Spirit-possession in theory and practice: séances with Tibetan spirit-mediums in Nepal

Authors

  • Per-Arne Berglie

Keywords:

Experience (Religion), Spirit possession, Seances, Trance, Ecstasy, Altered states of consciousness, Mediums, Shamanism -- Nepal, Tibetan Buddhism

Abstract

This paper describes a short study of the séances and trance-performances of three Tibetan spirit-mediums (dpa' bo) from a refugee-community in Nepal. The field-work on which this study is based was carried out in a Tibetan refugee-village in Nepal during 1970 and 1971. For each dpa' bo:  dBang phyug, Sri gcod, and Nyi ma don grub, a summary of personal thoughts and beliefs concerning possession is provided, followed by an example of how a séance was structured. A common feature is that when all the gods summoned have arrived, possession took place by the god most suited to carry out the task of the evening. The actual change of the ritual status of the spirit-medium is marked by the putting on of the headdress. From now on, until it falls off at the end of the séance, it is the god who speaks and acts through the medium, who afterwards claims that he has no recollection whatsoever of what then passes. A necessary condition for the activity of a spirit-medium is, of course, the conviction that their possession is genuine. Theoretically, when a dpa' bo has passed the period of calling and has been tested and has received the necessary training, this genuineness is proved. Of an established dpa' bo no further proofs are therefore required in addition to the satisfactory solution of the problems put to him at the séances. If, after all, someone has doubts about a dpa' bo, he can call a lama.
Section
Articles

Published

1982-01-01

How to Cite

Berglie, P.-A. (1982). Spirit-possession in theory and practice: séances with Tibetan spirit-mediums in Nepal. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 11, 151–166. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67136