4.7 Article

On Revelations and Revolutions: Drinking Ayahuasca Among Palestinians Under Israeli Occupation

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.718934

Keywords

ritual; psychedelics; Badiou's Being and Event; Israeli-Palestinian conflict; New Age; activism; DMT; prophecy

Funding

  1. Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS)

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Ritualistic use of ayahuasca can evoke feelings of unity and harmony among group members, but may also serve a destructive political status quo. Through in-depth interviews and participatory observations, it was found that despite efforts to avoid politics, political issues can still infiltrate these rituals, particularly through revelatory events induced by ayahuasca. These events lead participants to resist the hegemonic ritual structure and advocate for emancipatory messages.
The ritualistic use of ayahuasca can induce a feeling of unity and harmony among group members. However, such depoliticized feelings can come in the service of a destructive political status quo in which Palestinians are marginalized. Through 31 in-depth interviews of Israelis and Palestinians who drink ayahuasca together, and through participatory observations, such rituals were examined. In this setting marginalization was structurally rooted by the group's inability to recognize Palestinian national identity or admit the ongoing Israeli injustice toward Palestinians. Although the groups avoided politics, they still find their way into these rituals. This happened through occasional ayahuasca-induced revelatory events, in which individuals were confronted with a pressing truth related to the oppressive relations between Jewish Israelis and Palestinians. Three case studies of such revelatory events are described in this paper. Affected by emotions of pain, anger, and guilt, these participants developed resistance toward the hegemonic Israeli ritual structure. This was followed by an urge to deliver an emancipatory message to the rest of the group, usually through a song. Moreover, affected subjects developed a long-lasting fidelity to the truth attained at these events. In time, this fidelity led to the expansion of ayahuasca practices to other Palestinians and the politicization of the practice. The article draws on Badiou's theory in Being and Event (1988) to analyze the relations between the Israeli ritual structure, the Palestinian revelatory event, and the emancipatory fidelity that followed. Badiou's theory elucidates the egalitarian revolutionary potential, which is part of the sociopsychopharmacology of psychedelics.

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