Prayers are called
ngillatunes. The prayers of the
machi are usually in their native Mapudungu language, although rituals and other situations will often see them use both Mapudungu and Spanish. There are often taboos on photographing traditional rituals. Prior to the Chilean colonial conquest of the Mapuche, there were an array of different ritual specialists.
Ngillatun The
ngillatun has been described as "the main rituals" of contemporary Mapuche religion. The whole community takes part in the
ngillatun rituals, which occur within a consecrated space. These involve prayers and animal sacrifices and are believed to maintain balance among cosmic forces and avoid catastrophe. The
ngillatun ritual is designed to ensure cosmic wholeness, and is often performed both before and after the harvest. The
ngillatuwe is the collective altar; it is also called
la cruza (the cross). It takes the form of a pole with the face and arms of either Ngünechen or an ancestor carved on it; it will face east and is thought to protect the community. A Catholic priest will often bless it after it has been erected. White and blue crosses, representing the powers of the sky, are often planted beside it. The
ngillatuwe represents an axis mundi. It is located inside the
ngillatun fields, which are deemed sacred and left uncultivated. If the
ngillatuwe is destroyed it is believed that catastrophe will befall both the person responsible and the community to whom it belongs. Until the early 20th century, the
ngillatun was often led by male community elders known as
ngenpin (orators). By the 21st century, the
ngenpin were still officiating in the Pewenche and Williche areas but
machi were instead doing so in the areas of the south-central valleys and the Andean foothills. The
ngillatun ritual can take over two days to complete. Those participating will typically wear Mapuche traditional clothing and may have their faces painted. During the ceremony, prayers are offered to Ngünechen, with offerings of maize, beans, and
muday placed at the foot of the
ngillatuwe. An animal such as a sheep would then be sacrificed. If the community is in danger and needs important messages,
machi will go into a trance at the
ngillatun but this does not always happen. Those assembled will dance both in rows and in a circle around the
ngillatuwe. Men on horseback perform the
awün, circling the dances in imitation of the sun.
Ritual specialists Historical accounts testify to a range of different types of ritual specialist active among Mapuche communities prior to the late 19th century. European colonial accounts indicate that the most important specialists at the time were the
ampivoe or
ampivavoe who invoked spirits for healing purposes, and the
voiguebuyes or
voiguevoyes tasked with influencing ancestral spirits and combatting witchcraft. The scholar Ricardo Latcham suggested that the
ngenpin replaced the role of the
voiguebuyes prior to the 19th century.
Machi By the end of the 20th century, the dominant ritual specialist in Mapuche traditional religion was the
machi, a figure who is tasked with healing, divination, and participating in certain other rituals. In English language studies, various anthropologists have called the
machi "
shamans", although the term "shamanism" has never received a commonly agreed definition and has been used in at least four distinct ways. The
machi are believed to obtain their powers from various natural and ancestral spirits, as well as from Ngünechen. They also draw on the power of special locations, such as waterfalls, lakes, volcanoes, and the rock. They embody and travel with a spirit called a
machi püllü as well as having an ancestral spirit of all the
machi, the
filew. Mapuche traditionalists believe that the
machi are capable of using their powers for either good or evil, thus existing on a spectrum of good to bad. Mapuche traditionalists believe that the spirits call certain individuals to become
machi, sending them dreams (
pewma) and visions (
perimontum). The spirits may inflict an illness on the person, the
machikutran, which can include boils, fever, foaming at the mouth, insomnia, partial blindness, and partial paralysis. The
machikutran is only alleviated by their initiation as a
machi through the
machiluwün ritual. As the spirits are insistent, it is thought difficult for a person to resist them, although some people do. Through visions and dreams, the spirits reveal the use of herbs to the prospective machi and then give them their ritual tools for healing, such as the drum and their spirit animals.
Machis may experience their initiation through various ways. They may inherit their
machi spirit from a deceased machi from their material family; experience direct initiation in the midst of a powerful natural event like an earthquake or lightning; or they may experience a vision called the
perimontum in which a spirit appears before them. Those who have gained initiation through the latter two methods are considered more powerful although also more morally ambiguous. The trance states entered by the
machi are called
küymi. During their rituals they typically perceive themselves as being possessed by a spirit. During possession, the spirit mounts the
machi's head, a process called the
longkoluupan. Sometimes, the possessing spirit is thought to convey messages from Ngünechen. The words spoken in a possessed trance state may then be interpreted by an individual, often a family members, called the
dungumachife. This
dungumachife will elicit information about a patient's illness and treatment. Together, the
machi and
dungumachife are sometimes seen to represent the Ñuke Dios and Chaw Dios respectively. Some
machi use hallucinogens during their rituals, namely
palo de bruja or seeds of the
miyaya or
chamico, although other
machis are critical of this practice. As each
machi is regarded as the "spiritual bride" of their
filew, they wear female-associated clothing, including blue or purple head scarves, black shawls, and silver jewellery. Bacigalupo noted that this meant that
machis engaged in a form of "ritual transvestism".
Machi may have sexual relationships or remain celibate; in Chilean culture they are stereotyped as homosexuals. Some find the burden of being a
machi too much and abandon the profession. The
machi has to periodically renew their powers through the
ngeykurewen rituals or they will become ill. The
ngeykurewen ritual entails renewing the ritualist's marriage ties with their
filew.
Rewe At their home,
machis will have a timber pole called a
rewe ("the purest"), alternatively referred to as the
foye or
canelo. This usually consists of the trunk of a laurel or oak tree, into which steps have been notched. Branches of
klon,
triwe,
foye, or
coligüe will often be tied to the side. The
rewe represents the axis mundi of the world, a nexus between the human and spirit worlds, and is positioned to face east. The
filew is believed to live in the
rewe; kopiwe flowers, food, drink, and herbal remedies, all things regarded as female, are placed on or around the
rewe to feed the
rewe, while knives, volcanic rocks, and chueca sticks, all things thought male, are places atop the
rewe and on its steps to protect the
filew from evil spirits. It is on this pole that the
machi travels to other worlds while in a trance state; during rituals, the
machis ascend the steps on the
rewe to inform their audience that they have entered their visionary flight. Some
machis put a
llang llang, a rainbow-shaped arch made from vines, above the
rewe; it represents their connection with forest spirits. After the
ngeykurewen, many
machis place their old
rewe into a river to decay, replacing it with a new one; other
machis believe that their
rewe should only be deposited in a river after their deaths. The
machi uses a shallow drum called a
kultrun. This consists of a laurel or oak bowl with goatskin stretched across it, and is often conceptualised as a womb. Often, four items are placed inside the drum; two of these are regarded as male and may include darts, bullets, foye leaves, charcoal or volcanic rocks, while the other two are regarded as female and can include maize, seeds, wool, or kopiwe flowers. The goatskin will be decorated with a painted cross, representing the
meli witran mapu, or fourfold division of the world.
Kalku In Mapuche society, harmful
witchcraft is called
kalkutun or, in Spanish,
brujeria. The witch or sorcerer themselves are called a
kalku. Mapuche society does not contain self-acknowledged
kalku. In Mapuche lore,
kalkutun can involve invoking harmful spirits through incantations; poisoning a victim by placing a substance called
fuñapue into their food or drink; by adding
fuñapue to an object associated with the victim, such as their hair, nail clippings, clothes, or belongings; or by putting cemetery earth on the place where the victim stands or sits. The
fuñapue substance was composed of nails, hair, poisonous herbs, cemetery soil, parts of decomposing animal corpses, or pieces of worms, lizards, or frogs. Mapuche who believe themselves afflicted by
kalkutun will often hire a
machi to counteract it. In the Mapuche traditional worldview, the
kalku and the
machi play a role in balancing the conflicting forces in the cosmos. The religion holds that the most powerful
kalku are
machi who succumbed to those evil spirits they were fighting. Those
machi who transgress social norms or acquire significant wealth and prestige are sometimes accused of being
kalku. Non-Mapuche, or
wingka, or often assumed to be
kalku, as they are perceived as being wealthier than most Mapuche and as valuing individual gain above communal well-being.
Divination The
machi perform
divination rituals, the latter referred to as
pewuntun.
Healing Various traditional health practitioners exist in Mapuche society, including
machis,
meicas (traditional healers),
yerbateras (herbalists),
hueseros (bonesetters), and
suerferos (diviners). Their practices are often religiously syncretic, reflecting Christian influence. The
machi's task is to diagnose the cause of an illness. To do this they will look into their patient's eyes, examine urine samples, drum over their worn clothes, or conduct the uluntun, a diagnostic ritual involving prayers, massages, and rattles. They will determine which deity,
kalku, or
wekufe is responsible for the ailment and how to treat it. Some evil spirits are then dispersed from the person they are harming and sent back to the individual believed to have originally sent them. The
machi healing ceremonies are called
datun. The patient will pay the
machi for this service; some
machis have set fees, while others leave the payment to their client's discretion. Mapuche traditionalists believe that all plants have sacred powers, and they are often collected for use in healing. Some plants are thought to have the fourfold qualities of Ngünechen.
Machi may place a coin where they have taken cuttings of plants.
Funerals and the dead A funeral is called an
awn. Members of the reservation often feel obliged to attend the funeral, with non-attendance casting suspicion that they may have had a hand in the individual's death. The funeral ceremony is designed to rid the living both of the deceased person's spirit and other malevolent spirits that may be lurking around at that time; if the spirit lingers among the living after death it is at risk of being captured by a witch and used for malevolent ends. During the ceremony, the ancestors are invoked and called on to protect the spirit of the recently deceased individual. ==History==