Any future we can see (in dreams or in other ways) is a possible future. The odds on any
specific event being enacted are constantly shifting, and we want to take a
probabilistic, rather than a deterministic, attitude towards our previews. We
want to experiment actively with the possibility that we can help to manifest,
or avert, an event foreshadowed by a dream by how we use or fail to use the
dream information. To foster our understanding that none of this is exactly new
practice, but rather part of a basic human survival kit, let me describe four
cases from the history of dreaming, the kind of history that is not (yet) taught in schools but is essential to our understanding of the human odyssey. In each case, a dreamer’s ability to scout
ahead was used to benefit a community in ways that saved many lives.
The Iroquois Dream Scout
Living on the edge of survival, threatened by constant
warfare, hungry winters and white men’s diseases and land-stealing, the Six
Nations of the Longhouse Indians of the American Northeast – known to
anthropologists as the Iroquois – made it the first business of the day to scan
the dreams of the community for clues to the future. The term “dreamer” (atetshents) was a title of honor that
also meant “doctor” and “healer”. While everyone dreams, some people dream
stronger and truer than others, and those are the ones – when their insights
have been tested and proven repeatedly – when you need to make a decision on
which the safety and well-being of the people depends.
I spent several years studying the shamanic dreaming practices of the Iroquois after I started dreaming of an ancient Huron/Mohawk “woman of power” (arendiwanen) who insisted on communicating with me in her own language, which I was then obliged to study. My favorite documentary source on early Iroquois dreaming was the Jesuit Relations, a vast compilation of reports from the blackrobe missionaries who lived among these peoples in colonial times.
I spent several years studying the shamanic dreaming practices of the Iroquois after I started dreaming of an ancient Huron/Mohawk “woman of power” (arendiwanen) who insisted on communicating with me in her own language, which I was then obliged to study. My favorite documentary source on early Iroquois dreaming was the Jesuit Relations, a vast compilation of reports from the blackrobe missionaries who lived among these peoples in colonial times.
Father Bruyas, a Jesuit living
with the Oneidas
in the 17th century, left a striking account of the practice of an
Iroquois dream seer and how the community used her information. The Oneida dreamer reported
that she had dreamed that an enemy tribe from the South would try to wipe out
her village in a surprise attack. She described the place where her own warriors
could ambush the enemy, and predicted that the enemy war chief would be
captured and burned to death. Following her directions, the Oneida war captains set an ambush at the
place she described, so confident of their victory that they fired up their
kettles in advance for the celebration feast.
The English Minister Who Saved His Congregation
In 1558, under the reign of Catholic Queen Mary I, the
Protestant minister John Rough was "sore troubled" when he dreamed
that he saw two of the Guard leading the deacon of his congregation, Cutbert
Simson, off to interrogation. Rough was especially troubled because, in the
dream, the deacon was carrying a book listing all the members of the
underground Protestant community; if this fell into the hands of the
authorities in this age of religious persecution, all of them would be at risk.
In the middle of the night, Rough told his dream to his wife and then tried to
calm himself by reading. When he fell asleep, however, he "dreamed the like
dream again."
Now profoundly agitated, Rough
prepared to pay a visit to the deacon and to tell him the dream, certain that
it was a warning. In the way of synchronicity, the deacon turned up at the
minister's door first. When Rough told his dream, the deacon dismissed his
fears, insisting that dreams are "but fantasies, and not to be
credited." Rough had to call on his full ministerial authority, ordering
the deacon in the name of Almighty God to place the book in safekeeping. The
deacon, protesting, gave the book to Rough's wife. Soon after, Cutbert Simson
was arrested and interrogated. The Reverend Rough's dream - and his insistence
that its warning must be heeded - saved the whole congregation from exposure to
the authorities.
The Armenian
School Teacher Who Saved
Her Class
In 1988 Sofia , a school teacher
in the Armenian mountain village
of Shirokamud , dreamed
she felt the earth trembling while class was in session. In her dream, she instructed the children in
the classroom to join hands and follow her. She led them to safety, without
hesitation, through a maze of mountain trails and woke with clear recollection
of the path she had followed.
The dream felt so “real” and so menacing thatSofia
recounted it to fellow-teachers, who scoffed at her. She decided on her own
course of action. Without mentioning the dream, she instructed the children in
her class that if anything “bad” ever happened they were to join hands and
follow her without question. Three days later, two earthquakes measuring 6.9
and 5.8 on the Richter scale destroyed the school. 112 children died
immediately; others were burned to death in the aftermath. The only children
who survived were the members of Sofia ’s
class. When she felt the first tremors, she immediately acted on her dream
guidance, leading her pupils to safety, joined hand to hand, along the complex
mountain trail she had dreamed.
The dream felt so “real” and so menacing that
The Island Dreamers Who Got
Out of the Way of the Tsunami
The Andamans, a hunter-gatherer people who live on islands
of the same name in the Bay of Bengal , have a
traditional practice of community dreaming. They grow a nightly web of dreams
to produce life-supporting information for the community. In their communal big
houses, they enter dreaming together with a shared story or intention. They may
want to scout out where the best supply of fruit or game or fish, can be found
to feed the people the next day. They spin a shared web of dreaming and travel
out along its skeins, like human spiders
The terrible Asian tsunami of December 26, 2004 , brought
home that the web of dreaming can be essential to survival. In late December,
the Andamans are usually to be found in their seasonal fishing settlements
along the coast. After the tsunami roared through that year, their shelters
were gone. The Indian government, which claims possession of the islands,
assumed that the Andamans along the coast had been drowned. Then the islanders
reappeared on their forested hills. They knew
the tsunami was coming, and got out of its way by quietly abandoning their
fishing huts and taking to the hills. They knew because they observed the
movements of animals, and listened to the voices of wind and water, and because
they know how to dream as and for a community.
References
1.Robert Moss, Dreamways of the Iroquois (Rochester VT :
Destiny Books, 2004) p.35.
2. John
Foxe, Acts and Monuments of the Church
Containing the History and Sufferings of the Martyrs (1563) cited in Carole
Levin, Dreaming the English Renaissance
(New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008) p.2.
3. Robert
Moss, The Secret History of Dreaming (Novato CA :
New World Library, 2009) p. 270. For an
account of Andaman dream webbing (written before the tsunami, see Vishvajit
Pandya, “Forest Smells and Spider Webs:
Ritualized Dream Interpretation Among Andaman Islanders” Dreaming 14:2-3
(June-September 2004) 136-150.
2 comments:
Very interesting and informative post. If we view the history, there are many people who compromised their lives to save the lives of others which depicts that humanity is still alive.
These huge waves made a lot of loss to the america and many other cities. But i appreciate the humanity of people who put thier lives in danger to save the others and thanks for sharing those inspirational stories.
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