Current use of holy mushrooms of the genus Psilocybe in a Zapotec community in Oaxaca, Mexico.

IMA fungus  – January 01, 2025

Source: PubMed

Summary

While Mazatec mushroom traditions are well-known, a Zapotec community in Oaxaca continues its distinct, vital **Ceremonial use** of sacred fungi. Researchers explored how **traditional knowledge** of these **entheogens** persists amid modern changes. Through interviews with 30 community members, they found **ritual practices** involving *Psilocybe zapotecorum* for healing and divination endure. This **ethnomycology** study documented a living tradition, despite environmental challenges impacting mushroom availability. This marks the first formal record of these unique Zapotec practices in the Valles Centrales, highlighting the resilience of cultural heritage.

Abstract

The use of psychoactive Psilocybe mushrooms as entheogens by the Mazatecs of Oaxaca became known to the world in 1957. While the Mazatec Region has been the focus of research, historical records indicate that other indigenous groups in Mexico, including the Zapotecs, also used these mushrooms for ceremonial and medicinal purposes. However, the linguistic, cultural and ecological diversity of the Zapotec people suggests that their practices cannot be generalised. In contemporary times, changes in cultural and environmental factors, as well as the rise of psychedelic tourism, have contributed to the transformation and commodification of these traditions. The purpose of this paper was to document the changes in the use, customs and knowledge of Psilocybe species in a Zapotec community in the Valles Centrales of Oaxaca. Through informal in-depth interviews, 30 people from the community of El Peral, San Antonino El Alto were interviewed. These testimonies were recorded in a field diary and entered into a database for categorical analysis. In this way, it was possible to document that the use of Psilocybezapotecorum, called Hongo Borracho or Hongo Santo and in Zapotec Ni'to be'ya, for healing and divinatory purposes, continues in the community. However, its use is decreasing and the mushrooms are more difficult to find, likely due to changing climatic patterns, according to those interviewed. We found that there are still people dedicated to the sale of these mushrooms. For the Zapotecs of El Peral, these mushrooms can do whatever is asked of them according to a ritual, but they are aware that outsiders used them for recreational purposes, although they did not oppose it. This study underscores the importance of documenting and understanding cultural practices related to mushrooms, as well as the need to address environmental challenges that affect their availability and traditional use. Finally, this is the first formal record of the use of Psilocybe mushrooms amongst Zapotecs of the Valles Centrales Region in Oaxaca.

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