News
August 27, 20084th International Amazonian Shamanism Conference: FREE Mp3 downloads
For those of you who unfortunately could not attend the fourth annual Amazonian Shamanism Conference in Iquitos Peru this summer, we have some good news to share with you. A number of presentations were recorded and are available online. These include talks and presentations by many shamans & curanderos, Dennis McKenna, Robert Forte, Frank Echenhofer, Pablo Amaringo, Dr. Richard Grossman, Jimmy Weiskopf, and many other luminaries of this field. Enjoy!
Download the complete Mp3 collection (right click and save as):
4th_International_Amazonian_Shamanism_Conference_vbr_mp3.zip [1GB Zip file]
To download individual talks, go here.
July 21 2008
Peruvian government recognizes ayahuasca as national heritage
The Institute of National Culture has declared the knowledge and traditional uses of ayahuasca as national cultural heritage, in order to guarantee their cultural continuation within native Amazonian communities. This resolution was published on July 12 in the law bulletin of the national daily El Peruano. It states that ayahuasca (Banisteriopsis caapi) is a plant specimen with an extraordinary cultural history due to its psychotropic qualities that are to be experienced when combined in a brew containing the plant known as chacruna. B. caapi is in the indigenous world known as a 'master' plant which teaches to its initiates the very foundations of the world and its components.
Peruvian government declares ayahuasca as national heritage (English)
Cronicaviva (Español)
Altino Machado (Portuguese)
June 12, 2008
"The upcoming 'Convergence' in Peru will be a true retreat where we will create a community for nine days (July 10-18). Not only will we explore the teachings, use and practices of Ayahuasca and Master Teacher Plants, but we will learn more about entheogens, other visionary plants, non-ordinary states, shamanic practices from around the world and deep ecology."
Visit the Amazon Convergence website for details.
May 15, 2008
Visionairy artist Alex Grey talks about an ayahuasca experience he had in Brazil. Another video was uploaded by the Psychonaut Channel yesterday, featuring antropologist and author Jeremy Narby giving a short talk on the relationship between science and shamanism.
May 8, 2008
Another ayahuasca-themed lecture by Jeremy Narby, author of The cosmic serpent, is on YouTube. In his book Jeremy investigates the connections between shamanism and molecular biology. He hypothesizes that shamans may be able to access information at the molecular level through the ingestion of entheogens, specifically ayahuasca. He and three molecular biologists revisited the Peruvian Amazon to try to test the hypothesis, and their work was featured in the documentary film, Night of the Liana (2002).
Watch the lecture Ayahuasca and antropology, which was organized by Stichting Open in December 2007.
April 21, 2008
The Psychonaut Channel has uploaded a new lecture by Jonathan Ott on Ayahuasca Analogues. Jonathan describes his own experiences with different MAO-inhibitors and DMT-containing plants, in ayahuasca-like beverages and snuffs. Recorded March 23, 2008 at the World Psychedelic Forum in Basel, Switzerland.
April 14, 2008
Reality Sandwich, CoSM and Souldish proudly present... The 2nd Annual "Ayahuasca Monologues: Tales of the Spirit Vine"
"Following on last year's successful event, we are pleased to present five new visionary stories about ayahuasca, the renowned sacred brew of the Amazon. For centuries, shamans have drunk this powerful concoction to heal illness, obtain mystical insights, contact spirit guides, and explore magical worlds. Hear of experiences both miraculous and terrifying when Westerners access ayahuasca's incredible gifts. Music, dancing, and mingling will follow performance."
For more information visit Reality Sandwich
April 8, 2008
The Scientific Investigation of Ayahuasca - A Review of Past and Current Research
by Dennis McKenna, PhD
"With its complex botanical, chemical, and pharmacological characteristics, and its position of prime importance in the ethnomedical and magico-religious practices of indigenous Amazonian peoples, the investigation of ayahuasca in its many aspects has been an impetus to the furtherence of our scientific understanding of the brain/mind interface, and of the role that psychoactive plant alkaloids have played, and continue to play, in the quest of the human spirit to discover and to understand its own trancendent nature. Now, the process which has unfolded in Western culture since Richard Spruce first reported on ayahuasca use among the Indians of the Norwthwest Amazon in 1855 has reached a new stage. Ayahuasca has emerged from the Amazonian jungles where it has remained cloaked in obscurity for thousands of years, to become the sacramental vehicle for new syncretic religious movements that are now diffusing from their center of origin in Brasil to Europe, the United States, and throughout the world."
Read the entire article at www.ayahuasca.com
April 7, 2008
The Times published an article on the Santo Daime church: Santo Daime: the drug-fuelled religion
April 2, 2008
New video on the Psychonaut Channel
The Psychonaut Channel recorded over 20 hours of lectures and interviews at the World Psychedelic Forum in Basel, Switzerland. Among these were some extremely interesting talks on ayahuasca and DMT by Dennis McKenna, Kathleen Harrison, Jonathan Ott, Jeremy Narby and many others. Currently they are very busy editing and uploading the video's, but they have already managed to make nine video's available for us. The first gives a general impression of the symposium, and the second is a short talk by ethnobotanist and artist Kathleen Harrison on "Botanical Dimensions". The most recent video features etnobotanist Dennis McKenna talking about his experiences with ayahuasca.
March 21-24, 2008
The World Psychedelic Forum in Basel, Switzerland: www.psychedelic.info
The World Psychedelic Forum with over 60 seminars, lectures, and panel discussions, presented by more than 50 experts, and some 30 young researchers from all over the world, with a rich audio-visual supporting program, and a variety of external events during 3 nights offers a unique Easter weekend in Basel for the young and the young at heart, for the interested lay persons, as well as the professional. Among the speakers shamans, anthropologists and researchers of ayahuasca, DMT and other psychedelics.
March 11, 2008
Announcement by Hannah Klautz from Amsterdam:
"Friday 21st of March we are making an ayahuasca-ceremony with Nanki Nantipia, medicine-man from the Shuar-people from Ecuador. He than just arrives from his home-country and he will bring fresh ayahuasca from the Amazon rainforest. I hope that you will understand that a ceremony in this Equinox vibration can be very powerful and can bring you many transformations and healing. Most important in this is your focused intention and your will to change. Things can manifest themselves than very smooth and easily into your reality.
Place: De Ruimte, Weesperzijde 79A te Amsterdam
Time: 19.30 til 09.00 in the morning
Price: 120 Euro
A week later on Saturday 29th of March we will have an ayahuasca-ceremony with the famous Peruvian shaman Don Pedro Guerra. His icaro’s (songs) are mindblowing and can bring you in a strong contact with the spirit-world. There are still a few places available. Place, time and price are the same as above."
March 4, 2008
Blog: Jaguar Medicine, by Alberto Villoldo
"During those years traipsing around the Amazon, inspired by McIntyre's discoveries, I came across the opportunity to study with many shamans and healers. Many of them were masters who worked with the ayahuasca vine, a plant with hallucinogenic qualities that is used ritualistically in their culture, which fascinated me. I remember observing one of these shamans, don Ramon, during his nighttime healing ceremonies, as he would load his pipe with jungle tobacco and turn to one of his patients and "sing his jaguar down from the tree."
February 6, 2008
News article: Ayahuasca: A Strange Brew, by Gina Piccalo for the L.A. Times
New York writer Daniel Pinchbeck brought ayahuasca to the attention of liberal thinkers, detailing his mind-blowing journeys with the brew (and numerous other hallucinogens) in a pair of books: 2002’s “Breaking Open the Head: A Psychedelic Journey Into the Heart of Contemporary Shamanism” and 2006’s “2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl.” “When I published my first book in 2002 and I spoke to audiences, 50% to 80% of the people hadn’t heard of ayahuasca,” Pinchbeck says. “Now everywhere I go, everyone is familiar with it.”