Truro News

Peruvian mob kills Canadian blamed for Indigenous elder’s killing

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A 41-year-old Canadian who travelled to Peru to study hallucinog­enic medicine was killed by a mob in a remote corner of the Amazon rain forest after people blamed him for the slaying of an elderly shaman, authoritie­s said Sunday.

Peru’s attorney general’s office said Sebastian Woodroffe was dragged by the neck shortly after the killing of Olivia Arevalo, an octogenari­an plant- healer from the Shipibo-konibo tribe of northeaste­rn Peru. Officials backed away from initial reports that Woodroffe was the principal suspect in Arevalo’s killing.

Arevalo and Woodroffe were both killed Thursday in the indigenous community of Victoria Gracia, officials said. But police did not begin to investigat­e until a cellphone video appeared in local media showing a man purported to be Woodroffe begging for mercy while being dragged between thatch-roofed homes. He was then left motionless on the muddy ground.

On Saturday, officials dug up Woodroffe’s body from an unmarked grave where he had been hastily buried.

Every year thousands of foreign tourists travel to the Peruvian Amazon to experiment with ayahuasca – a bitter, dark-coloured brew made of a mixture of native plants.

The hallucinog­enic cocktail, also known as yage, has been venerated for centuries by indigenous tribes in Brazil, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia as a cure for all sorts of ailments. It’s also increasing­ly consumed by Western tourists looking for mindalteri­ng experience­s, sometimes with deadly consequenc­es.

Arevalo was a staunch defender of indigenous people’s rights in the region. She also practised a traditiona­l form of singing medicine that the Shipibo believe removes negative energies from individual­s and a group alike.

She can be heard singing a traditiona­l plant song on the website of the Temple of the Way of Lights, which describes itself as a plant-shamanic healing centre in the Peruvian Amazon.

Woodroffe, from Vancouver Island, said before going to Peru that he hoped an apprentice­ship with a plant healer from the Shipibo tribe would help his goal of changing careers to become an addiction counsellor using hallucinog­enic medicine.

“The plant medicine I have the opportunit­y of learning is far deeper than ingesting a plant and being healed. It is not about getting ‘high’ either. It is true some of the plants I will be learning about do have a perception-altering effect, but these are a few plants out of thousands I will be working with,” he wrote on the Indiegogo crowd-funding website seeking financial help to advance his studies.

“I am in this for the long haul. This is more than a ‘job’ to me. I want not only for people to recover ... I want to turn them on to the wonders of existence, and have them leave as a renewed friend and lover of this thing we call life.”

In December 2015, Winnipeg resident Joshua Stevens fatally stabbed a fellow tourist from England after the two drank ayahuasca together in a spiritual ceremony a few hours’ drive from where Woodroffe was killed.

Stevens was 29 at the time and said he went to the Phoenix Ayahuasca retreat near the town of Iquitos looking for relief from a serious skin condition.

He and British tourist Unais Gomes, 25, drank a hallucinog­enic brew, but things quickly went wrong, Stevens told CTV Winnipeg.

Gomes attacked the Canadian and two workers at the retreat with a large butcher knife and Stevens said he was forced to make a life-or-death decision to stab the British man, who died a short time later.

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