The Plants, Spirits, and Rituals at the Origins of Yuletide
The day on which many commemorate the birth of Christ has its origins in Pagan rituals that center on tree worship,
agriculture, magic and social exchange. But Christmas is no ordinary folk observance. It is an evolving feast that
over the centuries has absorbed elements from cultures all over the world - practices that give the magical properties
of plants and plant spirits pride of place. In fact, the symbolic use of plants at Christmas effectively transforms
the modern-day living room into a place of shamanic ritual.
Christian Rätsch and Claudia Müller-Ebeling show how the ancient meaning and use of the botanical elements
of Christmas provide a unique view of the religion that existed in Europe before the introduction of Christianity.
The fir tree was originally revered as the sacred World tree in northern Europe. When the Christian Church was unable
to drive the tree cult out of people´s consciousness, it incorporated the fir tree by dedicating it to the Christ Child.
Father Christmas in his red-and-white suit, who flies through the sky in a sleigh drawn by reindeer, has his mythological
roots in the shamanic reindeer-herding tribes of arctic Europe and Siberia.
These northern shamans used the hallucinogenic fly agaric mushroom, which is red and white, to make their soul flights
to the other world. Apples, which figure heavily in Christmas baking, are symbols of the sun god Apollo, so they find
a natural place at winter solstice celebrations of the return of the sun. Indeed, the emphasis at Christmas on green plants
and the promise of the return of life in the dead of winter is by its very nature another form of the pagan winter solstice
celebration still practiced today.
Christian Rätsch, ph.D., is a world-renowned anthropologist and ethnopharmacologist who specializes in the shamanic
uses of plants. A former president of the German Society for Ethnomedicine, he is the author of The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive
Plants and Marijuana Medicine and coauthor of Plants of the Gods.
Claudia Müller-Ebeling, Ph.D., is an art historian and anthropologist and coauthor, with Christian Rätsch,
of Tantra in the Himalayas and Witchcraft Medicine.
Both authors live in Hamburg, Germany.