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Traditional Healing and Ecotourism

by Brooke Gazer

By Brooke Gazer for The Eye Magazine

Traditional medicine has been around for centuries. In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in this area. Tierra Ventura Eco turismo is an ecotour company specializing in rural Oaxacan tours. Some of these tours involve the use of curanderos.

Curanderos or traditional healers

Claudia Schurr and Yves Chavan have been involved with traditional healers for the past twenty years. After they organized a workshop through the University of New Mexico, one of the instructors brought a group of students to Oaxaca. These students were interested in learning about alternative views of health. During that time, Tierra Ventura partnered with some NGOs who worked in remote parts of Oaxaca. Together they built an indigenous steam bath called a temazcal. They assisted in organizing workshops with traditional healers known as curanderos. They helped the indigenous create an independent income through tourism. Although these NGOs no longer exist, the contacts and deep friendships with the healers opened many doors for Claudia and her group.

Finding balance

Claudia says that traditional healing is fascinating. “When I first started bringing friends or clients to a curandero, I thought you must be physically sick because I didn’t want to waste the curandero’s time. Eventually I learned that traditional healing is based more on your spiritual health. In prehispanic times, there was no illness. There were only imbalances. A traditional healer is responsible for balances.”

Claudia has learned that your balance is between the spirit and the body. “They believe a trauma, an accident, or a strong emotion, brings you out of balance. This imbalance makes you physically sick, sometimes even years later. After your spirit gets sick, your body follows. Every emotion is linked to an organ. Sadness stays in your lungs. Anger in your liver. Fear in your kidneys.”

Cleansing rituals

Sometimes balance is restored though a “limpia”. This is a cleansing ritual where the healer uses herbs, cold water or mezcal, a chicken egg and fire or the smoke of copal to bring you back into balance. Temazcal, the indigenous steam bath, is another common form of cleansing. Each curandero has his or her own method. Some are guided by visions. Others read your iris. Some diagnose with the chicken egg. They may feel your pulse or read the fire or smoke, the earth, the water.  They work with ceremonies or rituals, with candles, healing with sacred plants, or through massages. There are a thousand ways to bring you back into balance.

Healing is a process

Claudia goes on to explain that getting back into balance is only where your healing begins. “It’s a process . . . difficult, devastating, lonely.  The healer only sustains you in your process. It involves far more than giving you an herbal tea or a tincture”.

I asked her if one might compare this process to modern-day psychotherapy.  She agreed. “Perhaps with some curanderos who work with your spirit, this may be like an old form of psychotherapy, but it is far more pragmatic.”

Claudia expressed some apprehension about commercializing the field of traditional medicine. “It’s a sensitive issue where I have to protect both sides; the client who looks for healing and also the healer. Most curanderos have had difficult lives and experiences. They made them what they are today. This is not a touristic experience.  We don’t want it to become one. There may be some who are curious, just wanting to experience something different. However,  some people are seriously seeking help. These are who we want to introduce to our curanderos”.

Tierra Ventura Ecotourism

Traditional medicine is only a small part of what Tierra Ventura Ecoturismo offers. Specializing in ecotours throughout the state of Oaxaca, the tour company organizes hiking tours and visits to remote places.  They travel in a vehicle. You don´t have to trek through the mountains unless you want to. Claudia explains “We want to show the “real” Oaxaca to our clients: the villages, the celebrations, the traditions, the mountains, the coast, the history and all those elements which tourists are not usually able to experience”. Claudia emphasizes that although they go off the beaten track, her tours are not too rustic for the average traveler. “We work with community projects and all of the villages have very nice, comfortable cabins with private bathrooms, fireplaces etc.”

For more information see their webpage www.tierraventura.com or contact them at info@tierraventura.com.

 

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