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Malidoma
Somé recognizes that he learned more through his
initiation as a Dagara tribesman than from his PhDs from
the Sorbonne and Brandeis University. His name means "be
friendly to strangers," and he is charged by his elders
of the Dagara tribe of Burkina Faso (east of Nigeria and
north of Ghana) with bringing the wisdom of his tribe to
the West. His book Ritual: Power, Healing and Community
(reviewed in this issue) is highly praised by Michael Meade,
Robert Bly and Robert Moore. If you were not fortunate enough
to catch his reading at the Elliott Bay Bookstore last August,
you can find out more about him through the book and tape
reviews in this issue.
During
one of the Conflict Hours at the Mendocino Men’s Conference
Malidoma spoke eloquently on indigenous people’s views
of gay men. He kindly agreed to elaborate on his views as
he sat with me among the redwoods of Mendocino.
Bert:
At Conflict Hour you told us that your culture honors gays
as having a higher vibrational level that enabled them to
be guardians of the gateways to the spirit world. You suggested
that our Western view limits itself by focusing only on
their sexual role. Can you elaborate for our readers?
Malidoma:
I don’t know how to put it in terms that are clear
enough for an audience that, I think needs as much understanding
of this gender issue as people in this country do. But at
least among the Dagara people, gender has very little to
do with anatomy. It is purely energetic. In that context,
a male who is physically male can vibrate female energy,
and vice versa. That is where the real gender is. Anatomic
differences are simply there to determine who contributes
what for the continuity of the tribe. It does not mean,
necessarily, that there is a kind of line that divides people
on that basis. And this is something that also touches on
what has become known here as the "gay" or "homosexual"
issue. Again, in the culture that I come from, this is not
the issue. These people are looked on, essentially, as people.
The whole notion of "gay" does not exist in the
indigenous world. That does not mean that there are not
people there who feel the way that certain people feel in
this culture, that has led to them being referred to as
"gay."
The
reason why I’m saying there are no such people is
because the gay person is very well integrated into the
community, with the functions that delete this whole sexual
differentiation of him or her. The gay person is looked
at primarily as a "gatekeeper." The Earth is looked
at, from my tribal perspective, as a very, very delicate
machine or consciousness, with high vibrational points,
which certain people must be guardians of in order for the
tribe to keep its continuity with the gods and with the
spirits that dwell there. Spirits of this world and spirits
of the other worlds. Any person who is at this link between
this world and the other world experiences a state of vibrational
consciousness which is far higher, and far different, from
the one that a normal person would experience. This is what
makes a gay person gay. This kind of function is not one
that society votes for certain people to fulfill. It is
one that people are said to decide on prior to being born.
You decide that you will be a gatekeeper before you are
born. And it is that decision that provides you with the
equipment (Malidoma gestures by circling waist area with
hands) that you bring into this world. So when you arrive
here you begin to vibrate in a way that Elders can detect
as meaning that you are connected with a gateway somewhere.
Then they watch you grow, and they watch you act and react,
and sooner or later they will follow you to the gateway
that you are connected with.
Now,
gay people have children. Because they’re fertile,
just like normal people. How I got to know that they were
gay was because on arriving in this country and seeing the
serious issues surrounding gay people, I began to wonder
it does not exist in my own country. When I asked one of
them, who tad taken me to the threshold of the Otherworld,
whether he feels sexual attraction towards another man,
he jumped back and said, "How do you know that?!"
He said, "This is our business as gatekeepers."
And, yet he had a wife and children -- no problem, you see.
So
to then limit gay people to simple sexual orientation is
really the worst harm that can be done to a person. That
all he or she is is a sexual person. And, personally, because
of the fact that my knowledge of indigenous medicine, ritual,
comes from gatekeepers, it’s hard for me to take this
position that gay people are the negative breed of a society.
No! In a society that is profoundly dysfunctional, what
happens is that peoples’ life purposes are taken away,
and what is left is this kind of sexual orientation which,
in turn, is disturbing to the very society that created
it.
I think
this is again victimization by a Christian establishment
that is looking at a gay person as a disempowered person,
a person who has lost his job from birth onward, and now
society just wants to fire him out of life. This is not
justice. It’s not justice. It is a terrible harm done
to an energy that could save the world, that could save
us. If, today, we are suffering from a gradual ecological
waste, this is simply because the gatekeepers have been
fired from their job. They have been fired! They have nothing
to do! And because they have been fired, we accuse them
for not doing anything. This is not fair!
Let
us look at the earth differently, and we will find out gradually
that these people that are bothering us today are going
to start taking their posts. They know what their job is.
You just have to get near them, to feel that they don’t
vibrate the same way. They are not of this world. They come
from the Otherworld, and they were sent here to keep the
gates open to the Otherworld, because if the gates are shut,
this is when the earth, Mother Earth, will shake -- because
it has no more reason to be alive, it will shake itself,
and we will be in deep trouble.
Bert:
Christianity has separated spirit from body and spirit from
Earth. And earlier you talked to us about Christianity suppressing
your culture. So there’s a suggestion here that suppression
of homosexuality would be the way for the Christians to
shut down the gateways, shut down the spirit, and shut down
our connection with the Earth.
Malidoma:
Yes! That’s right! Christianity stresses postponing
living on earth, as of we are only here to pack up our baggage
and prepare for a life somewhere else "out there."
Jesus Christ is right here, man! And of course anyone else
who knows more, who knows better, will be suppressed.
And
you start with the gatekeepers. You take the gatekeeper
and you confuse his mind. You threaten him and you throw
him in the middle of nowhere. Then nobody knows where the
gate is. As soon as you lose the whereabouts of the gate,
then you have a culture going downhill. What keeps a village
together is a handful of "gays and lesbians,"
as they call them in the modern world. In my village, lesbians
are called witches, and gay men are known as the gatekeepers.
These are the two only known secret societies. These are
the only groups that will get together as a separate group
and go out into the woods secretly to do whatever they do.
And if they find you during their yearly symposium, they
have the right to kill you.
Unless
they go out on their yearly symposium, the village cannot
be granted another year of life. They have to go out to
do what they do, in order for the village to feel safe enough
to live the way it has lived before. This is why, to me,
we’re playing with our lives.
Bert:
So our culture may not be granted another year of life.
Malidoma:
That’s right! Every year it feels like the number
of years that this culture is entitled to live is getting
smaller. So God only knows how close to the chasm this culture
is. This constantly- reiterated discomfort and hatred for
the gay person is again another indication that every year
we might as well be prepared for the apocalyptic moment
when the stars start to fall to the earth.
You
see, unless there is somebody who constantly monitors the
mechanism that opens the door from this world to the Otherworld,
what happens is that something can happen to one of the
doors and it closes up. When all the doors are closed, this
earth runs out of its own orbit and the solar system collapses
into itself. And because this system is linked to other
systems, they too start to fall into a whirlpool. And the
cataclysm would be amazing!
Ask
the Dogon, they will tell you that. The Dogon. They’re
a tribe that understands this so well, it’s amazing,
mind-boggling. And it is a tribe that knows astrology like
no other tribe that I have encountered. And the great astrologers
of the Dogon are gay. They are gay. There is a dull planet
that, in its orbit, is directly above the Dogon village
every 58 years. Who knows that, but the gay people.
I mean,
I’m not just trying to make gay people look fine.
This is the truth, man! I’m trying to save my ass!
Why
is it that, everywhere else in the world, gay people are
a blessing, and in the modern world they are a curse? It
is self-evident. The modern world was built by Christianity.
They have taken the gods out of the earth sent them to heaven,
wherever that is. And everyone who aspires to the gods must
then negotiate with Christianity, so that the real priests
and priestesses are out of a job. This is the worst thing
that can happen to a culture that calls itself modern.
Bert:
That theme came up earlier with you and Martín, the
Mayan shaman here, that if a modern society wants to shut
down another culture they will go out and kill the keepers
of the ritual.
Malidoma:
Oh, yes! Because they know that this is where the life-pulse
of the culture is. This is where the engine room of the
tribe is. So if you go and bomb that place, then the whole
mechanism shuts down. That’s pretty much what’s
at work in the third world, and what has happened here with
the Native American culture. And the thing about it is that
humans are going to be begetting gatekeepers, no matter
what. This is the chance that we’ve got. So maybe
that means that sooner or later we’re going to wake
up to the horror of our own errors, and we’re going
to reconsecrate our chosen people so that they can do their
priestly work as they should. Otherwise, I just don’t
understand. I just don’t understand. My position about
it is not so much that gays be just forgiven. That’s
just tokenism. But that they serve as an example of the
wrong, or the illness, that modernity has brought to us,
and that we use that to begin working at healing ourselves
and our society from the bottom up. That way, by the time
we reach a certain level, all the gatekeepers are going
to find their positions again. We cannot tell them where
the gates are. They know. If we start to heal ourselves,
they will remember. It will kick in. But as long as we continue
in arrogance, in egotism, in God-knows-what form of violence
on ourselves, no, there’s that veil of confusion that’s
going to continue to prevail, and as a result it’s
going to prevent great things from happening. That’s
all I can say about that.
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