Monday, February 14, 2011

Artefact of the Week: Poporos, Saving the World Since the First Millenium AD.

Poporo from the Gold Musem in Bogotá, Colombia
The artefacts of the week before (the Jamaican historic pipe and the Cuban Ídolo del Tabaco) were both connected to a certain drug. One was obviously linked to “sexuality” while the other is a symbol of power. This artefact of the week combines all these aspects and then some into one object.
This Colombian poporo of the archaeological culture we know as Quimbaya was probably made somewhere in the 4th to 7th century AD. It looks like it is made of gold, but it is actually tumbaga or guanín, which is an alloy of 80% gold and 19% copper with minor inclusions of silver. It is therefore yellower than most pure gold, much harder and has a distinct odour. Contrary to what may be expected, among indigenous peoples objects made from this alloy were far more appreciated than those made of pure gold . Before European contact the indigenous peoples of Colombia were widely renowned craft masters of tumbaga and pure gold objects and their beautiful creations can be found far from their Colombian homelands.
Aside from the fact that the material from which this particular object was made was highly valued, the poporo would have been an important personal artefact that was probably used for the ingestion of burned coca leaves and lime. We know this because using poporos in this way is a still surviving, longstanding tradition among Colombian indigenous peoples, especially those living in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. Part of the traditional dress of the men of these peoples consists of a gourd and a stick — probably organic poporos were used in the past as well, but they were not preserved, leaving only a few durable, gold examples. The gourd is filled with a mixture of burned coca leaves and lime which is scooped out of the gourd with the stick. Ingesting this mixture has a slight narcotic effect  although in no way comparable to the effects of using the party-drug cocaine, which also has coca leaves as raw material. A man will use his gourd multiple times per day in this way.
Taken from Reichel-Dolmatoff 1990
From ethnographic fieldwork, among for example the Kogui of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, we know that a poporo is given to a boy at his passage into adulthood and that he will not be willingly separated from his poporo for the rest of his life. The stick will be swiped clean after each use, so, over time, lime accretes on the top of the gourd. Therefore the poporo of an old man will have a thick crust of lime as can be seen in the picture below. So, it is actually possible to estimate the age of a certain person by looking at his poporo. I think that the only object that comes close to having a comparable close bond with its owner in our society is the wedding ring, although even these are becoming more and more easily disposable.
Still, a poporo is not only important for the personal identities of these people. It is also a vital tool for safeguarding the future of all of creation. First of all the act of dipping the stick into the gourd is seen as analagous to the act of procreation (you don’t need Freudian psychology to recognize the suggestive nature of this act) and it is actually believed that the gourd and stick are a micro-model of the layout of the cosmos.
Taken from Reichel-Dolmatoff 1990
Additionally, in the belief of the resident indigenous peoples the Sierra Nevada is literally the heart of the universe and the indigenous priests, called mamás among the Kogui, are its caretakers more about this in this TED presentation by anthropologist Wade Davis (at 10 minutes 30 seconds). So, if anything goes wrong with the Sierra Nevada, every living thing everywhere will suffer. Nowadays the mamás guard the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta by raising global public awareness on the importance of the Sierra Nevada and similar natural resources. Aside from this they actively contribute to the well-being of the cosmos by carefully manipulating ‘time cycles’ that act as the gears in the mechanism of life. In order to do this the mama needs to become 'master of time', which, among other things, is achieved by ingesting the mixture of coca and lime inside the poporo. Experienced mamás claim they can actually phase out of time and while being phased out can see and manipulate the time cycles that makes the cosmos run.
It is not known for sure if these ideas were present among indigenous cultures of the first millennium AD, but the fact that poporos were made of expensive and durable materials such as tumbaga suggests that it was already an important artefact at that time. Additionally we know that trying to understand or have a measure of control over cyclical processes of time has great antiquity in many places in the Caribbean basin and that those persons who were adept at these sorts of things often held important political and religious offices.  It is not unlikely that the poporro has already been used to save the world from harm since before the birth of a certain other saviour of humanity.

1 comment:

  1. Yet another thought-provoking posting by Angus. What a great idea to do this blog, and the author actually seems to have the discipline to keep going, kudos! This one holds a great many points to consider, the least of which is perhaps whether one really does not need Freudian psycho-analysis to consider the poporo a penis. Really not? Or in fact really a lot? But where it becomes truly interesting is in the use of the Tairona-Kogi as a comparative cultural reservoir. Here we pay tribute to the Austrian scholar who still looms largest in the establishment of Colombian anthropology. All other deceased Germanic colleagues that can claim such status, raise your hand!

    His portrayal of the Tairona-Kogi as indigenous people living in balance with ecology, having been able to harness themselves against the ever-threatening modernity, is both attractive and beautiful. Just rub the glass bell for a look at the Utopian Other which is willingly locked inside. Many have and continue to rub. Including archaeologists. And, yes, including Wade Davis. He has the luxury of being able to use his monographed NGS hanky to help keep even the glass in pristine condition.

    What is left behind in this indigenous essentialism is the realization that identity is not given but must be taken. Culture equals currency and having currency enables survival. Or better yet improvement. Not though in the minds of Davis and the like, I fear they prefer to proclaim cultural change as cultural degradation. Hence Davis' famous attention to cultural survival, a theme close to the heart for the guys who are making him Explorer of the Century. Or something along those capitalized lines; obviously I'm just jealous, and a hypocrite as a matter of fact ;) Would the indigenous ritual specialists active in the Santa Marta anno 2011 really base their protective activism on an essential cosmovision involving being alarmed by eschatological trouble, or would it actually involve grounded and strategic political ideals? I wonder where the twenty-something political science Tairona-Kogi student sitting around at a Saturday-night party in Bogota stick their poporos? They never seem to be twenty-something in the R-D photographs...

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