Mark J. Plotkin
Autor von Heilung aus dem Regenwald. Das geheime Wissen der Amazonas-Schamanen.
Über den Autor
Mark J. Plotkin is President of the Amazon Conservation Team and the author of Tales of a Shaman's Apprentice and Medicine Quest.
Werke von Mark J. Plotkin
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Wissenswertes
- Geburtstag
- 1955-05-21
- Geschlecht
- male
- Nationalität
- USA
- Ausbildung
- Harvard University (BS), Yale University (MS|Forestry), Tufts University (PhD)
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- Bewertung
- 4.0
- Rezensionen
- 9
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- 24
- Sprachen
- 3
We remove the forest and replace it with pasture land, or mono-culture, or air-strips, or villages, town, cities, and industrial wasteland.
When we take away the tropics jungle we take with it the diversity of plant and wildlife, indigenous homelands, and millennia of knowledge about the way the land actually works.
I couldn’t read Mark Plotkin’s 1993 book about his time among the indigenous peoples of Surinam and northern Brazil without a lump in my throat knowing that by now, most of what he saw is gone forever. It is simply heartbreaking.
I am sitting here nursing tendonitis in my elbow reading about his own elbow troubles and submitting to a native shaman to remove his pain, which he does and I am wondering: where can you get a shaman when you really need one?
In these tropical jungles Plotkin finds the most amazing mixture of terror and beauty. From the large predators, including jaguar and giant anteater, to the microbial predators: skin digging larvae. Sandflies carrying the deadly leishmaniasis. Man eating crocodiles. Deadly mosquitoes. Parasites. And on and on.
Then the beautiful birds, and plants, the waterfalls and jungle canope.
And who owns what: the national governments? The aboriginals? Mankind. Who owns the future discoveries or medicines pioneered by indigenous doctors?
Who should pay for killing languages and cultures and way-of-life when civilization intrudes on people in their natural habitat?
So many awful questions to ask about what “progress” has done to this planet and its peoples without needing to become romantic about life in the bush.
Although, while i was reading Plotkin’s account of tribal medicinal rituals I couldn’t help but compare it with the rituals we have replaced them with: the annual trip to the family doctor; the bland waiting room; the white lab coats; the medical records, now on HP tablets and the doctor cursing about how damn slow the software is; the physical exams. Eyes. Nose. Throat. Joints. Rectum. The lifting of the genitals.
“Say AHHHHH!!!!”
But the jungles are more even than the Indians. In South America there is the detritus of the colonial period. Patois and the descendents of black slaves. Prostitution and poverty in the city slums. Dutch and French, Spanish and Portuguese languages intermingled. Poor Brazilians lured to the jungle for a new life. And Missionaries. And soldiers. Venereal disease. Garbage. And the smell of gasoline wafting through the air.… (mehr)