People have asked why I call myself Kether. The story begins when as a pre-teen I had an “entity” come to me. He called himself Rufus. For many years I thought about this entity and came to the conclusion it was just my vivid imagination or some sort of imaginary friend. Then I quit thinking about it. This “friend” told me things and also was a protector of sorts to me. Its voice was with me and gave me warnings about situations. He also told me my real name was Kether. This name stuck in my mind and I told no one about it until I was in my fifties.
I was about eighteen when I learned
what Kether meant. It was then I
thought perhaps I had subconsciously picked it up from my mother, who
was a psychic and read tea leaves and tarot. As I became more
involved in Chaos Magic
it became my “secret name”. (or Craft name if I were a neo-pagan). As
I said, I was in my fifties before I used it publicly in any way.
This brings me to the heart of my post today. Cultural Appropriation.
Specifically spiritual cultural appropriation.
The most vocal group who are angry
about this are Native Americans. They decry
“Pretendians”
and especially White Shamans and Plastic Medicine Men. The debate goes on
about the difference between the two, shaman or medicine man/woman. I
began my page on Indians
with this in mind. There is a group who tracks “Plastic Shamans” and New Age practices avidly. In their
introduction they say “Native people DO NOT use the label "Shaman.”
One of the main points and purposes of
my website Kether Muse is to
show how myth, spirituality, religion and also science share beliefs
and blend together. Even politics is in part a blending of these
themes and culture.
The United Nations wrote the
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
to address this as well as other issues. “The Declaration recognizes
and affirms the rights of indigenous peoples to their cultural,
religious, and spiritual practices, to have private access to sacred
sites, as well as to maintain and strengthen their spiritual
relationship with their traditionally held lands, territories, waters
and coastal seas and other resources. With the Declaration, Native
peoples have rights acknowledged by the international community of
nations, including rights to sacred places both within existing
reservation or territorial boundaries and beyond.” But as I see it
the declaration gives no explicit opinion on a monopoly of ritual or
practice. It is more about land. So to me it is a matter of personal
opinion.
Back to my Name Kether. I am not
Jewish. I am not a Kabbalist
per se. But one reason I call myself a Chaos Magick Practitioner is I don't want
to be pigeon holed in my spiritual quest. Just because I am not an
Indian does it mean I cannot do a Vision Quest? Many Native
Americans say so. Or because I am not an Aborigine am I not allowed
to Dream Walk or have Dream Time? When Jesus went into the wilderness, was not
that a vision quest? Or the forty year adventure of Moses?
Or when the Buddha took his walk and sat under the Bodhi tree wasn't that a Vision Quest?
For a pantheist a rock
is as sacred as a cross is to a Christian? I have many
rocks I consider sacred.
When I walk down a mountain trail and I
come upon an owl or hawk feather I consider it a gift and a blessing.
My spiritual mentor (now dead) gave me an eagle feather which I have
on my alter to represent the element of air. Now Native
Americans and the law would say that I had no right to keep that
feather. According to federal regulations, only enrolled members of
federally recognized tribes can possess eagle, hawk and owl feathers
according to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.
Does it not seem odd this is a felony but I can go dig up a grave,
and it's only a misdemeanor? (Alabama Grave Robbing Law)
In my last post I
spoke about understanding other people, what they consider sacred
and the dangers of slipping into ones cultural spiritual identity,
sacrificing ones basic moral and ethical standing which has many shared traditions.
It is all about coexistance. As our world
becomes smaller and smaller the need for this is more important than
any time in history.
So in closing I implore you to reject
the dogma. Like Matt Johnson (musical heroes) said in
the song Armageddon Days Are Here (Again)
“The world is on its elbows and knees. It's forgotten the message
and worships the creeds.”
2 comments:
What a profoundly written post. I like Kether, it's unique and meaningful. I was only looking for synonyms of how to validate a degree from another country but luckily ended up on your blog. I saw your other site too.
glad you liked it. thanks
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