It’s the day earlier than the ceremony and forty individuals from totally different components of the world will converge in Copenhagen to expertise a shamanic ceremony facilitated by 46-year-old Helena Soholm, a Korean American shaman, known as mudang in Korean.
In desirous to know extra about shamanism, I got here throughout Helena’s work. Now we’re collectively in North Zealand, Denmark, together with conventional Korean musician Dong-Gained Kim, 58, who will accompany Helena throughout the ceremony.
Once we arrive on the seashore, it’s nonetheless a bit overcast and the earth is frozen beneath a thick, white carpet of snow. Dong-Gained appears to be like out and broadcasts, “The ocean welcomes us.” I say to Helena, “Sorry, I needed to do extra analysis about shamanism earlier than the journey, however I simply did not have time.” She responds, “Arin, that is a colonial approach of shamanism. You find out about it by experiencing it.” Helena and Dong-Gained bow to the 5 instructions throughout a pre-ceremony ritual. Heart is the fifth route.
Dong-Gained Kim is a grasp percussionist and a member of Yo-Yo Ma’s Silkroad Ensemble.
When Korea was an agrarian society, villagers would march to neighboring villages, taking part in their distinctive music to assist one another work throughout the harvest season. In keeping with Dong-Gained, “Working in rice fields is back-breaking work, and so singing and drumming had been concerned. Because the labor bought harder, the drumming would get quicker and extra thrilling. And that was the primary second I realized the idea of empathy in music.” He begins taking part in a 200-year-old gong and out of the blue the sky opens up.
Trendy healer
Helena is a transpersonal psychologist along with being a shaman. In her work, she integrates Western theories of psychology with Indigenous techniques of information to facilitate therapeutic and progress in fashionable, technologically superior societies.
Shortly after her initiation as a shaman in 2018, she says she acquired a imaginative and prescient the place she noticed the ancestors of Korean adoptees who had been adopted into Western nations, longing to attach with their descendents. She says she believes “clearing and honoring ancestral power is achieved via the restoration of the Indigenous thoughts, which might deepen an individual’s connection to self, others and land,” and so she facilitates ceremonies and pilgrimages for adoptees and others wanting to attach with their ancestral roots.
Helena is married to a Dane and has developed many connections in Denmark. She says her village is now international, “so wherever we go, my philosophy is we’ll create sacred house.”
Contributors
Among the many adoptees to take part on this ceremony in Copenhagen is Jannie Jung Westermann, 45, who introduced the providing for the intestine ceremony on behalf of Korea Klubben, an affiliation of Danish Korean adoptees. She was one of many first individuals concerned in gathering data for the investigation into the corrupt practices behind the worldwide adoptions of Korean youngsters, which amounted to a billion-dollar trade between the Sixties and Nineteen Eighties.
In 2001, Jannie labored with a Korean social employee to do a household search. She realized that adoptees are sometimes not given their full information. Jannie was capable of find her beginning mother and father though her preliminary information indicated that she had been deserted. Years after assembly her organic father, she labored with a non-public detective and located her organic mom.
On a visit to South Korea, Danish Korean adoptee Mai Quickly Younger Øvlisen, 41, heard Korean conventional music for the primary time. “I heard that voice of ache and of the individuals’s historical past and previous, as a rustic, and it was, like, ‘That is my voice. My voice is Korean.’ ” Now, she incorporates conventional Korean people music and shamanism into her musical observe together with her band, Meejah, which suggests “medium.” On discovering her beginning mother and father, Mai says, “I simply make room for it and open house for it to come back collectively, if it needs to.”
Unethical and unlawful adoption practices had been a systemic downside in lots of different nations, together with Greenland, which was colonized by Denmark. Kâlánguak Absalonsen, 53, was taken from her organic household after her father dedicated suicide when she was 3 years previous. Her mom signed adoption papers with out realizing that she was giving up her baby as a result of, in her Inuit tradition, there isn’t any phrase or idea for adoption, pondering, “when the snow disappears, they’ll come again.” However her youngsters didn’t come again. She despatched Kâlánguak letters, however her adoptive mom hid them from her. After I ask Kâlánguak what she remembers of Greenland, she speaks in regards to the sound of snow: “When it is actually chilly, it has a particular sound.”
Tom Pyun, 46, a Korean American author and consumer of Helena’s, flew from Los Angeles for the ceremony. His father died when he was 13, and his mom handed away out of the blue in 2021 from COVID-19. He had been searching for various strategies of therapeutic when he got here throughout Helena’s work: “There was no probability to essentially say goodbye or get any closure, and I assumed that possibly a shaman may assist me discover closure — what may have been mentioned or ought to have been mentioned.”
Anne-Marie Hansen, 44, is a Danish professor of design whose household lineage in Denmark may be traced again to the 1400s. She is inquisitive about rituals and discovering extra about her connection to Nordic pagan tradition. She mentioned she hoped the ceremony would assist her recuperate conventional data, revive cultural reminiscence and join with nature.
Ceremony
On the day of the ceremony, many individuals put on one thing from their native cultures to assist join them with their ancestors. As they trickle in, many add particular objects and mementos to an ancestral altar. Materials in crimson, blue, white, yellow and inexperienced, representing the 5 instructions are laid out. Everybody selects just a few items of torn material and, in a sluggish procession, transfer to the rhythmic drumming of Dong-Gained and Hendrikje Lange, a Western shaman initiated within the Korean custom, towards a tree on the entrance of BaneGaarden, the location of the ceremony. In keeping with Helena, “Since there are lots of people there who’re from totally different cultures, we want some sort of exercise to drag us collectively so that everyone’s already setting themselves up, at their unconscious stage, to set off one thing deep in our minds.”
Helena creates a circle with white material and invitations totally different teams of individuals in, beginning with adoptees. They begin leaping to enter a trance-like state. There are maternal cries of longing, deep ache and remorse. Within the Indigenous circle, the power and air shift. When the phrases, “Aya, aya,” come via Helena, Aká Hansen, an Inuit filmmaker from Greenland, bursts into track. With the European group, Helena has a tough time getting via, so she asks the opposite individuals to ship their power to this group. Many shut their eyes and place their palms. “There’s loads of blockage right here. Numerous masculine power,” Helena says. Lastly, a small group of diaspora members enter the white circle and there may be discuss damaged goals. On the finish, everybody jumps collectively and Helena blesses every individual. The ceremony is adopted by a dialogue the place we study that the track Aká sang was the primary time she had ever sung it. It’s a track of Aká’s ancestors.
The day after the ceremony, I ask individuals how they’re processing their experiences. Kâlánguak speaks of maternal power within the adoptee circle: “It was large to listen to the moms calling after us, ‘It is okay. I am right here. I like you. I like you. I like you.’ And, for me, it was a launch. I’ve heard all my life that my mom could not handle me. However that was not the case. Helena opened my coronary heart to obtain my mom with love.”
“I’ll take into consideration the ceremony for a very long time,” says Mai Quickly Younger. “It gave me a way of not being alone.”
This reporting was supported by the Worldwide Ladies’s Media Basis’s Lauren Brown Fellowship.
Arin Yoon is a Korean American photographer based mostly in Kansas Metropolis. See extra of her work on her web site arinyoon.com and her Instagram @arinyoon.
Picture edit by Grace Widyatmadja. Textual content edit by Zachary Thompson.