by Stephen Harrod Buhner

For
the past two decades, I have spent much of my time among plant
people—botanists, vegetalistas and herbalists. At conferences such as
the Green Nations Gathering or the International Herb Symposium, plant
people from every continent on Earth, and all traditions, gather. They
are part of a tribe of people that are beyond space and time, a nation
connected to the plants, to the Earth, and to similar people in times
long gone and yet to come.
A central element of that experience is the vibrant plant traditions of
Native peoples, for all of us swim in waters they first discovered.
Among the most influential are the tribal cultures of the Americas. The
plant knowledge of the Native peoples of North, Central and South
America, refined over millennia of practice, has integrated itself
throughout human cultures, but few people are aware of this rich
contribution to the world’s knowledge of medicinal plants.
We in the United States live in what is, in many respects, an odd
culture. Nearly all cultures on Earth have integrated plant medicines
into their healthcare systems; the United States is a striking
exception. Few in this country understand that pharmaceuticals are not
easily biodegradable, the elegant complexity and safety of plant
medicines, or the contributions of North American tribal cultures. But
plants are the oldest medicines there are, and they have been used for
healing since human beings have been.
Evidence of Ancient Use
At least 60,000 years ago, eight unique medicinal plants were placed in
a Neanderthal grave in Shanidar Cave in the region now known as Iraq,
plants that are still used in that region for healing. And between
15,000 and 25,000 years ago, the first paintings of medicinal plants
being used were incorporated into the great cave paintings in Lascaux,
France. The Egyptians, Greeks, Romans and ancient Islamic cultures had
highly sophisticated plant materia medica; but richest of all, perhaps,
are those of the world’s Indigenous peoples. North America is no
exception. For a length of time between 10,000 and 30,000 years,
members of American Native cultures have been gathering unique
knowledge of plant medicines; they are some of the greatest empirical
scientists our planet has ever known.
There is no exhaustive source of Native North American plant knowledge,
but Daniel Moerman’s magnificent Native American Ethnobotany (Timber
Press, 1998) comes the closest. The result of 30 years of diligent
work, it lists, as he notes, “4,029 kinds of plants…used in 44,691
different ways in 291 different societies. Of the 44,691 usages, 24,945
are medicinal.” This rich
materia medica,
refined by talented healers over generations, includes scores, or even
hundreds, of plants which have entered general human use through Native
contact with European, African and Asian peoples. They are now, for
example, a well-integrated part of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)
and Western European botanic practice; hundreds are also used in the
many vibrant, nonmainstream herbal communities in the United States,
including those of the Cajun, Creole, African-American, Hispanic and
Caucasian.
To read more,
BUY THIS ISSUE.