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Shamanism

Shamanism refers to a range of indigenous and traditional practices in which a shaman acts as an intermediary between the human community and the spirit world. Shamanic practitioners are found in many cultures across Asia, the Americas, Africa, and Oceania. Central features commonly include trance states induced by drumming, dancing, singing, fasting, or the use of psychoactive substances; journeying to non-ordinary reality to locate souls, retrieve lost power, or communicate with spirits; and performing healing, divination, and guidance for individuals and communities. Shamans may enter trance to diagnose illness, retrieve wholeness, influence weather or hunting fortunes, or settle disputes.

Shamanism is not a single organized religion but a set of related practices and beliefs that vary

In academic usage, shamanism describes a range of ethnographic phenomena and is often discussed in relation

between
cultures.
Common
concepts
include
a
cosmology
of
spirits,
ancestors,
and
animal
or
plant
spirit
helpers,
and
the
belief
that
illness
may
have
spiritual
or
social
causes.
Ritual
tools
such
as
drums,
rattles,
masks,
pipes,
and
other
ceremonial
objects;
purification
rites;
and
offerings
are
typical.
Shamans
may
be
chosen
by
spirits
or
initiated
through
training
and
testing.
to
organized
religions.
Neo-shamanism,
a
modern
adaptation,
appears
in
urban
settings
and
may
blend
traditional
elements
with
contemporary
spirituality.
Critiques
include
concerns
about
cultural
appropriation
and
misrepresentation.
The
term
derives
from
Siberian
languages,
where
it
denoted
a
ritual
specialist.