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Look to nature and instinct: Malidoma Some connects traditional wisdom with our modern culture.


Malidoma Patrice Some Malidoma Patrice Somé (born 1956 ) is a West African writer. He was born in Dano, Burkina Faso, among the Dagara.

He was kidnapped at the age of four by French Jesuit missionaries, raised in their boarding school, and given a Western education.
 is a West African West Africa

A region of western Africa between the Sahara Desert and the Gulf of Guinea. It was largely controlled by colonial powers until the 20th century.



West African adj. & n.
 shaman shaman (shä`mən, shā`–, shă`–), religious practitioner in various, generally small-scale societies who is believed to be able to diagnose, cure, and sometimes cause illness because of a special relationship with, or  of the Dagara lineage LINEAGE. Properly speaking lineage is the relationship of persons in a direct line; as the grandfather, the father, the son, the grandson, &c. . At the time of his birth, he was given his name, Malidoma, which means "friend of the enemy." He was stolen from his tribe at a young age by Jesuit missionaries, but later on in his life returned to his village and became a fully initiated member of his community. He then went on to become a bridge between the indigenous and modern worlds by earning two masters degrees and three doctorates from Sorbonne and Brandeis Universities Brandeis University, at Waltham, Mass.; coeducational; chartered and opened 1948. Although Brandeis was founded by members of the American Jewish community, the university operates as an independent, nonsectarian institution. . He is the author of three books: Of Water and the Spirit, The Ancient Wisdom of Africa and Ritual. New Life Journal had the great pleasure of speaking with him recently on topics such as community and ritual during his visit to our area.

NLJ NLJ National Law Journal
NLJ National Liberty Journal
NLJ Nested Loop Join
: Can you describe to us how the ancient wisdom of Africa can pertain to pertain to
verb relate to, concern, refer to, regard, be part of, belong to, apply to, bear on, befit, be relevant to, be appropriate to, appertain to
 and assist those of us living within the structures of the modern world?

MS: Well, ancient wisdom of Africa is ancient wisdom of the world; I mean that the geography of the place doesn't matter as long as you come from this Earth. So, ancient Earth wisdom is something, of course, that can probably be of great help ... There is a lack of term because the English language English language, member of the West Germanic group of the Germanic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Germanic languages). Spoken by about 470 million people throughout the world, English is the official language of about 45 nations.  doesn't have the kind of term. The various localities in Africa have words that describe things that are bigger and larger than human consciousness, and so English just calls it "magical," although there is nothing magical about it. It is a part of a new type of consciousness that comes with its own sounds and its own cognition cognition

Act or process of knowing. Cognition includes every mental process that may be described as an experience of knowing (including perceiving, recognizing, conceiving, and reasoning), as distinguished from an experience of feeling or of willing.
, and, within that, also generates its own method of approach ... I think that more and more it is wisdom teaching people that there is indeed a consciousness in nature among the trees and among the mountains that comes with a specific vibrational frequency that can be detected. If modern science can, they are going to figure out a machine or measurement unit they can apply to a tree to see what kind of indication appears on the screen. But, once it is possible to merge with that vibration, there are distant realities that can become revealed; imagine tuning into the frequency of a certain tree and for some reason picking up radio transmission from far away--maybe that's why the tree has been standing there all these years ... What I'm saying is that this is really a piece of wisdom that has the capacity to alter our human experience as humans think of their human selves. More and more, we need to look at nature. The current approach to nature is a place to be domesticated do·mes·ti·cate  
tr.v. do·mes·ti·cat·ed, do·mes·ti·cat·ing, do·mes·ti·cates
1. To cause to feel comfortable at home; make domestic.

2. To adopt or make fit for domestic use or life.

3.
a.
 and even developed; really, it's not a credit to human consciousness to think in those terms. This kind of wisdom has a universality ... it's just that some have chosen to ignore it and with this made a commitment to control--control reality, the world and to control people, for that matter. We tend to get to a point where there is more loss than gain associated with such an angle of approach to reality.

NLJ: In the Dagara culture, humans do not remember with their heads, but rather with their bones. Can you describe to us the difference and how activating this ancient memory can transform us?

MS: The thing to know is that using the bones as instruments for comprehension of reality really allows the individual to break into those frequencies that I was talking about in association with trees.

Bones don't think, they project; they spell out something that is already evident. The thinking self is one that is conditioned to find ways of controlling or capturing reality, and, therefore, what the mind does is articulate comfort in terms of assigning structural logic on things that are sometimes other than what they have been labeled to be. Because the labeling comes with a discourse, the mind looks at it as logical; then, there is an imposition to the body to agree with it as though somehow, if it's logic, you have to embrace it. What if it is exactly the opposite? If it is logical, walk away from it! What if? It is when you think like this, the more you get confused. If you won't program your mind to make a list of all the things that are illogical, then the mind won't do it.

That's when the bones come in, because the bones are the headquarters of what we may call intuition, instinct and feeling; most of these don't come with a logical arrangement. You leave your house, travel a little bit and somehow you want to go back and get your umbrella. So maybe you turn your car around and get it. To the mind, that is not logical. It is sunny outside, by the way. Not until later on during the day when it starts to rain do you realize, 'Oh, okay, the bones were picking up on what was going to happen much later.' But, in the moment, there is no logic to that ... So, following intuition and instincts, some of which may feel rather compulsive com·pul·sive
adj.
Caused or conditioned by compulsion or obsession.

n.
A person with behavior patterns governed by a compulsion.



compulsive

the state of being subject to compulsion.
, you find yourself doing things that you cannot break away from and they are not logical, that is bone trait trait (trat)
1. any genetically determined characteristic; also, the condition prevailing in the heterozygous state of a recessive disorder, as the sickle cell trait.

2. a distinctive behavior pattern.
 that is obeying bone memory. This is an area of cognition that the mind doesn't know yet with what to do. That's why a lot of you encourage people to believe in their instincts, to trust their intuition, to actually develop a dream self sufficiently, to be able to read the symbols and images given to them in the dream world. That is what can indeed accelerate the era in which the bones are going to be the ones taking over the logic of the mind, because the bones are connected with heart and spirit. The mind is connected with external reality, and, actually, it is only the reality that it has created; whereas, the bones don't create reality, they merge with it. In that regard, everything becomes a lot more hospitable hos·pi·ta·ble  
adj.
1. Disposed to treat guests with warmth and generosity.

2. Indicative of cordiality toward guests: a hospitable act.

3.
, a lot more settling to the heart and the spirit.

Malidoma Some will be offering a two-year intensive training, Indigenous African Spirit Technologies, in our area, with two meetings this year and three in 2008. For more information, visit www.ritesofpassagecouncil.com/malidomaashevillebrochure.pdf.

Look for a continuation of the Malidoma Some interview in a future issue of New Life Journal, where he will speak about change and healing. Read a past interview with Malidoma at www.newlifejournal.com.

Emily Sullivan Emily Sullivan-Prowse is a character on the US post-apocalyptic drama Jericho. She is played by Ashley Scott.

In the pilot episode, it is revealed that Emily is an old friend of the pivotal character Jake Green (Skeet Ulrich) and that a falling out has happened
 is a licensed massage and bodywork bodywork /body·work/ (-wurk?) a general term for therapeutic methods that center on the body for the promotion of physical health and emotional and spiritual well-being, including massage, various systems of touch and manipulation,  therapist in Asheville, NC. She can be reached at emilybodywork@gmail.com.
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Title Annotation:strong roots
Author:Sullivan, Emily
Publication:New Life Journal
Article Type:Interview
Date:Jun 1, 2007
Words:1112
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