S
starcycle
Guest
After I was struck by lightning in 1979, a medicine man I know instructed me, and worked with me for several years, on rituals to aid myself in becoming more re-grounded to the earth. He was a very sweet and non-judgmental old shaman, who had no problem with white people participating in native rituals, provided that their heart was in the right place.
On the other hand, I lived with several (white) people back in the 1980's who were INVITED to participate in both sweat lodges and peyote rituals by some Native Americans they knew who led them. There were some very ultra sleezy Native Americans in that circle, who were VERY sexually inappropriate, using their power as leaders to manipulate and seduce the young white women. An ugly scene that I am very glad to have bypassed.
What makes something sacred is the intention behind it. When you learn that it's called wisdom.
We can go back and forth all day about who we each knew, what they each said, personal anecdotes, etc. and it's not likely to get us very far. It doesn't change the fundamental point regarding having respect for the culture.
Because even you just said, "provided that their heart was in the right place." That means that you listened to what he said, and you accepted it and presumably went along with it. You didn't spit in his face and say that what he said was crazy, and that the way it really was is some other way. You didn't take his rituals and then go turn them into something else, claiming it was "founded" on what he said it meant.
So the point you seem to be missing is that when a group of people takes the "old testament" and claims that it's saying something other than what the people whose book and culture it is say it means, then their "hearts" may or may not be in the "right place," but the point is that their actions certainly aren't. They are being violent, it's pretty much as simple as that. It would be akin to you taking whatever the medicine man gave you and doing something profane with it.
You wouldn't do that, would you? And yet you defend when people do that to the Torah. So it's kind of a double standard, but I guess sometimes that's hard for people to see.