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Mapuche religion
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{{Short description|Mythology and religion of the indigenous Mapuche people of South America}}{{Multiple issues|{{More citations needed|date=July 2022}}{{Tone|date=July 2022}}{{Expand Spanish|Creencias religiosas mapuches|topic=culture|date=December 2009}}}}File:Mapuche Machis.jpg|thumb|Mapuche machis ]]The religion of the indigenous Mapuche people of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina is an extensive and ancient belief system. Legends and myths are common to the various groups that make up the Mapuche people. WEB, The creation of the world according to the Mapuche mythology {{!, Ralli Museum |url=https://museoralli.es/en/outstanding-works/the-creation-of-the-world-according-to-the-mapuche-mythology/ |access-date=2023-11-16 |website=Museo Ralli Marbella |language=en-US}} These myths tell of the creation of the world and the various deities and spirits that reside in it.- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
Overview
In order to describe the beliefs of the Mapuche people, it is important to note that there are no written records about their ancient legends and myths from before the Spanish arrival, since their religious beliefs were passed down orally. Their beliefs are not necessarily homogenous; among different ethnic groups, and the families, villages, and territorial groups within those ethnic groups, there are variations and differences and discrepancies in these beliefs. Likewise, it is important to understand that many of the Mapuche beliefs have been integrated into the myths and legends of Chilean folklore, and to a lesser extent, folklore in some areas of Argentina. Many of these beliefs have been altered and influenced by Christianity, due largely to the evangelization done by Spanish missionaries.JOURNAL, Costanza Torri, Maria, 2011, The Influence of Christian Conversion in Mapuche Traditional Medicine in Temuco, Chile: Toward a Cultural Syncretism or a form of Ideological Assimilation?, Journal of Religion and Health, 52, 4, 1228â1239, 10.1007/s10943-011-9561-x, 22203378, 25172476, JOURNAL, Gumucio, Christian Parker, 2002, Religion and the Awakening of Indigenous People in Latin America, Social Compass, 49, 1, 67â81, 10.1177/0037768602049001006, 146434986, WEB, Bendel, Maria, Intercultural health and ethnic community relations among the Mapuche people in Chile, 2002,weblink This happened chiefly through the syncretism of these beliefs and also through misinterpretation or adaptation within both Chilean and Argentine societies. This syncretism has brought about several variations and differences of these core beliefs as they have become assimilated within Chilean, Argentine and even Mapuche culture. Today, these cultural values, beliefs and practices are still taught in some places with an aim to preserve different aspects of this indigenous Mapuche culture.JOURNAL, Ortiz, Patricio R., 2009, Indigenous Knowledge and Language: Decolonizing Culturally Relevant Pedagogy in a Mapuche Intercultural Bilingual Education Program in Chile, Canadian Journal of Native Education, 32, 1, 93â114, 130, {{ProQuest, 755412284, }}Above all the similarities between the common religion and mythology of South America and its indigenous people, the religious beliefs and myths of the Mapuche people stand out because of their unique characteristics that reflect the Mapuche moral, social, cosmological and religious idiosyncrasy.There are differing views among scholars if ancestors play a significant role in the Mapuche religion.JOURNAL, El modelo de ancestralidad mapuche: Un debate en torno a las afinidades culturales de las representaciones escatológicas amerindias, Revista Austral de Ciencias Sociales,weblink Moulian-Tesmer, Rodrigo, 36, 127â151, Rojas-Bahamonde, Pablo, 10.4206/rev.austral.cienc.soc.2019.n36-07, 2019, 36, 201535281, Spanish, The Mapuche ancestrality model: A debate on the cultural affinities of Amerindian eschatological representations, free,Indigenous Spiritual Thought and the West
Like many other indigenous American cultures, the Mapuche embrace a cyclic concept of time. Cyclic time is an alternative to the mode of linear thought dictated by European rationalism and positivism which has been the prevailing model in the Western world for the last 400 years. Linear time corresponds to a Jewish philosophical revolution based in Zoroastrianism that serves as an oppositional theory to the theory of cyclic time. This understanding of time was fundamental for the development of the West and the birth of modernity/modern thought.Indigenous groups emphasize that "The West has historically negated the existence of indigenous philosophy, diminishing it to the category of simple Cosmology, folklore, or mythic thought". While the interaction of linear thought with cyclical has resulted in a prime example of cultural syncretism, this interaction has affected the essence of Mapuche beliefs, given that it has changed the core of the Mapuche vision of the Universe by imposing a linear concept of time.In the vertical plane (spiritual)
Much like ancestral spirits ((:es:Pillán|Pillán)), humanity (che) participates in both worlds, maintaining a dynamic equilibrium between good and bad. The world of mankind is called (:es:Ãuke Mapu|Mapu), and above this exists the Ankawenu (sky/heavens).{{Citation needed|date=May 2023}} Pedagogically, the three dimensions are described to be interrelated and conform with the structure of the Mapuche universe in the vertical plane:- Wenu Mapu: On the upper end of Nag Mapu is Wenu Mapu, the "land of above", a sacred and invisible space where the divine family resides with the good spirits and the Mapuche ancestors.WEB, Mapuche - Memoria Chilena, Biblioteca Nacional de Chile,weblink Memoria Chilena, 29 March 2024,
- Nag Mapu: This refers to the central land, also known as "the land that we walk on". This visible space is inhabited by humans and nature.WEB, Villanueva-Gallardo, Sandra, TERRITORIOS DISCURSIVOS DEL PUEBLO MAPUCHE-WILLICHE,weblink Diálogo andino, 29 March 2024, 343â355, 10.4067/S0719-26812021000200343, June 2021,
- Miñche Mapu: On the bottom end of Nag Mapu is Miñche Mapu, the underworld, where the force of evil and malignant spirits can be found.
On the horizontal plane (earthly or Nag Mapu)
Principle article: Nag mapuLikewise, that is why, in the ritual aspect, Mapuche religiosity is not expressed through temples or through the construction of other sacred buildings. On the contrary, it is expressed through intimate contact with nature, (:es:Ngen|Ngen), and the Earth represented by (:es:Ãuke Mapu|Ãuke Mapu).Thus, a clearing in the forest, surrounded by trees (ideally (:es:Drimys winteri|canelos)) and purified through ritual dance, becomes the most sacred temple for the Mapuche. The only construction permitted is the (:es:Rewe|rewe), a trunk of canelo on which steps have been carved that allow the officiant, either the (:es:Machi|Machi) or the (:es:Ngenpin|Ngenpin), to climb to its summit.Cosmogony
See also: (:es:CosmogonÃa|Cosmogony) and (:es:Admapu|Admapu).Mapuche (:es:CosmogonÃa|cosmogony) designates the origin of the Mapuche in the (:es:Ãuke Mapu|Ãuke Mapu). It is said that before populating the Earth, spirits watched from above and only saw deserts, until they were permitted to enrich the land with innumerable different beings made from the clouds. Only then did humans come down from the sky, learning the language of nature and bringing the Mapuche language â the same language spoken in the sky. The spirits promised them that they would allow them to return in the future.Trengtreng and Kaykay
Principle article: (:es:Tenten Vilu y Caicai Vilu|Tenten Vilu and Caicai Vilu)Another well known cosmological myth describes Chile's geography through the legend of (:es:Tenten Vilu y Caicai Vilu|Tenten Vilu and Caicai Vilu). Due to the historical interaction between myths and Christianity, the Mapuche and Huilliche versions of this myth are profoundly entwined with the biblical story of the (:es:Diluvio universal|flood). Later on, Mapuches interpreted this big event as a rebirth of the Mapuche and a phenomenon that is repeated over time, like a major universal purification. Nevertheless, this relation between the Universal Flood was created by Christians, because the original Mapuche story tells us not of a great flood but of a cataclysm generated by an earthquake and a subsequent tsunami, a more probable occurrence in a place like the West coast of South America.Divinities and spirits of the past
The religious beliefs of the Mapuche are primarily based on spirit worship of ancestors (mythical or real), and spirits, and elements of nature. These spirits do not correspond to "deities", as is commonly understood in the Western world. With regard to deities, not even in the oldest aspects of the Mapuche religion does there exist a principal spirit that is considered to be the supreme "God", creator of the universe and of man, although the word "Ngenechén" is often translated as "God". This God-Ngenechén relation is likely a forced equivalence created by Jesuits in their missionary zeal during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, as a means of making Christianity more acceptable and adaptable. Jesuit influence (The Jesuits, however, were great estimators of the depth of Mapuche transcendental thought) created numerous false equivalences that were nonetheless absorbed by the naturally syncretic Mapuche culture; generating enormous confusion and change that to date has not yet been overcome.The divinities and spirits of the ancestors can be divided into:- Ngen: Primordial spirits (In Mapuche thought, the Ngen represent the essence of all things that exist in the world).
- El: Primordial creator spirits (In Mapuche thought, the El represent the essence of creation of all things that exist in the world).
- Pillán: Benign, masculine spirits.
- {{ill|Wangulén|es}}: Benign feminine spirits.
- Wekufe: Evil spirits.
- Pu-am: The representation of the soul or the universal spirit.
- Am: Soul or spirit of living beings.
- Ngenechén: Spirit or deity that governs humans.
- Antu o Chau: Also called Antu fucha (ancient sun God). Antu also has a feminine dimension known as Antu kuche (Ancient Moon Goddess), that in reality is the representation of his wife (:es:Kuyén|Kuyén).
- Elche: Spirit known as creator of mankind spirit.
- Elmapu: Spirit known as creator of mapu (Earth).
Cosmology
Central to Mapuche cosmology is the idea of a creator called ngenechen, who is embodied in four components: an older man (fucha/futra/cha chau), an older woman (kude/kuse), a young boy, and a young girl. They believe in worlds known as the Wenu Mapu and Minche Mapu. Also, Mapuche cosmology is informed by complex notions of spirits that coexist with humans and animals in the natural world, and daily circumstances can dictate spiritual practices.Ngenechen, and Don Armando MarileoThe most well-known Mapuche ritual ceremony is the Ngillatun, which loosely translates "to pray" or "general prayer". These ceremonies are often major communal events that are of extreme spiritual and social importance. Many other ceremonies are practiced, and not all are for public or communal participation but are sometimes limited to family.The main groups of deities and/or spirits in Mapuche mythology are the Pillan and Wangulen (ancestral spirits), the Ngen (spirits in nature), and the wekufe (evil spirits).Sun and moon worship among the Mapuche have parallels among the Central Andean peoples and the Inca religion.JOURNAL, Correlatos en las constelaciones semióticas del sol y de la luna en las áreas centro y sur andinas, BoletÃn del Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino, Moulian, Rodrigo, 23, Catrileo, MarÃa, 2, 121â141, 10.4067/S0718-68942018000300121, 2018, Spanish, Hasler, Felipe, MarÃa Catrileo, Correspondence of semiotic sun and moon constellations in the central and southern andes, free, Indeed, in among Mapuches as well as Central Andean peoples the moon (Mama Killa, Cuyen in Mapudungun) and the sun (Inti, Antu in Mapudungun) are spouses. Mapuche, Quechua and Aymara words for the sun and the moon appear to be a borrowing from Puquina language.JOURNAL, Moulian, RodrÃgo, Catrileo, MarÃa, Landeo, Pablo, MarÃa Catrileo, 2015, Afines quechua en el vocabulario mapuche de Luis de Valdivia, Akins Quechua words in the Mapuche vocabulary of Luis de Valdivia, Revista de lingüÃstica teórica y aplicada, 53, 2, 73â96, 10.4067/S0718-48832015000200004, Spanish, free, Thus the parallels in cosmology may be traced back to the days of the Tiwanaku Empire in which Puquina is thought to have been an important language.The Human in Mapuche Mythology
See also: (:es:MitologÃa|Mythology) and (:es:Religión|Religion).The origin myth of the Mapuche. The objective of the human being in the Mapu is to populate it and care for it, while waiting for the arrival of all the spirits to this world. The descendants of the first human beings formed the Lituche (the original village).The spirit and human death
For the Mapuche, the essence/soul of human beings always lives in intimate contact with nature. One example of this is the celebration of all Mapuche rituals in tree clearings. For this, before all else, exists the Pu-Am, a universal soul that permeates all living things. From this universal essence comes that of every man, the Am, that accompanies his body until he dies. However, humans are not the only beings with Am â all living beings possess their own essence. Only the (:es:Wekufe|wekufe) lack an essence.In respect to the carnal death of a man, when a man dies, his Am becomes Pillü and resists separating from his body. But the state of his pillü is very dangerous because the wekufe can take possession of the soul and enslave it or it can be used by the (:es:Calcu|Calcu). To save herself, the anima must travel to the island of Ngill chenmaiwe that the dead can reach with the help of the (:es:Trempulcahue|Trempulcahue): in this place it will become Alwe. Thus, at the funeral, family and friends of the deceased try to drive away the soul essence with shouts and strikes. Once in the alwe form, the soul essence can return to be close to its loved ones without the threat of the wekufe and in this way help its descendants â above all its grandchildren. In some cases, when the human being has achieved actualization on the island of Ngill chenmaiwe, the pillü can transform into (:es:Pillán|pillán) or (:es:Wangulén|wangulén). Finally, with the passage of time, when the descendants of the deceased have lost memory of the deceased, the alwe returns to reunite with the Pu-Am and thus the cycle reaches its conclusion.The spiritual path of human beings
In Mapuche culture, the ultimate goal for humans is to reach a path that allows one to achieve knowledge in its four forms:- (:es:Creatividad|Creativity)
- (:es:Imaginación|Imagination)
- (:es:Intuición|Intuition)
- (:es:Comprensión|Comprehension)
Color conception of the cosmos
Between the Mapuche people, color is intimately associated with the understanding of the universe and its respective dimensions.- (:es:Azul|Blue) (kallfü) is an optimum color and it is frequently seen on concrete levels of daily life, such as in the scarves that mapuche women use to cover their heads, common dress, and in the paint used in rooms as well as general home decorations. As such, white and blue are ritual colors of excellence, prominent in principle Machi symbols and the guillatún. These two colors are always present in the Mapuche view of the benevolent supernatural space. However, their respective arrangement is not set nor governed by normative origins, given that blue and white are colors naturally perceived in the sky depending on the meteorological and climatic conditions.
- (:es:Negro (color)|Black) (kurü) symbolizes the rain as well as material and spiritual power. The Mapuche view this color with intensity, and it is generally used by those in positions of power such as the Lonko, Ulmen, and Machis. This is possibly due to the fact that black is the most difficult color to dye traditional Mapuche fabrics.
- (:es:Rojo|Red) (kelü) is commonly associated with fighting, warlike behavior or battle, and blood. Consequently, red is a prohibited color in the (:es:Guillatún|guillatún). Nonetheless, red also has positive connotations given its relation with the color of flowers in the region, especially the (:es:Copihue|copihue).
- (:es:Verde|Green) (karü) symbolizes nature in all of its splendor and exuberance; it represents the fertilization of the earth, its fertility, and the land itself.
Main figures in the Mapuche belief system
Human beings within the Mapuche belief system
The Mapuche religion is not an organized religion and does not have temples or a priestly caste.- (:es:Calcu|Kalku)WEB, kalku - Tesauro Regional Patrimonial,weblink www.tesauroregional.cl, 29 March 2024,
- (:es:Machi|Machi): A man or woman who serves as an intermediary between the visible world and the invisible world. He or she knows all of the natural lawen (in (:es:Idioma mapudungún|mapudungún): lawen 'medicine') as their uses. Is the authority on traditional medicine and the expert on the secrets of the Mapuche world. To be chosen as Machi, one must achieve a religious role of txemon (in (:es:Idioma mapudungún|mapudungún): txemon 'healing') through a ceremony known as (:es:Machitún|machitún)
- Dungumachife: Intermediary between the lof and the newen (power) of the machi when found in küymi (trance), where he acts as an interpreter or assistant in the healing ritual. Â
- (:es:Genpin|Ngenpin): Owner of words, official speaker and spiritual guide during the ritual performance. When it coincides with the lonko person it is called genpin lonko Zugu.
- Pelom: People with special characteristics that can see the future.
Mythological beings
- (:es:Anchimallén|Anchimallén){{Citation needed|date=May 2023}}
- (:es:Chonchón|Chonchón){{Citation needed|date=May 2023}}
- (:es:Colo Colo (mitologÃa)|Colo Colo)
- (:es:Cuero (leyenda)|Cuero)
- (:es:Epunamun|Epunamun)
- (:es:Gualicho|Gualicho){{Citation needed|date=May 2023}}
- (:es:Guallipén|Guallipén){{Citation needed|date=May 2023}}
- (:es:Guirivilo|Guirivilo)
- (:es:Laftrache|Laftrache)
- (:es:Piuchén|Piuchén)
- (:es:Sumpall|Sumpall)
- (:es:Trelke-wekufe|Trelke-wekufe)
- (:es:Trempulcahue|Trempulcahue)
- (:es:Trentren Vilu y Caicai Vilu|Trentren Vilu y Caicai Vilu)
- Zapan-Zucum{{Citation needed|date=May 2023}} Specifically (:es:Huilliche|Huilliches):
- (:es:Canillo (mitologÃa)|Canillo)
- (:es:Chaotroquin|Chaotroquin)
- (:es:Huenteao|Huenteao)
- (:es:Millalicán|Millalicán)
- (:es:Pucatrihuekeche|Pucatrihuekeche)
Machi
In the mythology and beliefs of the Mapuche people, the machi "shaman", a role usually played by older women, is an extremely important part of the Mapuche culture. The machi performs ceremonies for the warding off of evil, for rain, for the cure of diseases, and has an extensive knowledge of Chilean medicinal herbs, gained during an arduous apprenticeship. Chileans of all origins and classes make use of the many traditional herbs known to the Mapuche. The main healing ceremony performed by the machi is called the machitun.Legends and mythical creatures
The most important myths are:- the legend of Trentren Vilu and Caicai Vilu (Ten Ten-Vilu and Coi Coi-Vilu)
- the Cherufe
- the Chonchon
- the Colo Colo
- the Gualichu
- the Kalku
- the Ngen spirits
- the Nguruvilu
- the Peuchen
- the Pillan spirits
- the Trehuaco
- the Wekufe spirits
See also
- Chemamull
- Chilean mythology
- Chilote mythology
- Mapudungun
- Misión Jesuita Mapuche
- Indigenous religion
- Pascuse mythology
- Pillan
- South American mythology
- Wallmapu
- Wekufe
References
{{Reflist}}- Juan Luis Nass. MitologÃa mapuche. Volumen 40 de Colección 500 años. Colección 500 años (Ediciones Abya-Yala) ; 40. Volumen 40 de 500 años. Ediciones ABYA-YALA, 1991 (Spanish).
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