J.D. and Usha Vance at their Hindu wedding. |
"The academic study of Indic religions, and of yoga, has been intimately tied to questions
regarding the role of psychoactive substances from an early stage. This is particularly with
respect to soma, a sacred beverage utilized within the Vedic tradition," writes Stuart Ray Sarbacker, Professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Philosophy at Oregon State University, in his paper "Psychoactives and Psychedelics in Yoga: Historical Contexts and Contemporary Culture."
Dr. Sarbacker continues, "The role and nature of the beverage referred to as soma in the Vedic tradition of fire
sacrifice (yajña) and its purported psychoactivity has been thoroughly investigated within and
outside of Indology. ... Soma is revered as a sacred beverage and as a deity, said to confer visionary experience and
immortality upon the brāhmaṇa who ritually consumes it. Soma is identified as amṛta, literally
the elixir of 'nondeath,' of immortality, a name resonating through the millennia of later Hindu
narrative and discourse. There are various hypotheses as to the botanical identity of soma, some
of the leading candidates being ephedra, peganum harmala (Syrian rue), cannabis, poppy, mead
or wine, ergot, amanita muscaria (Fly Agaric mushroom), psilocybe cubensis (Magic
Mushroom), and an ayahuasca analog."
Chris Bennett, Lynn Osburn & Judy Osburn write in their book Green Gold The Tree of Life: Marijuana in Magic & Religion, "Descriptions of haoma, or soma, list it as yellow or gold-like in color, the color of ripe cannabis in the Middle East and India. Source material on the subject also tells us that 'the intoxicating juice of the haoma herb found on their mountain slopes' grew in the Hindu Kush mountains and valleys, a place that is still famed for its powerful ganja."
Harris (top left) wearing a sari. |
Sarbacker writes that the terminology of cannabis in Hindu tradition is "exclusively feminine in gender" and includes a scope of conceptualizations, including as “the root of Śiva” (śivamūla),
“conquerer” (vijayā), “breaker [of disease]” (bhaṅginī), “intoxicator” (gañjā), “perfected”
(siddhā), and “root of perfection” (siddhamūlikā), as well as the soma-like appellation of “sweet
nectar” (madhudravā)."
Perhaps one of these Hindu women now prominent in US politics will somehow bring us back to the spiritual teachings of the soma, as well as the bhangini and ganja, and the vijaya. According to the LA Times. Shyamala Gopalan (Kamala's mother) was a Tamil Brahmin, part of priest class. Usha's mother is named for the Hindu goddess Lakshmi, also known as Kamala.
Hindu groups sought an apology from Harris's niece in 2020 for tweeting out an image of her aunt as the Hindu goddess Durga in her destroyer mode defeating Trump. The tweet said, "I am actually speechless, other than to say the first day of Navaratri was LIT." Navaratri, the festival of Durga, will be celebrated this year from October 3 - 12, in time for the election, and a new kind of October Surprise?
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