Showing posts with label Big Island. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Island. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

I don't believe in voodoo, but I don't mess with those who do

Black magic used to make predictions (wikimedia commons)
Black magic used to make predictions (wikimedia commons)

Carol Forsloff--“I'm not much into the occult,” she said, as a group of people were discussing everything from tarot cards to a Malaysian Airlines missing plane's whereabouts as someone speculated it might have been taken by aliens. “Actually,” and she laughed as she said this, “I don't believe in voodoo, but I don't mess with those who do.”



Black magic, like other areas of the occult, remains a common practice in some cultures. But whereas most people don't practice this themselves, they are reluctant to tangle with someone who does. Beverly had said what her beliefs are with regard to occult practices, and a review of the literature and research, as well as surveys of opinions, has found most people are like Beverly. They may not be practitioners or believers in occult practices or the paranormal but remain curious at the same time, while considering the potential of the negative as harmful enough not to antagonize anyone who might be that so-called witch or someone with the proverbial evil eye. Beverly expressed it more succinctly, when she remarked, “Who needs pins being pushed, then feeling the hurt and not knowing where it's coming from. I would rather just steer away from anyone like that or say nothing at all."



Some might say Beverly has the right idea. After all, even in some of the more progressive societies, there remains those segments of the culture who continue to practice black magic. India is an example of this. The country is considered to have mostly progressive ideas, however black magic remains part of the culture of many people, with others tacitly believing in parts of the practice, although not necessarily all of the essential elements.



In India, as an example, in 2012 incidents of killings showed the practice of black magic continues in the country. In West Bengal the body of a local Ayurveda doctor was found near a temple with his head near a crematorium with flowers, blood and incense. Police declared this to be the result of local black magic. In another city to the South, police detained 14 members of a black magic cult who had been accused of cheating people. A year before, in a remote village in India, a childless couple was arrested for killing five young boys on the advice of a black magic practitioner who had told them that by killing the boys “it would help the woman conceive.”



One might think that the practice and involvement in black magic might just appeal to the poor and ill-educated, but among the recipients of black magic help are well-educated people as well as entertainers and people of great wealth. Many either participate or among those who “don't mess with those who do.”



People of the Solomon Islands are for the most part Christian. They retain, however, some practices that are borderline or outside mainstream Christian beliefs. Ancestors are considered to have special powers, as an example. They will use ancestors as mediators when they pray to God. Although modern medicine is used and respected, so are traditional healers, many of whom still practice black magic in order to help the sick or the dying. 



Island cultures, consisting of those people who have had relatively less exposure to the modern world, or exposure only within less than 200 years, often retain many traditional practices. Like religious people in mainstream churches may be eclectic in their beliefs and practices, this is particularly true of people who have been raised in island cultures. In Hawaii, the island state of the United States, most people are Christian or belong to one of the mainstream Asian religions such as Buddhism, belief in ancestors and animism retains a position alongside mainstream churches and temples. People consider stones, certain amulets, particular phrases, behaviors or positions to have certain powers. Even large environmental features are given respect for having the power to reward and punish. Pele, the volcano goddess of the Big Island, Hawaii, is of special significance to virtually everyone on the island, as well as those people who travel there from the other islands or outside Hawaii. Pele is said to live in the craters of the Big Island's volcano Kilauea. The goddess, according to legend, descended from the supreme beings of Earth Mother and Wakea, Sky Father. Local people admonish visitors not to antagonize Pele, which often means not taking that piece of lava rock home. Otherwise, people say, Pele will wreak vengeance on those who dare to take what belongs to her.



What happens to those unfortunate folks who carry something home with them, that local folks would say belongs to Pele, like that ordinary piece of sandstone or lava? The lava stones are said to be so filled with power that they can be dangerous. So there remains the current belief that taking them from the islands will bring misfortune on those visitors who test Pele's wrath by taking some of those rocks home as souvenirs. Hawaii retains some of that old black magic belief, despite its modernization; and not just those born in the islands will echo that belief. Many mainlanders who settle in Hawaii will also admonish visitors not to take home those objects that belong to the land—anywhere, for the ancestors may be angry if you do.



Within mainstream religions there are those who practice a form of black magic based on mainstream religious practices. One of the practices is the Black Mass, the purpose of which is to profane the sacraments. The candles are black, and the crucifix turned upside down. The ceremony itself parodies the sacraments and the mass. Alastair Crowley, who has written about occult practices including the Black Mass, tells the best known of these ceremonies is the “Mass of Saint Secaire.” It's purpose, Crowley tells us, is to “cause an enemy to wither away.”



Even in Islam there are black magic practices. Islamic exorcism provides for a way to rid a person from demons and the spirits of possession. Like Christian groups, there are Islamic ones that also practices in some ways various occult beliefs or will offer credence to some of them.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Tom Peek’s ‘Daughters of Fire,’ offers Hawaiian adventure through prism of survival

[caption id="attachment_20658" align="alignleft" width="219"]Daughters of Fire Daughters of Fire[/caption]

Carol Forsloff----Most people carry a fantasy view of Hawaii, from literature and occasional visits to the islands, of palm trees, soft sands and lovely maidens, woven into tales that seldom capture much beyond island myths.  But Tom Peek, author of  Daughters of Fire, has done more than write a captivating story, as he weaves into his narrative the essence of Hawaiian culture fused with knowledge from his own submersion in living and working with the local people.

An interview with Peek at the Benson Hotel, one of Portland’s best-known and one of its most historic places in Oregon , reinforced this writer’s own perceptions and affections for Hawaii.  Peek is more than a teller of tales but a man of deeply held feelings that he expresses well in conversation that establishes knowledge of history, culture, and environment.

The book Daughters of Fire tells the story of modern Hawaii, with its political problems and controversies.  Peek brings it to life through his experience and knowledge, gleaned from years of studying with local Hawaiians and living among them as brother and friend.  His book reflects his passion and respect for Hawaii, most especially the Big Island, site of Hawaii’s famous and feared volcanoes.

In recounting the mysteries and mystique of Hawaii, Peek is able to draw from his own experience from living on an island in Minnesota as well as more than 25 years of residency in Hawaii, which he calls home and where he has worked closely with the local people.  As a writer for the Kilauea Visitors Center, Peek has had an ongoing intimacy with the elders, or Kapuna, of the Big Island of Hawaii.

Murder, romance, crime, disaster as well as colorful and memorable characters create the drama that unfolds against the backdrop of Hawaii in “Daughters of Fire”.  The volcanoes are central to the story, both in how local people revere the spirits of their ancestors and link the behaviors of the island environment as an over-flowing stream that connects everyone both past and present.

How long does it take an author to write a book of more than 500 pages?  Peek maintains it requires a lifetime that includes one’s writing history, observations of people and events, joined with the interaction with the material itself in the actual act of producing a book.

Peek had been a writer long before making a home in Hawaii.  30 years ago he had worked in sustainability, and one of his mentors was one of the first to testify on global warming.   Peek became a writer on fiscal policy at the Center for Urban and Regional Affairs at the University of Minnesota, armed with a Masters degree in Public Affairs from the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs.  He became disillusioned during the Reagan area and moved to Polynesia.  It was there Peek says his faith in human nature was restored by the unique culture and aloha of the people he met in Hawaii.

From growing up on a small island in Minnesota called Grey Cloud, Island, Peek had learned to respect nature, as others like him do and for whom nature can be a significant force in island living.  When he arrived in Hawaii, he met traditional people among the Hawaiians who hold the same appreciation for nature he had learned from living on Grey Cloud.   Island ways of viewing nature and man as closely connected is a dominant theme of Daughters of Fire. As Peek observes, “Islanders don't see God as having created man separate from nature.  Global warming is a spiritual question.  We have to discover how we can find solutions.  My book is about looking at ideas through a prism of Hawaiian culture that can help Westerners in their own crisis.”

Peek’s ability to capture Hawaii beautifully and accurately comes from experiences of island life both in Hawaii and Minnesota.   His observations and affections specific to Hawaiian culture come from years of working and socializing with a diverse group of people, crossing cultural influences that allow the writer to have gained the wealth of details, perspective, and emotional connections to write a book that truly represents the culture and traditions of Hawaii.

Peek immersed himself in Hawaiian culture, interacted with experts in it, while he traveled through the geographical locations depicted in Daughters of Fire.  He heard and witnessed the pain the Hawaiians felt at the changes taking place, the greater and greater incursion of the modern world and its materialism on a culture where man-made environmental disturbances are in opposition to island living and that sense of oneness in the community.   His geographical knowledge comes from his work as an eruption ranger and writer for Mauna Kea and Kilauea.   He shares this knowledge and perspective with the reader in a far more knowledgeable and detailed manner than other writers who visited Hawaii occasionally, such as James Michener and Robert Louis Stevenson.

For many writers who have composed short stories or books, the focus is usually on the story itself.    Daughters of Fire, however,  is more than a story.  It is a message about man’s connection to the environment which is important for man’s ultimate survival.  As Peek said in this interview, “The man-made aspects of climate change would not have occurred if people treated the environment as they do in Hawaiian culture.  Their nature would never create global warming.  That’s why it is important to look at the Hawaiian culture and other traditional cultures, to help Westerners get through their malaise.  Western culture is in crisis, and people don’t know how to respond.  Traditional cultures have characteristics that can help Westerners find their way. The best solutions may come from traditional culture. “

Peek goes on to explain that a cursory glance or passing interest in traditional cultures is insufficient in modeling behaviors, as it is more than wisdom one can find there.  Hawaiians trust intuition, as Westerners rely on science.    With tears in his eyes, Peek said, “I learned to appreciate what aloha means from the Kapunas.  Aloha is a love of the community, the family.  The Hawaiian word for family, ‘ohana,’ means far more than the Western concept, as it embraces the entire community as it fuses with nature.    In the Western world materialism and over-stimulation take people away from their natural environment.  In Hawaii, relationship is important, and Hawaiians are less likely to spend most of their time on the Internet.  Progress needs to be redefined and traditional ideas should be part of the future.”

Peek’s book, Daughters of Fire, not only captures the very soul of Hawaiian culture, but creates an absorbing tale where those “daughters”, especially the three who guide and support the PhD anthropologist whose work and witness inspires the adventures of the book,  respond with the strength  emanating from the mystical force of the female Goddess,  Madam Pele.  The personal courage of those daughters, and their intuition and knowledge, help shape the Big Island and its people as in some ways it seems to have guided the writing of Daughters of Fire.

Find the mystery, adventure, excitement and wisdom from this must-read novel.  It’s not just the thrill of the ride that will stay with you but the feeling of wonderment that life as it seems in the modern world can find a better way by using the best of the world’s traditional people, as in Hawaii.

The following are links from the website www.daughtersoffire.com, reflecting the awards and accolades the book has already received:

  • 2013 North American Author Tour
    Daughters of Fire

  • Daughters of Fire Makes New York Debut at Book Expo America

  • Daughters of Fire Wins National Indie Publishers’ Award

  • Daughters of Fire Featured at 2013 Hawaiʻi Book & Music Festival

  • Hana hou reading during Hawaiʻi’s Merrie Monarch Hula Festival