Smoking ceremony
Smoking ceremony is an ancient and contemporary custom among some
Research has shown that heating the leaves of Eremophila longifolia (commonly known as the Berrigan emu bush), one of the plants used in smoking ceremony, produces a smoke with significant antimicrobial effects. These effects are not observed in the leaves prior to heating. Fumigating a newborn infant, a mother who has just given birth, or a boy who has just been circumcised, is considered to assist in preventing infection.[4]
Cultural significance
Smoking ceremonies are done at key milestones throughout one's life, depending on the traditions of each Indigenous nation.[5] Smoke may also be created by lighting a fire of paperbark, then smouldering green leaves atop the flame.[6] The fire may be created in a pit in the ground, in the area itself or in a bucket.[5]
Birth
Smoking ceremonies may be performed at birth to welcome a newborn into the community and ensure that the mother and child will both be healthy throughout their lives.
Initiation
Some Indigenous groups in Central Australia perform
Death
Smoking ceremonies are conducted in a deceased person's space to aid their spirit in moving on from the material world[5] and purify or cleanse a location.[1] The ceremony takes precedence over all other events and may involve smoking a deceased person's house, room or car to allow their spirit to return to country.[5] Depending on the Indigenous Nation, smoking may be accompanied by sweeping of branches across a location, which is said to weaken the connection between the dead and living world and may have replaced the practice of burning the clothes and belongings of the deceased.[5] Community members may also paint ochre on the living spaces inhabited by the dead, which serves the dual purpose of encouraging the spirit to move on and notifying the community that someone has died.[5]
If it occurs in an enclosed space, the practice itself is altered slightly.[5] A small fire may be built within the home, or a bucket of smoking coals may be brought into the house.[5]
Gundungurra ceremonies
The
Welcome to Country
Smoke and fire have been traditionally used by Indigenous Australians as a form of communication.[10] Individuals light a fire when entering another group's country, signalling their entry to the people who live there, and acting as a call for help when necessary.[10] In the 21st century, smoking ceremonies have become a more frequent occurrence as part of Welcome to Country ceremonies.[11] Welcome to Country ceremonies are part of reconciliation as they acknowledge the traditional ownership of the land and involve Aboriginal Australians in events that take place on their land.[11] Smoking ceremonies are performed by Indigenous elders and community members in an event open to the non-Indigenous Australian public, as opposed to the closed ceremonies performed within a community. While smoking ceremonies are not a universal element of Indigenous cultures, they have been performed across the country by a number of different community elders.[11]
Welcome to Country for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex
During their 2018 royal visit of Australia, Fiji, Tonga and New Zealand, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex participated in a smoking ceremony to commemorate the unveiling of the Queens Commonwealth Canopy in K’Gari National Park.[12] Butchulla elders performed the ceremony as a Welcome to Country, highlighting the focus on Indigenous forests encouraged by the Queen's Commonwealth Canopy program.[12] It was the first smoking ceremony performed for royalty.
Other events
Beatification of Mary Mackillop
In 1995 Pope John Paul II beatified the Australian nun Mary Mackillop in Sydney, accompanied by 26 Catholic Aboriginal Australians.[13] Aboriginal Australians performed a smoking ceremony to replace traditional incense burning in Catholic mass,[14] with the Pope making special mention of the presence of Aboriginal Australians throughout Australia's history.[13] Members of the Indigenous community who commented on the event said they saw this as a positive step towards reconciling with the Catholic church.[13]
Melbourne Midsumma Festival
In 2020 convenors of the Midsumma Festival invited Aboriginal elders to perform a welcome to country ceremony before the march, incorporating a smoking ceremony into the proceedings.[15] They acknowledged the Faces of Aboriginal Pride, elected at the 2019 Victorian NAIDOC Pride Night, Stone Motherless Cold and Astro.[16]
Lidia Thorpe’s Induction into Parliament
Upon election to the
Thorpe’s later appointment to the federal senate in 2020 included a smoking ceremony at the Aboriginal Tent Embassy. She carried a message stick bearing a mark for each of the 441 Indigenous people who died in custody since the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody in 1990.[18]
Biological properties
Plants used in smoking ceremonies have various biological properties which, when fumigated, can be beneficial for community members. The chemical components of plants used in smoking ceremonies mean that the ceremonies are not solely spiritual but serve medicinal and physical purposes too. In addition to exposing people to the smoke, surgical tools used in circumcision rituals may also be exposed to the smoke to be disinfected.[1][19]
Emu Bush
Emu bush, otherwise known as Berrigan, is a traditional medicine sacred to Aboriginal Australian cultures. Research has shown that there is variation in the quantity and types of essential oils produced by plants across NSW. These chemovariants correlate to different ceremonial uses of the plant. For example, the Western Australian Emu Bush is a different chemotype which contains some toxic compounds, so Australian Sandalwood is more common in ceremonial life.[19]
Temperature is known to affect the antimicrobial activity of beneficial compounds in Emu Bush. Pyrolysis and burning of the plant also increase the physical benefits of the plant. Medicinal benefits are maximised through elements of the ceremony. Individuals participating in the ceremony are directly exposed to the smoke as the leaves are brought closer to their skin and face, and artefacts are sometimes singed alongside the leaves when used for surgery.[19]
Australian sandalwood
As with other sandalwood species,
References
- ^ a b c d Kelly, Glen (1999). "Karla Wongi Fire Talk: A Nyungar perspective on forest burning". Landscope. 14: 11.
- ISBN 9781741159622.
- ^ "Northern Territory Natives". Observer. 3 November 1906.
- PMID 24837304.
- ^ PMID 19112922.
- ^ a b c d Seymour, Jasmine (2019). Baby Business. Magabala Books.
- JSTOR 2843680.
- ^ Jones, Graham (2014). "Indigenous medicine - a fusion of ritual and remedy". The Conversation. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
- ^ "How Did Australian Aboriginals Use Fire?". www.jenolancaves.org.au. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ a b Prober, Suzanne; Yuen, Emma; O'connor, Michael (2013). "Ngadju kala: Ngadju fire knowledge and contemporary fire management in the Great Western Woodlands". CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences. CSIRO.
- ^ JSTOR 40495601.
- ^ a b "The Duke and Duchess of Sussex learn about Indigenous culture on their 2018 Royal Tour". www.indigenous.gov.au. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
- ^ a b c "Aborigines help Pope beatify Australian with smoking ceremony". Chicago Tribune. 1995. p. 2.
- ^ John Paul II, Eucharistic concelebration for the beatification of Mother Mary Mackillop Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1995
- ^ Lee Lin Chin et al. The Annual Pride March Has Cloaked Melbourne in Colour, as Tens of Thousands Celebrated Sexual Diversity. N.p., 2017. Film.
- ^ Midsumma Festival Program 2020 https://www.midsumma.org.au/whats-on/
- .
- ^ Gredley, Rebecca (5 October 2020). "Vic's first Aboriginal senator sworn in". AAP General News Wire.
- ^ PMID 23563055.
- Epub 2017 Apr 10. PMID 28395396.
- PMID 25004464.