4.1 Article

Botanicas in America's backyard: Uncovering the world of Latino healers' herb-healing practices in New York City

Journal

HUMAN ORGANIZATION
Volume 65, Issue 4, Pages 407-419

Publisher

SOC APPLIED ANTHROPOLOGY
DOI: 10.17730/humo.65.4.4ptan9lh5qlrq6bb

Keywords

folk healers; immigrant health; alternative medicine; Latinos; botanicas; ethnomedicine; New York City

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This article examines Latino healers'use and prescription of herbs and plants in New York City (NYC), focusing on botdnicas (ethnic healing-religious stores) as main healing outlets serving a pan-ethnic population of Latino immigrants in the city. Botdnicas provide a physical and a social space for the exchange of information and resources, as well as for the support of informal faith-healing networks on the basis of religious belonging (e.g., Santeria and Spiritism). Rather than conforming to discrete categories, plants and herbs reveal a poli-functionality in how they impact different aspects of clients' lives, ranging from getting back a loved one to recovering from a serious health condition. Healers' treatments, based on ritualistic cleansing, are pivotal to resolving Latinos' ailments rooted in sociosoma modes of causation that imply social relationships severed by sorcery, spirit intrusion, and stressful living circumstances. Most of the plants, herbs, and roots found at botdnicas are believed to have both natural and supernatural healing properties, able to deal with the multi-dimensional aspects of disease and wellbeing. The article will finally discuss the implications of these findings from a research and policy perspective, particularly regarding the need for research models able to account for the role of spirituality and religiosity in Latinos' integrative systems of healing.

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