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Article discussing the possibility of A. muscaria being the legendary Soma - based mostly on Wasson's research Amanita Muscaria as the God/Plant Soma of the Rigvedaby Michael S. Smith
For nearly 150 years Vedic Scholars have been in search of the mysterious
plant of the Rigveda known as Soma
The idea that Soma was a fungus, specifically the red capped Amanita
muscaria mushroom, was first presented by the ethno-mycologists R. Gordon
Wasson and his wife Valentina Wasson in the 1960’s and published in their
1968 volume Soma: The Divine Mushroom of Immortality. A number of theories
as to the identification of Soma had been circulating for years, but all were
found to lack similarities to the poetic descriptions of plant described in
the Rigveda. Some plants offered up as being Soma were Bhang (Cannabis),
Rhubarb, Periploca aphylla, Sarcostemma brevistigma, and Ephedra vulgaris, to
mention just a few, with Peganum harmala being the most recent suspect. Some
of the strongest evidence suggesting these could not be Soma is that the
Rigveda makes no mention of the divine plant having any roots, leaves,
blossoms, or seeds. What we do find in the Rigveda though is poetic
references to attributes that could be applied to a mushroom. To see these
attributes we must first have an understanding of where the Amanita muscaria
mushroom grows and what it looks like.
The Amanita grows in a mycorrhizal relationship with a number of different
trees, specifically the pines, firs, and above all, the birches, from which
the mushroom must feed from. Being temperate climate trees that grow in
cooler climates we can assume that the Amanita grows in higher elevations
surrounding the northern portions of the Indian peninsula, specifically the
Hindu Kush range and the Himalayan mountains. The Rigveda repeatedly states
that Soma grows high in the mountains and nowhere else. For example, Mandala
V 43 states that Soma is a “plant from the mountain...,” and Mandala IX 46
says that Soma is “seated on the mountain top...” With the placement of Soma
in the high mountains it would be naive to assume that Soma could be the
previously mentioned plants that all grow in the lush valleys or the arid
flatlands.
Understanding the great importance of Soma in Vedic culture why is it that
in modern India there is agreement that what are being used in the sacrifices
are Soma substitutes? Could it be that the Ar-yan, in their migration from
the northern highlands into the low lying valleys and flatlands, had no way
of bringing the plant with them because of its inability to be cultivated due
to its need for a mycorrhizal relationship with trees that only grow in the
highland?
The Amanita muscaria itself is a bright red mushroom that has woolly white
spots on its top that are fragments of the veil from which the mushroom
emerges as it explodes out of the ground. These wool like spots, which
resemble warts, lent to this mushrooms designation as a “toadstool.” The
Amanita can grow up to 8 inches tall and nearly 10 inches in diameter once it
has fully opened its parasol.
An indication that Soma might be the red Amanita is that Soma is described
as being like the sun. “He (Soma) has clothed himself with the fire-bursts
of the sun...” (Mandala IX 17). Even before it has fully opened the Amanita
can remind one easily of the sun, its white spots seen as the orbs rays.
Mandala IX 86 states that “Soma envelopes himself all around with the rays
of the sun...” Soma has even been compared to the brilliance of lightning
(Mandala IX 22), causing the poet to declare, “make me burn like fire started
by friction” (Mandala VIII 48). W.L. Reese, in his Dictionary of Philosophy
and Religion, states that “Agni (Soma) represents the trinity of earthly
fire, lightning, and sun. In this extended sense he was the mediator between
the gods and man.” As in many other cultures it seems possible that a
hallucinogen, in this case Amanita muscaria, was the doorway to entering the
realm of the gods.
A common metaphor for Soma is the bull, the Rigveda’s symbol of strength.
“He (Soma) bellows, terrifying bull... the hide is of bull, the dress of
sheep” (Mandala IX 70). In Mandala IX 97 we find a reference to the “red
bull.” Might we assume that the skin of the mushroom represents the red hide
of the bull, while the woolly spots represent the “dress of sheep”? Many
references to a cows udder can also be found in the Rigveda. Since Soma was
“milked” of its juice it seems possible that the Amanita itself could be this
udder. This becomes all the more plausible if one has seen an immature
Amanita. No doubt to a poetically inspired mind the Amanita could suggest a
cows udder. Even the stalk, or amsu, is likened to a teat. “When the
swollen amsu were milked like cows with full udders...” (Mandala VIII 9).
What is also interesting is that the “milk” of Soma is described as a tawny
yellow color, a color much closer to cows milk, and to the expressed juice of
an Amanita, than would be the green juice of a chlorophyll producing plant.
Another interesting reference is to Soma’s being a single eye. “Quickened
by the seven minds, he (Soma) has encouraged the rivers free of grief, which
have strengthened his single eye” (Mandala IX 9). And in Mandala IX 97,
“Soma who has for eye the sun.” Though further evidence suggesting that the
Amanita is the single eye is lacking Wasson simply asks us to examine an
Amanita and inquire if a creeping vine or Rhubarb could fulfill the concept
of the single eye so fittingly as the red capped Amanita. Another Mandala
about the eye helps bring together the many metaphors descriptive of Soma.
"I have drunk the navel (Soma) into the navel (stomach) for our sake."
Indeed, the eye is altogether with the sun. I have milked the child of the
wise” (Mandala IX 10). In this quote we can see the many metaphors at play,
the navel, a word with an archaic history in many cultures and which often
has the dual meaning of a mushroom, the eye, which can signify both its shape
and its power to open up ones sight, the sun, of which the red cap could
represent, and the milking, which is what was done with Soma and which fits
into the udder concept of Soma.
The most interesting, and probably the strongest supporting evidence that
Amanita muscaria is the divine Soma is the mentioning in the Rigveda of there
being two forms of Soma. “With those two forms which stand facing us, O
Soma, thou reignest over all things” (Mandala IX 66). Wasson in his studies
of Amanita use in other cultures also came across two forms of Amanita. The
first being the expressed juice of a fresh or re-hydrated mushroom, and the
second being the urine of those who have drunk the juice. The best example
of urine drinking after the ingestion of Amanita mushrooms comes from Filip
Johann von Strahlenberg’s studies of the Siberian Koryak tribe in the early
1700’s. Strahlenberg states that when the Koryak,"make a feast, they pour water upon some of these mushrooms, and boil them. They then drink the liquor, which intoxicates them; the poorer sort, who cannot afford to lay in a store of these mushrooms, post themselves, on these occasions, round the huts of the rich, and watch for the opportunity of the guest coming down to make water; and then hold a wooden bowl to receive the urine, which they drink off greedily, as having still some virtue of the
mushroom in it, and by this way they also get drunk."
Since the Amanita’s psychoactive principle are altered very little by
passing through the human body the possibility of interpreting the Rigveda’s
references to a second form of Soma being urine is simplified. I hope this
one quote will allow a deeper understanding of Wasson’s thesis. “Soma, storm
cloud imbued with life, is milked of ghee (milk). Navel of the Way, Immortal
Principle, he sprang into life in the far distance. Acting in concert, those
charged with the office, richly gifted, do full honor to Soma. The swollen
men piss the flowing Soma” (Mandala IX 74).
Though many more Mandala’s in the Rigveda itself can be better interpreted
in the light of Amanita muscaria, and more information about its use in other
cultures could be examined, it goes beyond the scope of this essay. I simply
believe that this beautiful mushroom is the best explanation of Soma to date
and should be taken serious by all scholars interested in the divine Soma of
the Rigveda.
"The Fly-Agaric (Amanita muscaria) produces intoxication, hallucination, and
delirium. Light forms of intoxication are accompanied by a certain degree of
animation and some spontaneity of movements. Many Shamans, previous to their
seances, eat the Fly-Agaric to get into ecstatic states... Under strong
intoxication the senses become deranged; surrounding objects appear either
very large or very small, hallucinations set in, spontaneous movements and
convulsions. So far as I could observe, attacks of great animation alternate
with moments of deep depression. The person intoxicated by the Fly-Agaric
sits quietly rocking from side to side, even taking part in conversations
with his family. Suddenly his eyes dilate, he begins to gesticulate
convulsively, converses with persons whom he imagines he sees, sing, and
dances. Then an interval of rest sets in again. However, to keep up the
intoxication additional doses of the fungus are necessary... There is reason
to think that the effects of the Fly-Agaric would be stronger were not its
alkaloids quickly taken out of the organism with the urine. The Koryak knows
this by experience, and the urine of the persons intoxicated with the
Fly-Agaric is not wasted. The drunkard himself drinks it to prolong his
hallucinations, or he offers it to others as a treat." - Waldemar Jochelson, Early 1900’s
Wasson, R. Gordon. Soma: The Divine Mushroom of Immortality. Harcourt Brace
Jovanovick, Inc., 1968.
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