Skip to content

Healing Failed Faith? Contemporary Siberian Shamanism

Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer

Anthropology and Humanism December 1, 2001 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1525/ahu.2001.26.2.134

Summary

The changes in Russia have significantly impacted the indigenous peoples of Siberia, particularly in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), leading to a mix of social, political, and spiritual transformations. Initial optimism in the 1990s has shifted to confusion, prompting a rise in shamanic revitalization, which is both popular and controversial. Various shamanic movements are emerging, focusing on philosophical, social, and ecological reforms while addressing individual and community healing.

Study at a glance

Population indigenous peoples of Siberia, specifically in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia)
Key finding Shamanic revitalization has become popular and controversial amidst social and spiritual transformations in the Sakha Republic.

Abstract

The agony of public and private changes in Russia (the Federation of Rossiia) has extended to indigenous peoples of Siberia. Focus on the Sakha Republic Yakutia) of the Far East enables analysis of diverse social, political, and spiritual transformations. Initial 1990s euphoria at the possibility of personal and community reform has yielded to confusion and soul searching. In such conditions, shamanic revitalization has become both popular and controversial in rural and urban contexts. Diverse shamanic activities and styles reveal a fragmentation of tradition. While disillusion with failed faith healers is rife, several nascent shamanic movements have attracted eclectic groups of followers. The two shamanic leaders featured here are attempting philosophical, social, and ecological reforms. Their movements and reputations transcend the personal healing of multicultural clients.This article, inspired by the writing and example of Edith Turner, draws attention to the interrelationship between individual and community healing. Data, based on frequent fieldwork in the Far East since 1986, help augment and critique literature on revitalization movements, shamanism, gender, and nationalism.

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment