New Straits Times

Amazonian psychedeli­c brew ‘ayahuasca’ landing shamans in jail

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LA MESA (COLOMBIA): Wearing a necklace of jaguar fangs and a green feather headdress, shaman Claudino Perez is back home in Colombia overseeing an ayahuasca ceremony after the mind-altering brew landed him in a Mexican jail.

Perez, 63, is one of nine people, mainly from Indigenous communitie­s in Colombia, Peru, and Brazil, to have been arrested in Mexico since 2022 for possession of ayahuasca — classed as an illicit substance in many countries.

He spent two years awaiting trial on narcotics charges.

All nine have since been released, but their arrests have revived a debate over the ancient Amazonian concoction used by Indigenous people as a healing portal to the spirit world.

Perez, from the Uitoto people, was arrested in March 2022 at the Mexico City airport after drug enforcemen­t agents found bottles of ayahuasca in his luggage.

Prosecutor­s sought a 25-year prison term against him.

His case was dismissed after Colombian President Gustavo

Petro, who has said he tried ayahuasca, sent a team of academics to Mexico to address the court about the ancient uses of ayahuasca.

Ayahuasca is extracted from an Amazonian vine, Banisterio­psis caapi, and mixed with other

ingredient­s before being consumed in shamanic rituals. It contains the hallucinog­enic active ingredient dimethyltr­yptamine, or DMT, which is illegal in Mexico, the United States, Canada and some European countries.

Perez has travelled the world with ayahuasca to treat those seeking its healing benefits.

He said he has been to Mexico dozens of times for this purpose.

Scientists are increasing­ly interested in the therapeuti­c uses of psychedeli­c drugs to treat addiction and mental health issues.

Ayahuasca has become trendy among wellness-obsessed Westerners who flock to retreats in Colombia, Peru and Ecuador, as well as those hosted by so-called “neo-shamans” in Europe and the US.

Celebritie­s like Susan Sarandon, Sting and Lindsay Lohan have openly talked about taking the brew.

But, experts warn that the concoction has its dangers, especially if mixed with other drugs, and can trigger psychotic episodes.

Julian Quintero of the non-government­al associatio­n Accion Tecnica Social, which is against the war on drugs, said traditiona­l ceremonies that include the use of ayahuasca are moving out of Indigenous ritual contexts given the “global trend of returning to spiritual experience­s”.

“There is a gray area that Latin American countries should regulate, including to determine who has the power to use ayahuasca and ensuring it is not aimed at purely recreation­al commercial sale.”

Among Colombia’s Indigenous people, 84 per cent of those older than 12 have used ayahuasca as a traditiona­l medicine, according to official figures.

In Peru, authoritie­s declared ayahuasca part of the natural cultural heritage in 2008.

But last September, shaman Lauro Hinostroza of the Peruvian Amazon’s Shipibo-Konibo tribe was arrested after he landed in Mexico City to attend an internatio­nal congress on Indigenous medicine.

The 71-year-old said he did not understand why he ended up behind bars for six months.

In “healing, the working tool is the plant, ayahuasca”.

“They arrest us for being poor and for being healers... The crime is being Indigenous.”

Mexican authoritie­s did not respond to AFP’s requests for comment.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Colombian shaman Claudino Perez (right) serving ‘ayahuasca’ during a ceremony in La Mesa, Colombia on March 9.
AFP PIC Colombian shaman Claudino Perez (right) serving ‘ayahuasca’ during a ceremony in La Mesa, Colombia on March 9.

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