrival in the marketplace, center
of this village widely dispersed in the jungle. Old and
young men, who had been squatting and standing around in
the half-opened bars and shops, pressed suspiciously yet
curiously about our Land Rover; they were mostly barefoot
but all wore a sombrero. Women and girls were nowhere to
be seen. One of the men gave us to understand that we should
follow. him. He led us to the local president, a fat mestizo
who had his office in a one-story house with a corrugated
iron roof. Gordon showed him our credentials from the civil
authorities and from the military governor of Oaxaca, which
explained that we had come here to carry out scientific
investigations. The president, who probably could not read
at all, was visibly impressed by the large-sized documents
equipped with official seals. He had lodgings assigned to
us in a spacious shed, in which we could place our air mattresses
and sleeping bags.
I
looked around the region somewhat. The ruins of a large
church from colonial times, which must have once been very
beautiful, rose almost ghostlike in the direction of an
ascending slope at the side of the village square. Now I
could also see women looking out of their huts, venturing
to examine the strangers. In their long, white dresses,
adorned with red borders, and with their long braids of
blue-black hair, they offered a picturesque sight.
We
were fed by an old Mazatec woman, who directed a young cook
and two helpers. She lived in one of the typical Mazatec
huts. These are simply rectangular structures with thatched
gabled roofs and walls of wooden poles joined together,
windowless, the chinks between the wooden poles offering
sufficient opportunity to look out. In the middle of the
hut, on the stamped clay floor, was an elevated, open fireplace,
built up out of dried clay or made of stones. The smoke
escaped through large openings in the walls under the two
ends of the roof. Bast mats that lay in a corner or along
the walls served as beds. The huts were shared with the
domestic animals, as well as black swine, turkeys, and chickens.
There was roasted chicken to eat, black beans, and also,
in place of bread, tortittas, a type of cornmeal pancake
that is baked on the hot stone slab of the hearth. Beer
and tequila, an Agave liquor, were served.
Next
morning our troop formed for the ride through the Sierra
Mazateca. Mules and guides were engaged from the horsekeeper
of the village. Guadelupe, the Mazatec familiar with the
route, took charge of guiding the lead animal. Gordon, Irmgard,
my wife, and I were stationed on our mules in the middle.
Teodosio and Pedro, called Chico, two young fellows who
trotted along barefoot beside the two mules laden with our
baggage, brought up the rear.
It
took some time to get accustomed to the hard wooden saddles.
Then, however, this mode of locomotion proved to be the
most ideal type of travel that I know of. The mules followed
the leader, single file, at a steady pace. They required
no direction at all by the rider. With surprising dexterity,
they sought out the best spots along the almost impassable,
partly rocky, partly marshy paths, which led through thickets
and streams or onto precipitous slopes. Relieved of all
travel cares, we could devote all our attention to the beauty
of the landscape and the tropical vegetation. There were
tropical forests with gigantic trees overgrown with twining
plants, then again clearings with banana groves or coffee
plantations, between light stands of trees, flowers at the
edge of the path, over which wondrous butterflies bustled
about.... We made our way upstream along the broad riverbed
of Rio Santo Domingo, with brooding heat and steamy air,
now steeply ascending, then again falling. During a short,
violent tropical downpour, the long broad ponchos of oilcloth,
with which Gordon had equipped us, proved quite useful.
Our Indian guides had protected themselves from the cloudburst
with gigantic, heart-shaped leaves that they nimbly chopped
off at the edge of the path. Teodosio and Chico gave the
impression of great, green hay ricks as they ran, covered
with these leaves, beside their mules.
Shortly
before nightfall we arrived at the first settlement, La
Providencia ranch. The patron, Don Joaquin Garcia, the head
of a large family, welcomed us hospitably and full of dignity.
It was impossible to determine how many children, in addition
to the grown-ups and the domestic animals, were present
in the large living room, feebly illuminated by the hearth
fire alone.
Gordon
and I placed our sleeping bags outdoors under the projecting
roof. I awoke in the morning to find a pig grunting over
my face.
After
another day's journey on the backs of our worthy mules,
we arrived at Ayautla, a Mazatec settlement spread across
a hillside. En route, among the shrubbery, I had delighted
in the blue calyxes of the magic morning glory Ipomoea violacea,
the mother plant of the ololiuhqui seeds. It grew wild there,
whereas among us it is only found in the Garden as an ornamental
plant.
We
remained in Ayautla for several days. We had lodging in
the house of Dona Donata Sosa de Garcia. Dona Donata was
in charge of a large family, which included her ailing husband.
In addition, she presided over the coffee cultivation of
the region. The collection center for the freshly picked
coffee beans was in an adjacent building. It was a lovely
picture, the young Indian woman and girls returning home
from the harvest toward evening, in their bright garments
adorned with colored borders, the coffee sacks carried on
their backs by headbands. Dona Donata also managed a type
of grocery store, in which her husband, Don Eduardo, stood
behind the counter.
In
the evening by candlelight, Dona Donata, who besides Mazatec
also spoke Spanish, told us about life in the village; one
tragedy or another had already struck nearly every one of
the seemingly peaceful huts that lay surrounded by this
paradisiacal scenery. A man who had murdered his wife, and
who now sits in prison for life, had lived in the house
next door, which now stood empty. The husband of a daughter
of Dona Donata, after an affair with another woman, was
murdered out of jealousy. The president of Ayautla, a young
bull of a mestizo, to whom we had made our formal visit
in the afternoon, never made the short walk from his hut
to his "office" in the village hall (with the
corrugated iron roof) unless accompanied by two heavily
armed men. Because he exacted illegal taxes, he was afraid
of being shot to death. Since no higher authority sees to
justice in this remote region, people have recourse to self-defense
of this type.
Thanks
to Dona Donata's good connections, we received the first
sample of the sought-after plant, some leaves of hojas de
la Pastora, from an old woman. Since the flowers and roots
were missing, however, this plant material was not suitable
for botanical identification. Our efforts to obtain more
precise information about the habitat of the plant and its
use were also fruitless.
The
continuation of our journey from Ayautla was delayed, as
we had to wait until our boys could again bring back the
mules that they had taken to pasture on the other side of
Rio Santo Domingo, over the river swollen by intense downpours.
After
a two-day ride, on which we had passed the night in the
high mountain village of San MiguelHuautla, we arrived at
Rio Santiago. Here we were joined by Dona Herlinda Martinez
Cid, a teacher from Huautla de Jimenez. She had ridden over
on the invitation of Gordon Wasson, who had known her since
his mushroom expeditions, and was to serve as our Mazatec
and Spanish-speaking interpreter. Moreover, she could help
us, through her numerous relatives scattered in the region,
to pave the way to contacts with curanderos and curanderas
who used the hojas de 1a Pastora in their practice. Because
of our delayed arrival in Rio Santiago, Dona Herlinda, who
was acquainted with the dangers of the region, had been
apprehensive about us, fearing we might have plunged down
a rocky path or been attacked by robbers.
Our
next stop was in San Jose Tenango, a settlement lying deep
in a valley, in the midst of tropical vegetation with orange
and lemon trees and banana plantations. Here again was the
typical village picture: in the center, a marketplace with
a half-ruined church from the colonial period, with two
or three stands, a general store, and shelters for horses
and mules. We found lodging in a corrugated iron barracks,
with the special luxury of a cement floor, on which we could
spread out our sleeping bags.
In
the thick jungle on the mountainside we discovered a s-pring,
whose magnificent fresh water in a natural rocky basin invited
us to bathe. That was an unforgettable pleasure after days
without opportunities to wash properly. In this grotto I
saw a hummingbird for the first time in nature, a blue-green,
metallic, iridescent gem, which whirred over great liana
blossoms.
The
desired contact with persons skilled in medicine came about
thanks to the kindred connections of Dona Herlinda, beginning
with the curandero Don Sabino. But he refused, for some
reason, to receive us in a consultation and to question
the leaves. From an old curandera, a venerable woman in
a strikingly magnificent Mazatec garment, with the lovely
name Natividad Rosa, we received a whole bundle of flowering
specimens of the sought-after plant, but even she could
not be prevailed upon to perform a ceremony with the leaves
for us. Her excuse was that she was too old for the hardship
of the magical trip; she could never cover the long distance
to certain places: a spring where the wise women gather
their powers, a lake on which the sparrows sing, and where
objects get their names. Nor would Natividad Rosa tell us
where she had gathered the leaves. They grew in a very,
very distant forest valley. Wherever she dug up a plant,
she put a coffee bean in the earth as thanks to the gods.
We
now possessed ample plants with flowers and roots, which
were suitable for botanical identification. It was apparently
a representative of the genus Salvia, a relative of the
well-known meadow sage. The plants had blue flowers crowned
with a white dome, which are arranged on a panicle 20 to
30 cm long, whose stem leaked blue.
Several
days later, Natividad Rosa brought us a whole basket of
leaves, for which she was paid fifty pesos. The business
seemed to have been discussed, for two other women brought
us further quantities of leaves. As it was known that the
expressed juice of the leaves is drunk in the ceremony,
and this must therefore contain the active principle, the
fresh leaves were crushed on a stone plate, squeezed out
in a cloth, the juice diluted with alcohol as a preservative,
and decanted into flasks in order to be studied later in
the laboratory in Basel. I was assisted in this work by
an Indian girl, who was accustomed to dealing with the stone
plate, the metate, on which the Indians since ancient times
have ground their corn by hand.
On
the day before the journey was to continue, having given
up all hope of being able to attend a ceremony, we suddenly
made another contact with a curandera, one who was ready
" to serve us ." A confidante of Herlinda's, who
had produced this contact, led us after nightfall along
a secret path to the hut of the curandera, lying solitary
on the mountainside above the settlement. No one from the
village was to see us or discover that we were received
there. It was obviously considered a betrayal of sacred
customs, worthy of punishment, to allow strangers, whites,
to take part in this. That indeed had also been the real
reason why the other healers whom we asked had refused to
admit us to a leaf ceremony. Strange birdcalls from the
darkness accompanied us on the ascent, and the barking of
dogs was heard on all sides. The dogs had detected the strangers.
The curandera Consuela Garcia, a woman of some forty years,
barefoot like all Indian women in this region, timidly admitted
us to her hut and immediately closed up the doorway with
a heavy bar. She bid us lie down on the bast mats on the
stamped mud floor. As Consuela spoke only Mazatec, Herlinda
translated her instructions into Spanish for us. The curandera
lit a candle on a table covered with some images of saints,
along with a variety of rubbish. Then she began to bustle
about busily, but in silence. All at once we heard peculiar
noises and a rummaging in the room-did the hut harbor some
hidden person whose shape and proportions could not be made
out in the candlelight? Visibly disturbed, Consuela searched
the room with the burning candle. It appeared to be merely
rats, however, who were working their mischief. In a bowl
the curandera now kindled copal, an incense-like resin,
which soon filled the whole hut with its aroma. Then the
magic potion was ceremoniously prepared. Consuela inquired
which of us wished to drink of it with her. Gordon announced
himself. Since I was suffering from a severe stomach upset
at the time, I could not join in. My wife substituted for
me. The curandera laid out six pairs of leaves for herself.
She apportioned the same number to Gordon. Anita received
three pairs. Like the mushrooms, the leaves are always dosed
in pairs, a practice that, of course, has a magical significance.
The leaves were crushed with the metate, then squeezed out
through a fine sieve into a cup, and the metate and the
contents of the sieve were rinsed with water. Finally, the
filled cups were incensed over the copal vessel with much
ceremony. Consuela asked Anita and Gordon, before she handed
them their cups, whether they believed in the truth and
the holiness of the ceremony. After they answered in the
affirmative and the very bitter-tasting potion was solemnly
imbibed, the candles were extinguished and, lying in darkness
on the bast masts, we awaited the effects.
After
some twenty minutes Anita whispered to me that she saw striking,
brightly bordered images. Gordon also perceived the effect
of the drug. The voice of the curandera sounded from the
darkness, half speaking, half singing. Herlinda translated:
Did we believe in Christ's blood and the holiness of the
rites? After our "creemos" ("We believe"),
the ceremonial performance continued. The curandera lit
the candles, moved them from the "altar table"
onto the floor, sang and spoke prayers or magic formulas,
placed the candles again under the images of the saints-then
again silence and darkness. Thereupon the true consultation
began. Consuela asked for our request. Gordon inquired after
the health of his daughter, who immediately before his departure
from New York had to be admitted prematurely to the hospital
in expectation of a baby. He received the comforting information
that mother and child were well. Then again came singing
and prayer and manipulations with the candles on the "altar
table" and on the floor, over the smoking basin.
When
the ceremony was at an end, the curandera asked us to rest
yet a while longer in prayer on our bast mats. Suddenly
a thunderstorm burst out. Through the cracks of the beam
walls, lightning flashed into the darkness of the hut, accompanied
by violent thunderbolts, while a tropical downpour raged,
beating on the roof. Consuela voiced apprehension that we
would not be able to leave her house unseen in the darkness.
But the thunderstorm let up before daybreak, and we went
down the mountainside to our corrugated iron barracks, as
noiselessly as possible by the light of flashlights, unnoticed
by the villagers, but dogs again barked from all sides.
Participation
in this ceremony was the climax of our expedition. It brought
confirmation that the hojas de la Pastora were used by the
Indians for the same purpose and in the same ceremonial
milieu as teonanacatl, the sacred mushrooms. Now we also
had authentic plant material, not only sufficient for botanical
identification, but also for the planned chemical analysis.
The inebriated state that Gordon Wasson and my wife had
experienced with the hojas had been shallow and only of
short duration, yet it had exhibited a distinctly hallucinogenic
character.
On
the morning after this eventful night we took leave of San
Jose Tenango. The guide, Guadelupe, and the two fellows
Teodosio and Pedro appeared before our barracks with the
mules at the appointed time. Soon packed up and mounted,
our little troop then moved uphill again, through the fertile
landscape glittering in the sunlight from the night's thunderstorm.
Returning by way of Santiago, toward evening we reached
our last stop in Mazatec country, the capital Huautla de
Jimenez.
From
here on, the return trip to Mexico City was made by automobile.
With a final supper in the Posada Rosaura, at the time the
only inn in Huautla, we took leave of our Indian guides
and of the worthy mules that had carried us so surefootedly
and in such a pleasant way through the Sierra Mazatec. The
Indians were paid of, and Teodosio, who also accepted payment
for his chief in Jalapa de Diaz (where the animals were
to be returned afterward), gave a receipt with his thumbprint
colored by a ballpoint pen. We took up quarters in Dona
Herlinda's house.
A
day later we made our formal visit to the curandera Maria
Sabina, a woman made famous by the Wassons' publications.
It had been in her hut that Gordon Wasson became the first
white man to taste of the sacred mushrooms, in the course
of a nocturnal ceremony in the summer of 1955. Gordon and
Maria Sabina greeted each other cordially, as old friends.
The curandera lived out of the way, on the mountainside
above Huautla. The house in which the historic session with
Gordon Wasson had taken place had been burned, presumably
by angered residents or an envious colleague, because she
had divulged the secret of teonanacatl to strangers. In
the new hut in which we found ourselves, an incredible disorder
prevailed, as had probably also prevailed in the old hut,
in which half-naked children, hens, and pigs bustled about.
The old curandera had an intelligent face, exceptionally
changeable in expression. She was obviously impressed when
it was explained that we had managed to confine the spirit
of the mushrooms in pills, and she at once declared herself
ready to " serve us" with these, that is, to grant
us a consultation. It was agreed that this should take place
the coming night in the house of Dona Herlinda.
In
the course of the day I took a stroll through Huautla de
Jimenez, which led along a main street on the mountainside.
Then I accompanied Gordon on his visit to the Instituto
Nacional Indigenista. This governmental organization had
the duty of studying and helping to solve the problems of
the indigenous population, that is, the Indians. Its leader
told us of the difficulties that the "coffee policy"
had caused in the area at that time. The president of Huautla,
in collaboration with the Instituto Nacional Indigenista
had tried to eliminate middlemen in order to shape the coffee
prices favorably for the producing Indians. His body was
found, mutilated, the previous June.
Our
stroll also took us past the cathedral, from which Gregorian
chants resounded. Old Father Aragon, whom Gordon knew well
from his earlier stays, invited us into the vestry for a
glass of tequila.
A Mushroom Ceremony
As we returned home to Herlinda's house toward evening,
Maria Sabina had already arrived there with a large company,
her two lovely daughters, Apolonia and Aurora (two prospective
curanderas), and a niece, all of whom brought children along
with them. Whenever her child began to cry, Apolonia would
offer her breast to it. The old curandero Don Aurelio also
appeared, a mighty man, one-eyed, in a black-andwhite patternedserape
(cloak). Cacao and sweet pastry were served on the veranda.
I was reminded of the report from an ancient chronicle which
described how chocotatl was drunk before the ingestion of
teonanacatl.
After the fall of darkness, we all proceeded into the room
in which the ceremony would take place. It was then locked
up-that is, the door was obstructed with the only bed available.
Only an emergency exit into the back garden remained unlatched
for absolute necessity. It was nearly midnight when the
ceremony began. Until that time the whole party lay, in
darkness sleeping or awaiting the night's events, on the
bast mats spread on the floor. Maria Sabina threw a piece
of copal on the embers of a brazier from time to time, whereby
the stuffy air in the crowded room became somewhat bearable.
I had explained to the curandera through Herlinda, who was
again with the party as interpreter, that one pill contained
the spirit of two pairs of mushrooms. (The pills contained
5.0 mg synthetic psilocybin apiece.)
When
all was ready, Maria Sabina apportioned the pills in pairs
among the grown-ups present. After solemn smoking, she herself
took two pairs (corresponding to 20 mg psilocybin). She
gave the same dose to Don Aurelio and her daughter Apolonia,
who would also serve as curandera. Aurora received one pair,
as did Gordon, while my wife and Irmgard got only one pill
each.
One
of the children, a girl of about ten, under the guidance
of Maria Sabina, had prepared for me the juice of five pairs
of fresh leaves of hojas de la Pastora. I wanted to experience
this drug that I had been unable to try in San Jose Tenango.
The potion was said to be especially active when prepared
by an innocent child. The cup with the expressed juice was
likewise incensed and conjured by Maria Sabina and Don Aurelio,
before it was delivered to me.
All
of these preparations and the following ceremony progressed
in much the same way as the consultation with the curandera
Consuela Garcia in San Jose Tenango.
After
the drug was apportioned and the candle on the "altar"
was extinguished, we awaited the effects in the darkness.
Before
a half hour had elapsed, the curandera murmured something;
her daughter and Don Aurelio also became restless. Herlinda
translated and explained to us what was wrong. Maria Sabina
had said that the pills lacked the spirit of the mushrooms.
I discussed the situation with Gordon, who lay beside me.
For us it was clear that absorption of the active principle
from the pills, which must first dissolve in the stomach,
occurs more slowly than from the mushrooms, in which some
of the active principle already becomes absorbed through
the mucous membranes during chewing. But how could we give
a scientific explanation under such conditions? Rather than
try to explain, we decided to act. We distributed more pills.
Both curanderas and the curandero each received another
pair. They had now each taken a total dosage of 30 mg psilocybin.
After
about another quarter of an hour, the spirit of the pills
did begin to yield its effects, which lasted until the crack
of dawn. The daughters, and Don Aurelio with his deep bass
voice, fervently answered the prayers and singing of the
curandera. Blissful, yearning moans of Apolonia and Aurora,
between singing and prayer, gave the impression that the
religious experience of the young women in the drug inebriation
was combined with sensual-sexual feelings.
In
the middle of the ceremony Maria Sabina asked for our request.
Gordon inquired again after the health of his daughter and
grandchild. He received the same good information as from
the curandera Consuela. Mother and child were in fact well
when he returned home to New York. Obviously, however, this
still represents no proof of the prophetic abilities of
both curanderas.
Evidently
as an effect of the hojas, I found myself for some time
in a state of mental sensitivity and intense experience,
which, however, was not accompanied by hallucinations. Anita,
Irmgard, and Gordon experienced a euphoric condition of
inebriation that was influenced by tke strange, mystical
atmosphere. My wife was impressed by the vision of very
distinct strange line patterns.
She
was astonished and perplexed, later, on discovering precisely
the same images in the rich ornamentation over the altar
in an old church near Puebla. That was on the return trip
to Mexico City, when we visited churches from colonial times.
These admirable churches offer great cultural and historical
interest because the Indian artists and workmen who assisted
in their construction smuggled in elements of Indian style.
Klaus Thomas, in his book Die kunstlich gesteuerte Seele
[The artificially steered mind] (Ferdinand Enke Verlag,
Stuttgart, 1970), writes about the possible influence of
visions from psilocybin inebriation on Meso-American Indian
art: "Surely a culturalhistorical comparison of the
old and new creations of Indian art . . . must convince
the unbiased spectator of the harmony with the images, forms
and colors of a psilocybin inebriation." The Mexican
character of the visions seen in my first experience with
dried Psilocybe mexicana mushrooms and the drawing of Li
Gelpke after a psilocybin inebriation could also point to
such an association.
As
we took leave of Maria Sabina and her clan at the crack
of dawn, the curandera said that the pills had the same
power as the mushrooms, that there was no difference. This
was a confirmation from the most competent authority, that
the synthetic psilocybin is identical with the natural product.
As a parting gift I let Maria Sabina have a vial of psilocybin
pills. She radiantly explained to our interpreter Herlinda
that she could now give consultations even in the season
when no mushrooms grow.
How
should we judge the conduct of Maria Sabina, the fact that
she allowed strangers, white people, access to the secret
ceremony, and let them try the sacred mushroom?
To
her credit it can be said that she had thereby opened the
door to the exploration of the Mexican mushroom cult in
its present form, and to the scientific, botanical, and
chemical investigation of the sacred mushrooms. Valuable
active substances, psilocybin and psilocin, resulted. Without
this assistance, the ancient knowledge and experience that
was concealed in these secret practices would possibly,
even probably, have disappeared without a trace, without
having borne fruit, in the advancement of Western civilization.
From
another standpoint, the conduct of this curandera can be
regarded as a profanation of a sacred custom-even as a betrayal.
Some of her countrymen were of this opinion, which was expressed
in acts of revenge, including the burning of her house.
The
profanation of the mushroom cult did not stop with the scientific
investigations. The publication about the magic mushrooms
unleashed an invasion of hippies and drug seekers into the
Mazatec country, many of whom behaved badly, some even criminally.
Another undesirable consequence was the beginning of true
tourism in Huautla de Jimenez, whereby the originality of
the place was eradicated.
Such
statements and considerations are, for the most part, the
concern of ethnographical research. Wherever researchers
and scientists trace and elucidate the remains of ancient
customs that are becoming rarer, their primitiveness is
lost. This loss is only more or less counterbalanced when
the outcome of the research represents a lasting cultural
gain.
From
Huautla de Jimenez we proceeded first to Teotitlan, in a
breakneck truck ride along a half-paved road, and from there
went on a comfortable car trip back to Mexico City, the
starting point of our expedition. I had lost several kilograms
in body weight, but was overwhelmingly compensated in enchanting
experiences.
The
herbarium samples of hojas de la Pastora, which we had brought
with us, were subjected to botanical indentification by
Carl Epling and Carlos D. Jativa at the Botanical Institute
of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. They
found that this plant was a hitherto undescribed species
of Satvia, which was named Salvia divinorum by these authors.
The chemical investigation of the juice of the magic sage
in the laboratory in Basel was unsuccessful. The psychoactive
principle of this drug seems to be a rather unstable substance,
since the juice prepared in Mexico and preserved with alcohol
proved in selfexperiments to be no longer active. Where
the chemical nature of the active principle is concerned,
the problem of the magic plant ska Maria Pastora still awaits
solution.