y äF » * f ri r» 3C- The Power of African Myths B y D r . C lyde W , F ord My interest in traditional Af­ rican sacred wisdom, especially as it is reflected in African my­ thology, was an unlikely out­ growth o f my efforts to under­ stand the relationship between social and personal healing. As a chiropractor and a thera­ pist, I sought answers on how individual groups, particularly African-Americans, might heal from long-standing trauma and pain. I knew that a turning point in the individual healing process often came when the “personal stories” of trauma shifted from victim ization to empowerment, and I felt that something sim ilar must be true about social heal­ ing, though it was harder to grasp what those “social sto­ ries” might be. Myths are, in fact, the “so­ cial stories” that heal. For myths supply more than the moral tag lines we learned early on to as­ sociate with nursery rhym es and fairy tales. Properly read, myths bring us into accord with the eternal mysteries of being, help us man­ age the inevitable passages of our lives, and give us templates for our relationship o f these so­ cieties to the earth we share with all life. When trauma con­ fronts us, individually or col­ lectively, myths are a way of reestablishing harmony in the wake o f chaos. Mythology is interested in the timeless questions o f hu­ manity: What is the relationship of human life to the great m ys­ tery o f being behind all life? How are we to understand our relationship to the earth we inhabit and to the cosmos in which we find ourselves? How am I to pass through the stages of my life? The movement of human con­ sciousness from birth, through life, and into death can be found in African mythology. As an example, death appears in many African creation myths; in fact, one form of its entry into the world is so common that it has earned the name “the failed m essage.” From the Khoi of Southwest Africa comes a simple and exemplary version o f the tale: The Moon, it is said, once sent an insect to men, saying, ”Go to men and tell them, ‘As 1 die, and dying live; so you shall also die, and dying live.’” The insect started with the message, but while on his way was overtaken by the Hare, who asked, “On what errand are you bound?" The insect answered, “ 1 am sent by the Moon to men, to tell them that as she dies and dying lives, so shall they also die and dying live.” The Hare said, “As you are an awkward runner, let me go. With these words he ran off, and when the reached men, he said, “I am sent by the Moon to tell you, ‘As I die and dying perish, in the same manner you also shall die and come wholly to an end.’ ” The Hare then returned to the Moon and told her what he had said to men. The Moon re ­ proached him angrily, saying, “ Do you dare tell the people a thing that 1 have not said?” With these words the Moon took up a piece of wood and struck the Hare on the nose. Since that day the Hare’s nose has been slit, but men still be­ lieve what the Hare told them. The failure of humanity to receive the m oon’s message adds a marvelous twist to this myth, for the hare is the trick­ ster figure. By inaccurately de­ livering the m oon’s message, the hare serves as a lure to the spiritual quest; the challenge is to discover the intended mes­ sage o f the moon in spite of what the trickster says. And this message - the ability o f human beings to find immor­ tality through their message - the ability o f human being to find immortality through their mortality - informs the mythic wisdom of traditional Africa. Still, in an age where technol­ ogy allows for the instantaneous transfer o f information anyplace on earth, why bother with Afri­ can mythology, coming as it does from an era when infor­ mation flowed simply from the storyteller’s mouth to a small audience? A very short creation story from the Bulu people of Cameroon offers one answer: Zambe, son of the supreme god M ebe’e, created a chim­ panzee, a gorilla, an elephant, and two men - a European and an A frican - each of whom Dr. Clyde IV. Ford is the author of The Hera With An African Face: Mythic Wisdom ofJraditiQnal Africa. was named Zambe as well. To these creatures, Zambe gave the tools o f survival - fire, water, food, weapons, and a book. In tim e, Zam be re ­ turned to check on the earth. “All the tools you were given for survival,” he asked each c re a tu re , “ w h ere a re th ey now ?” The chimpanzee and the go­ rilla had discarded all but the fruit, and Zambe banished them to the forest forever. The e l­ ephant could not rem em ber what h e’d done with his pos­ sessions. The European kept the book but discarded the fire, while the African discarded the book but kept the fire. Thus, Europeans remained keepers of the book, but Africans keepers of the flame. The book is symbolic of hu­ man efforts to control the natu­ ral world, and hum anity within it, through reason and intellect; this is the course W estern civi­ lization has taken. Fire is symbolic o f the sa­ cred wisdom that sees beyond the created world o f hum anity to the divine mystery which is its source. Fire signifies the passionate burning o f the light o f the human soul. To control the m undane, the myth tells us, Europeans sacri­ ficed the sacred. To hold on to the sacred, Africans sacrificed the mundane. And now, as we are poised at the m illennium , we cannot hope that page in the book o f intellect and reason alone; there must also be turn­ ings o f the soul, and here the mythic wisdom of Africa keeps a flame that may help light the way. » » • » • 1999 1 9 9 9 • 31 lye Ç o ___ out o f the sea and several very pow erful Beings com ing to ­ ward him unconscious, with a sm ell o f perfum e all around him. She carried him hom e. From that day forth, he never suffered from the m igraine headaches again. Learning to survive as a pre- teen, Eric found two jo b s. In b e tw e e n jo b s , he w e n t to school, and although he had a tough tim e catching up w ith other students, he persevered, m anaging to learn basic re a d ­ ing, w riting and m ath. His aca­ demic d iffic u ltie s m ade life m iserab le in school and at hom e. Eric believ es that he was in som e way “b lo ck e d ” from learning traditional linear way o f thinking. He thinks it may have been another part of his Spiritual development which encouraged his intuitive “know­ ing” and a deeper sense o f the people and world around him. At age seventeen, Eric was ready for his journey out o f Africa to Europe and, eventu­ ally, to the United States and Canada. The journey lasted five years and is a tale o f great hard­ ship and great faith. He was jailed, he begged, he walked, he hitchiked, he slept in the desert. Burned by the sun and freezing at n ig h t, he o ften felt the “warmth” of his guides but they never interfered with his “initia­ tion.” It took some years for Eric to use his healing gifts again. In 1984, with several other people, Eric began “The World Federa­ tion for Spiritual Healing” in Belguim. His vision was to cre­ ate a place where people could receive healing, and where he could teach as many students as possible his techniques of energy healing. Eric’s intention is to bring healing to any situation. One of Eric’s deepest beliefs is, “ Heal­ ing is a matter o f sim plicity and honesty. We are all born with an innate ability to heal. We need only the will to serve without discrimination. Eric is especially interested in the children o f the world. He believes that the children, from very young to teenagers, can be taught to use their “hidden heal­ ing powers” to help us to change the world and provide a brighter future for themselves and all of us! Fasil G hem b Photo caption Built by Emperor Fasilides during the 17,h century. Fasil Ghemb stands still to this date to grace Gondar, A Northeastern city o f Ethiopia. Surrounded by a 900-metre wall, the enchanting royal compound contains palaces churches, monasteries and extraordinary public and private buildings. Although factual documents d o ™t support it. the castle is said to have been built with mixture o f wheat flour and thousands o f eggs in order to hold the building together. Today, the castle stands among other sites as the most visited tourist attractions in the country. Master Healer from Ghana B y D onna S elby T hroughout history, people the w orld over have told sto ­ ries about special individuals who gave the ability to heal. O f particu lar interest lately by the “ c iv iliz e d ” W estern world is the study o f how physical, em otional and m ental disease m ay be affected by w orking w ith the “u n seen ” energy o f a p e rs o n . V ery few W estern m in d s a re a b le to b r e a k ­ through the veil o f physical form and see this field o f en ­ ergy. Eric V orm anns is such an individual. Eric was born in a tiny v il­ lage in G hana, W est A frica. B efore his b irth , his parents and G randm other w ere told by the villag e elders that this child w ould possess the gift o f healing and bare the re ­ sp o n sib ility o f teaching h e a l­ ing to others. A fter his birth , he was taken to the O raclist, w ho c o n firm e d the p re d ic ­ tions. D uring this first seven y ears, Eric gained a rep u ta ­ tion in his com m unity for b e ­ ing able to tell people m any hidden things about their lives and health. E ric “h e a le d ” by sim ply do ­ ing w hat his S p irit guides in ­ stru c te d him to do. He also receiv ed sp iritu al instruction in the gath erin g and ap p lic a ­ tio n o f plants and leaves that could be used as a talism an to p ro tect an individual. E r i c ’s p a te r n a l G r a n d ­ f in o t h e r w anted him to live with her as she knew about his healing p o te n tia l. S tric t, but with an un­ conditional lo v e and a c c e p - ta n c e , she gave Eric a s tro n g sen se of b o undaries an d s e l f ­ re s p o n s i­ bility . She w as w e ll a w a re o f his destiny and alw ays e n c o u r - a g e d h is c o m m u n ic a tio n s w ith the S p irit guides he called his “ frie n d s.” D uring this period o f tim e, Eric suffered from m igraine h e a d a c h e s . T h e s e a tta c k s were so severe that he could not m ove for days at a time. His entire head w ould feel as if it was on fire and when cold w ater was applied to soothe him, it im m ediately turned to steam . W hen he was seven, his aunt decided it w ould be best to seek m edical advice since the m edicine men and h erbalists could not affect his condition. An operation was then recom m ended. Draped for surgery, w ith a nurse w heeling him down the hall, little Eric heard the voice o f his Spirit guides in stru c t­ ing him to tell the nurse he had to go to the bathroom . W ithout question he m ade his sudden request. A nnoyed and baffled, the nurse allow ed him to go. From there, the Spirit guides told him to go hom e to his G randm other. L ater that day, on a nearby beach where Eric often went, he had a life altering experience. All he re ­ m em bered is seeing a sw irl­ ing, colorful, smoke com ing THE FUTURE OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY IS NOW! 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