A Culture's Catalyst - Historical Encounters with Peyote and the Native American Church in Canada placeholder

A Culture's Catalyst

Historical Encounters with Peyote and the Native American Church in Canada

By Fannie Kahan
Introduction by Erika Dyck
With Abram Hoffer, Duncan Blewett, Humphry Osmond, and Teodoro Weckowicz
Categories: History, Indigenous Studies, Religious Studies, Indigenous History
Publisher: University of Manitoba Press
Hardcover : 9780887552021, 176 pages, May 2016
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780887555060, May 2016
Ebook (PDF) : 9780887555084, 176 pages, May 2016
Paperback : 9780887558146, 176 pages, May 2016

Table of contents

Introduction

Ch. 1 Peyote—A Culture’s Catalyst: The Eternal Search
Ch. 2 The Great Bastion
Ch. 3 The Struggle for Peyote
Ch. 4 The Spiritual Herb
Ch. 5 Night in the Tipi
Ch. 6 The Psychedelic Experience in the Native American Church
Ch. 7 Peyote Ceremony and Jungian Archetypes
Ch. 8 Peyote: A Sacrament by Medical Prescription

Description

In 1956, pioneering psychedelic researchers Abram Hoffer and Humphry Osmond were invited to join members of the Red Pheasant First Nation near North Battleford, Saskatchewan, to participate in a peyote ceremony hosted by the Native American Church of Canada.

Inspired by their experience, they wrote a series of essays explaining and defending the consumption of peyote and the practice of peyotism. They enlisted the help of Hoffer’s sister, journalist Fannie Kahan, and worked closely with her to document the religious ceremony and write a history of peyote, culminating in a defense of its use as a healing and spiritual agent.

Although the text shows its mid-century origins, with dated language and at times uncritical analysis, it advocates for Indigenous legal, political and religious rights and offers important insights into how psychedelic researchers, who were themselves embattled in debates over the value of spirituality in medicine, interpreted the peyote ceremony. Ultimately, they championed peyotism as a spiritual practice that they believed held distinct cultural benefits.

“A Culture’s Catalyst” revives a historical debate. Revisiting it now encourages us to reconsider how peyote has been understood and how its appearance in the 1950s tested Native-newcomer relations and the Canadian government’s attitudes toward Indigenous religious and cultural practices.

Reviews

“An extraordinary and unreservedly recommended study.”

- Helen Dumont