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T A B L E_T A L K You've won the lottery, quit your job and updated your passport. Where are you headed? Fantasize in the Wanderlust area of Table Talk R E C E N T L Y Why I hate B&Bs
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Given what I know of the strange and magical history of the place, it seems perfectly right to me, and as we continue into the town itself, I am filled with a sense of occult expectation. But when we get off the bus, my Australian travel companion Carlos and I are greeted only by a jovial Indian man in his mid-30s, wearing dirty pants and scruffy leather sandals and smiling optimistically, who offers to lead us to a room. Eduardo, as he introduces himself, brings out our good humor more than our mystical awe. But then, as we're trudging up inclined alleyways and steep, winding dirt trails, he suddenly turns and asks, "So you are here to eat the sacred hongos?"
I tell him we haven't decided yet, and he nods understandingly, then adds: "Anyway, I will bring you to a shaman."
Eduardo leads us inside a small compound of houses. There is an old woman who he says is the shaman, or currandera. Two of her teenage grandchildren greet us and immediately start pattering about mushrooms and a nice place to sleep -- a package deal for a good price. It seems a number of Mazatec families have gotten into the business of hosting pseudo-veladas, as the mushroom-taking ceremonies are known, in order to make a few extra bucks off the occasional gringo seeker before he can locate a real shaman. Politely, we look at the room, then say we'd prefer to be in the center of town. Though he has missed the chance to make a commission, Eduardo is gracious enough to walk us to a hotel. Along the way I ask him if he ever takes mushrooms himself. He says, "Yes, but only when I'm sick. So I can go to the other side and heal myself."
Carlos and I look at each other quizzically. Such a strange idea: tripping when you're sick. In our culture you trip when you're well, to feel even better. The idea of taking hallucinogenic mushrooms when you've got a high fever makes us laugh, though it is precisely this approach that put Huautla on the map.
That history began in the mid-1950s, when Huautla was still about as remote as a place can be. Located high in Mexico's Sierra Madre del Sur, about 250 miles southeast of Mexico City, it took 10 hours just to make the 38-mile journey from the bottom of the mountain to the top. Nevertheless, two Westerners made their way to the village. They were R. Gordon Wasson and Allan Richardson. Wasson was vice president of J. P. Morgan Co., the huge banking firm, and Richardson was a New York fashion photographer. The two men wanted to know more about Mazatec spiritual and curative practices, which were said to center on ingesting sacred, vision-producing mushrooms, called teonanacatl ("flesh of the gods") by the Indians. Succeeding in their quest, Wasson and Richardson participated in an all-night ceremony led by María Sabina, the local currandera who subsequently became a cult figure; they were the first outsiders ever to experience the sacred teonanacatl.
Subsequently Wasson returned with his wife and the Swiss chemist Dr.
Albert Hoffman, the inventor of LSD, to record a sacred velada.
Hoffman had isolated the active alkaloids in the mushrooms, psilocybin
and psilobin, and wanted to see how synthetic capsules would stack up
against the mushrooms. After the ceremony, Sabina declared that they
contained the same spirit. Wasson also published an account of his experiences
in Life magazine in 1957. Today, that
article is considered by many as the catalyst that kicked off the
Psychedelic Revolution, giving Huautla a key -- if unwitting -- influence on
1960s and '70s pop culture.
In the years that followed, Sabina received a long procession of the
era's most important rock 'n' roll musicians, writers, poets and
counterculture personalities, including Donovan, Bob Dylan, Timothy
Leary, the Rolling Stones, Peter Townshend and, most famously, the
Beatles.
John, Paul, George and Ringo are said to have arrived by
helicopter in
1968 as part of Ringo's birthday celebration. They took part in a
sacred night ceremony with Sabina, at her home in El Fortin, at
the top of the mountain just outside of town. Legend has it that during the velada Sabina warned John that
she saw a vision of a gun pointed at him.
By 1969, hundreds of hippies had swarmed into the small mountain village, crowding the square and open spaces with makeshift encampments. Locals who remember say that the hippies often behaved badly, tripping freely in public -- disrespecting the age-old ritual of the teonanacatl -- not only on mushrooms but on LSD, and also defecating and fornicating with apparently no reserve.
It didn't take long for the Mazatecan and Mexican authorities to grow
weary of what they saw as a grotesque display of American youth
immorality, and by the early '70s the military had driven the hippies out
and set up checkpoints at the foot of the mountain, thus ending the
Magical Mushroom Tour.
Today, Huautla is mostly unknown to the travelers who visit
Mexico's southern state of Oaxaca. In recent years the town has prospered and
grown substantially through coffee cultivation, yet it is still
picturesque, with winding streets and crooked networks of stairs that
connect it vertically, and breath-stopping views of lushly foliated hills and
mist-shrouded mountaintops.
On our first night in town, Carlos and I step out to the corner
comedor
for dinner and end up watching Game Four of the NBA Championships -- remote as Huautla is, satellite receivers still point skyward from numerous tin rooftops. Later, as we return to our hotel across the town square-cum-outdoor
basketball court -- the same town square that once housed throngs of
hippies -- we're challenged to a game of one-on-two by a young Mazatec
who thinks he's "Michael Yordan." The court is dark, except for some light
that shifts in from a nearby building and a generous moon. And although
we are much taller and change every few points so we can catch our
breath in this altitude, the kid's jumps defy gravity and he apparently has infrared
vision, too; he beats us handily, 10-2, and sends us home sucking air.
The next day we get up early and hike to El Fortin. It's a long hike
that mostly follows the course of a winding road past the outskirts of
town and myriad scenes of rural Mexican life. There are dirty children
playing alongside the dusty road; men butchering a freshly slaughtered
steer; women carrying heavy loads on their heads, or sitting in front of
their shacklike houses with a basket of mangoes to sell and their
breasts given out to hungry mouths.
The higher we walk, the more spectacular -- almost aerial -- views
we get of Huautla, seemingly floating in mist, and the deep ravine that
drops off to its side. On the last stretch to El Fortin, we cut through a
coffee grove and follow a crooked dirt trail to the top. There we meet
with Filogonio Garcia, the grandson of María Sabina and current
practitioner of the family tradition. In fact, according to local
belief, he's the direct inheritor of her formidable mystical gifts.
When he enters the hut where Carlos and I are waiting, I'm immediately
held by his dark, lucent stare. Although he's in his 50s, he doesn't
look a day over 35, with shiny coffee-brown skin and black, short-cropped
hair. He takes a seat facing us and smiles.
First I tell him that I've come to learn about the sacred mushrooms
and
his grandmother, and he kindly allows me to peruse his own
archive, which contains old books and photographs. In one book I glimpse
the quote: "The sacred mushroom ceremony brings about a direct
confrontation with the sacred world that obliges us to reevaluate all
our concepts of the universe and of man." Hmm. This is definitely not just for
fun.
Later, after answering more of my questions, Filogonio says: "But if
you want to know the mushrooms, you have to eat the mushrooms."
I look to Carlos, who gives a slight, affirmative nod. So I ask
Filogonio if a ceremony is possible. For a price, of course, it is.
(Charging for a ceremony is one way in which the tradition has changed
due to contact with outsiders.) Then he tells us we should abstain from
smoking, drinking and sex, and come to see him again the following
night, just before midnight, with reverence in our hearts.
N E X T+P A G E | And they ate the mushrooms with honey ...
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