Difference between revisions of "Initiation" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[File:Monks Initiation (26392071260).jpg|thumb|400px|New monks of [[Kriya Yoga]] are renamed by their guru during the 3 day initiation ceremony in [[Amarkantak]], [[Annupur]], [[India]]]]
 
[[File:Monks Initiation (26392071260).jpg|thumb|400px|New monks of [[Kriya Yoga]] are renamed by their guru during the 3 day initiation ceremony in [[Amarkantak]], [[Annupur]], [[India]]]]
  
'''Initiation''' is a [[rite of passage]] marking entrance or acceptance into a group or society. It could also be a formal admission to adulthood in a community or one of its formal components. In an extended sense it can also signify a transformation in which the initiate is 'reborn' into a new role. Examples of initiation ceremonies might include Christian [[baptism]] or [[Confirmation (Christian sacrament)|confirmation]], Jewish [[B'nai Mitzvah|bar or bat mitzvah]], acceptance into a [[fraternal organization]], [[secret society]] or [[religious order]], or [[graduation]] from school or [[recruit training]]. A person taking the initiation ceremony in traditional rites, such as those depicted in these pictures, is called an ''initiate''.
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'''Initiation''' is a [[rite of passage]] marking entrance or acceptance into a group or society. It could also be a formal admission to adulthood in a community or one of its components. In an extended sense it may also signify a transformation in which the initiate is "reborn" into a new role. The initiation experience tends to bring new members closer to the group, developing social cohesion, and increasing their commitment both to the other members and the purpose of the group.
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The components of the initiation vary widely from study of scripture and public affirmation of faith, through tests of knowledge or physical fortitude, to participating in humiliating, dangerous, or even criminal activities. Examples of initiation ceremonies include Christian [[baptism]] or [[Confirmation (Christian sacrament)|confirmation]], Jewish [[Bar Mitzvah|Bar or Bat Mitzvah]], acceptance into a [[fraternal organization]], [[secret society]], or [[religious order]], or [[graduation]] from school or [[recruit training]].  
  
 
==Characteristics==
 
==Characteristics==
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Initiation rituals have been theorized to lead to the development of social cohesion though [[group identification]] and [[identity fusion]].<ref>Harvey Whitehouse and Jonathan A. Lanman, [https://pure.qub.ac.uk/en/publications/the-ties-that-bind-us-ritual-fusion-and-identification    The Ties That Bind Us] ''Current Anthropology'' 55(6) (2014): 674–695. Retrieved June 15, 2022.</ref>
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Studies of certain social forms of initiation, such as [[hazing]] in college [[fraternities and sororities]], suggest that severe initiations produce [[cognitive dissonance]].<ref>Elliot Aronson and Judson Mills, [https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fh0047195 The effect of severity of initiation on liking for a group] ''Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology'' 59(2) (1959): 177–181. Retrieved June 14, 2022.</ref> Dissonance is then thought to produce feelings of strong group [[Interpersonal attraction|attraction]] among initiates after the experience, because they want to justify the effort expended.<ref>Leon Festinger, [https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1962-02261-001 The psychological effects of insufficient rewards] ''American Psychologist'' 16(1) (1961): 1–11. Retrieved June 14, 2022. </ref> A 2017 study found that groups that share painful or strong negative experiences can cause visceral bonding, and pro-group behavior. For example, students of [[Brazilian Jiu Jitsu]] who had experienced painful belt-whipping gauntlets had a higher willingness to donate time or risk their lives for the club.<ref>Harvey Whitehouse, Jonathan Jong, et al., [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5349572/ The evolution of extreme cooperation via shared dysphoric experiences] ''Scientific Reports'' 7 (2017):44292. Retrieved June 15, 2022.</ref>
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On the other hand, [[Reward system|rewards]] during mild initiations have important consequences in that initiates who feel more rewarded express stronger group identity: A reward led to higher group identity than no reward. ... Interestingly, a mild initiation followed by a reward led to more group identity than a severe initiation followed by a reward.<ref>Caroline Kamau, [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00207594.2012.663957 What does being initiated severely into a group do? The role of rewards] ''International Journal of Psychology'' 48(3) (2013): 399-406. Retrieved June 14, 2022.</ref> Such findings support the idea of group socialization proposed by Levine and Moreland in which the relationship between the individual and the group "is assumed to change in systematic ways over time and both parties are viewed as active social influence agents."<ref>John M. Levine and Richard L. Moreland, [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14792779543000093 Group Socialization: Theory and Research] ''European Review of Social Psychology'' 5(1) (1994): 305-336. Retrieved June 14, 2022.</ref>
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As well as group attraction, initiations can also produce [[conformity]] among new members.<ref>Caroline F. Keating, Jason Pomerantz, et al., [https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2005-07159-004 Going to college and unpacking hazing: A functional approach to decrypting initiation practices among undergraduates] ''Group Dynamics: Theory, Research, and Practice'' 9(2) (2005): 104–126. Retrieved June 14, 2022. </ref> Psychology experiments have also shown that initiations increase feelings of [[affiliation]].<ref>Hein F. M. Lodewijkx, Martijn van Zomeren, and Jef E. M. M. Syroit, [https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1046496404272381 The anticipation of a severe initiation: Gender differences in effects on affiliation tendency and group attraction] ''Small Group Research'' 36(2) (2005): 237–262. Retrieved June 14, 2022. </ref>
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[[Mircea Eliade]] defined initiation as "a basic change in existential condition," which liberates man from profane time and history. "Initiation recapitulates the sacred history of the world. And through this recapitulation, the whole world is sanctified anew... [the initiand] can perceive the world as a sacred work, a creation of the Gods."<ref name=Eliade>Mircea Eliade, ''Rites and Symbols of Initiation'' (Spring Publications, 1965. ISBN 978-0882140612).</ref>
 
[[Mircea Eliade]] defined initiation as "a basic change in existential condition," which liberates man from profane time and history. "Initiation recapitulates the sacred history of the world. And through this recapitulation, the whole world is sanctified anew... [the initiand] can perceive the world as a sacred work, a creation of the Gods."<ref name=Eliade>Mircea Eliade, ''Rites and Symbols of Initiation'' (Spring Publications, 1965. ISBN 978-0882140612).</ref>
  
===Functions===
 
 
Eliade noted a variety of functions fulfilled by initiation rituals:
 
Eliade noted a variety of functions fulfilled by initiation rituals:
  
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* "to make [the initiand] open to [[Spirituality|spiritual]] values."
 
* "to make [the initiand] open to [[Spirituality|spiritual]] values."
  
===Types===
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==Types==
 
[[File:George Catlin - The Cutting Scene, Mandan O-kee-pa Ceremony - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|350px|The ''Okipa'' ceremony was a test for young [[Mandan]] men to prove themselves as warriors. The ceremony as witnessed by [[George Catlin]], circa 1835]]
 
[[File:George Catlin - The Cutting Scene, Mandan O-kee-pa Ceremony - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|350px|The ''Okipa'' ceremony was a test for young [[Mandan]] men to prove themselves as warriors. The ceremony as witnessed by [[George Catlin]], circa 1835]]
 
Eliade described several types of initiation:<ref name=Eliade/>
 
Eliade described several types of initiation:<ref name=Eliade/>
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* Entering into a [[Secret society]]
 
* Entering into a [[Secret society]]
 
* Other specialized initiations.
 
* Other specialized initiations.
 
===Psychological===
 
In the study of certain social forms of initiation, such as hazing in college fraternities and sororities, laboratory experiments in psychology suggest that severe initiations produce [[cognitive dissonance]].<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Aronson | first1 = E. | last2 = Mills | first2 = J. | year = 1959 | title = The effect of severity of initiation on liking for a group | journal = Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology | volume = 59 | issue = 2| pages = 177–181 | doi= 10.1037/h0047195| citeseerx = 10.1.1.368.1481 }}</ref> Dissonance is then thought to produce feelings of strong group [[Interpersonal attraction|attraction]] among initiates after the experience, because they want to justify the effort used.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Festinger | first1 = L | year = 1961 | title = The psychological effects of insufficient rewards | journal = American Psychologist | volume = 16 | issue = 1| pages = 1–11 | doi= 10.1037/h0045112}}</ref> [[Reward system|Rewards]] during initiations have important consequences in that initiates who feel more rewarded express stronger group identity.<ref>Kamau, C. (2012). What does being initiated severely into a group do? The role of rewards. ''International Journal of Psychology'', {{DOI|10.1080/00207594.2012.663957}}</ref> As well as group attraction, initiations can also produce [[conformity]] among new members.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Keating | first1 = C. F. | last2 = Pomerantz | first2 = J. | last3 = Pommer | first3 = S. D. | last4 = Ritt | first4 = S. J. H. | last5 = Miller | first5 = L. M. | last6 = McCormick | first6 = J. | year = 2005 | title = Going to college and unpacking hazing: A functional approach to decrypting initiation practices among undergraduates | journal = Group Dynamics: Theory, Research, and Practice | volume = 9 | issue = 2| pages = 104–126 | doi= 10.1037/1089-2699.9.2.104| citeseerx = 10.1.1.611.2494 }}</ref> Psychology experiments have also shown that initiations increase feelings of [[Need for affiliation|affiliation]].<ref>
 
{{cite journal
 
| last1 = Lodewijkx | first1 = H. F. M.
 
| last2 = van Zomeren | first2 = M.
 
| last3 = Syroit | first3 = J. E. M. M. | year = 2005
 
| title = The anticipation of a severe initiation: Gender differences in effects on affiliation tendency and group attraction
 
| journal = Small Group Research
 
| volume = 36 | issue = 2
 
| pages = 237–262 | doi= 10.1177/1046496404272381
 
| s2cid = 146168269
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
  
 
==Examples==
 
==Examples==
 
===Religious and spiritual===
 
===Religious and spiritual===
 
[[File:Freimaurer Initiation.jpg|thumb|400px|[[Freemasonry]] initiation, eighteenth century]]
 
[[File:Freimaurer Initiation.jpg|thumb|400px|[[Freemasonry]] initiation, eighteenth century]]
A spiritual [[initiation rite]] normally implies a shepherding process where those who are at a higher level guide the initiate through a process of greater exposure of knowledge. This may include the revelation of secrets, hence the term secret society for such organizations, usually reserved for those at the higher level of understanding. One famous historical example is the [[Eleusinian Mysteries]] of ancient Greece, thought to go back to at least the [[Mycenae|Mycenaean period]] or "[[Bronze Age]]".
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A spiritual [[initiation rite]] normally implies a shepherding process where those who are at a higher level guide the initiate through a process of greater exposure of knowledge. This may include the revelation of secrets, hence the term [[secret society]] for such organizations, usually reserved for those at the higher level of understanding. One famous historical example is the [[Eleusinian Mysteries]] of [[ancient Greece]], thought to go back to at least the [[Mycenae|Mycenaean period]] or "[[Bronze Age]]."
  
In the context of [[ritual magic]] and [[esotericism]], an initiation is considered to cause a fundamental process of change to begin within the person being initiated and its "evolution operates within both the material world and the spiritual world".<ref>{{cite book | last = Bernard | first = Christian | year = 2015 | title = So Mote It Be! | url = https://www.rosicrucian.org/rosicrucian-books-so-mote-it-be | publisher = Chapter 10. Mystical Initiation (Definition). The Rosicrucian Order, AMORC}}</ref> The person conducting the initiation (the ''initiator''), being in possession of a certain power or state of being, transfers this power or state to the person being initiated. Thus the concept of initiation is similar to that of [[apostolic succession]]. The initiation process is often likened to a simultaneous death and rebirth, because as well as being a beginning it also implies an ending as existence on one level drops away in an ascension to the next.
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In the context of [[ritual magic]] and [[esotericism]], an initiation is considered to cause a fundamental process of change to begin within the person being initiated and its "evolution operates within both the material world and the spiritual world."<ref>Christian Bernard, ''So Mote It Be!'' (Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, 2004, ISBN 978-1893971073).</ref> The person conducting the initiation (the ''initiator''), being in possession of a certain power or state of being, transfers this power or state to the person being initiated. Thus the concept of initiation is similar to that of [[apostolic succession]]. The initiation process is often likened to a simultaneous death and rebirth, because as well as being a beginning it also implies an ending as existence on one level drops away in an ascension to the next.
Initiation is a key component of [[Judaism]], [[Sufism]] and [[Shiism]], [[Vaishnavism]], [[Sant Mat]], [[Surat Shabd Yoga]], [[Vajrayana Buddhism]], [[Wicca]], and similar religious [[gnosis|gnostic]] traditions. It denotes acceptance by the [[Guru]] and also implies that the [[wikt:chela#Etymology 2|Chela]] (student or disciple) agrees to the requirements (such as living an ethical lifestyle, meditating, etc.)
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Initiation is a key component of [[Judaism]], [[Sufism]], and [[Shia Islam]], [[Vaishnavism]], [[Sant Mat]], [[Surat Shabd Yoga]], [[Vajrayana Buddhism]], [[Wicca]], and similar religious [[gnosis|gnostic]] traditions. It denotes acceptance by the [[Guru]] and also implies that the [[Chela]] (student or disciple) agrees to the requirements (such as living an ethical lifestyle, [[meditation|meditating]], and so forth).
  
 
===Naval and military===
 
===Naval and military===
 
[[File:'crossing the Line Ceremony' on Board the Troop Transport Ss Empress of Australia, on An African Troop Convoy, August 1941 A5176.jpg|thumb|400px|[[Equator]] crossing ceremony on ''[[RMS Empress of Australia (1919)|Empress of Australia]]'', August 1941 ]]
 
[[File:'crossing the Line Ceremony' on Board the Troop Transport Ss Empress of Australia, on An African Troop Convoy, August 1941 A5176.jpg|thumb|400px|[[Equator]] crossing ceremony on ''[[RMS Empress of Australia (1919)|Empress of Australia]]'', August 1941 ]]
Some communities on board a military vessel and also of military soldiers tend to form a closed 'family' which absorbs in members, who are often formally accepted, generally after a form of trial or [[hazing]].
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Some communities on board a military vessel and also of military soldiers tend to form a closed "family" which absorbs in members, who are often formally accepted after some kind of test or [[hazing]].
  
In addition, there can be similar rites of passages associated with parts of naval and military life, which do not constitute true initiations as the participants are already and remain members of the same community. One such rite is associated with [[crossing the equator]] on board a naval ship, but it can even be taken by passengers on board a [[cruise liner]], who are not and do not become members of anything but the so-called "equator crossing club". Another form, “Kissing the Royal Belly” or “Royal Baby”, calls for initiates to kneel before a senior member of the crew, who wears a mock diaper. This “Baby” usually has a huge stomach covered with greasy materials ranging from cooking oil to mustard, shaving cream, eggs, and oysters. Junior sailors must lick the Baby's navel area, while the "baby" grabs and shakes their head to better smear the goo onto their faces.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://nsrc.sfsu.edu/MagArticle.cfm?Article=750 |title= Sailor Men: Are Navy rituals, like Kissing the Royal Belly, homophobic or homoerotic? |access-date= 2009-09-01 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071117070601/http://nsrc.sfsu.edu/MagArticle.cfm?Article=750 |archive-date= 2007-11-17 |url-status= dead }}</ref>
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In addition, there can be similar [[rites of passage]] associated with parts of naval and military life, which do not constitute true initiations as the participants are already and remain members of the same community. One such rite is associated with crossing the [[equator]] on board a naval ship, but it can even be taken by passengers on board a [[cruise liner]], who are not and do not become members of anything but the so-called "equator crossing club."  
  
===Gang===
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===College Fraternities and Sororities===
[[Gang]]s often require new members to commit crimes before accepting them as part of the gang.<ref name=maryland>Maryland gangs.[http://gangs.umd.edu/wfrmByLocationDetail.aspx?county=Harford Associated Gangs in this county] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071016135802/http://gangs.umd.edu/wfrmByLocationDetail.aspx?county=Harford |date=2007-10-16 }}.</ref><ref name=vlad>{{cite web|url=https://www.vladsokhin.com/work/crying-meri/|title=Crying Meri|publisher=Vlad Sokhin|access-date=12 February 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2008/11/26/ce_bar_killing_1126.ART_ART_11-26-08_B5_DLC0U89.html|title=Man, 18, gets life in prison for murder|last1=Coolidge|first1=Sharon|date=November 26, 2008|work=The Cincinnati Enquirer|access-date=November 26, 2008|publisher=GateHouse Media, Inc.|agency=The Columbia Dispatch}}</ref>
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{{Main|Hazing}}
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Traditionally, [[college]] [[fraternities and sororities]] conduct initiation rituals known as [[hazing]] for potential new members ("Pledges"). Hazing activities can involve forms of ridicule and humiliation within the group or in public, while other hazing incidents are akin to pranks. A "[[snipe hunt]]" is such a prank, when a newcomer or credulous person is given an impossible task, such as being sent to find a tin of Tartan paint, or a "dough repair kit" in a bakery.<ref> Reinhold Aman (ed.), ''Maledicta 12'' (Maledicta Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0916500320).</ref>  
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[[File:1922 Cover of College Humor Magazine.jpg|thumb|300px|Paddling depicted on 1922 cover of ''College Humor magazine'']]
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Spanking may be involved, mainly in the form of [[Paddle (spanking)|paddling]], sometimes over a lap, a knee, furniture, or a pillow.  
  
New members may be physically beaten by fellow gang members to demonstrate their courage, also known as "beat-in" or "jump-in", which occasionally results in a fatality.<ref name=maryland/><ref>James M Klatell. [http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/07/28/eveningnews/main3107316.shtml Exclusive: Gangs Spreading In The Military]</ref> One study indicates that young people are more likely to be hurt in gang initiation than they are by refusing to join.<ref>Jeff Grabmeier. [http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/joingang.htm TEENS CAN REFUSE GANG MEMBERSHIP WITHOUT SERIOUS HARM, STUDY SAYS]. Ohio State University. Dec 18, 1998.</ref> Female members may be required to have sex with male members as a form of initiation, also known as "sex in", though they may also be "jumped-in" like their male counterparts. One study shows that female members who were “sexed-in” as part of gang initiation were thereafter viewed with lower respect than those that were "jumped-in", even when promised they would become full-fledged members.<ref>Burris-Kitchen, D. (1997). Female Gang Participation. Lampeter, Wales: The Edwin Mellen Press.</ref> Another study found that sexed-in members face greater risks of sexual exploitation and [[Gang rape|abuse]] by fellow male members.<ref name=Miller2002>Miller, J. (2002). Young Women in Street Gangs: Risk Factors, Delinquency, and Victimization Risk. National Crime Journal, Ch.3></ref>
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Submission to senior members of the group is common, often with meaningless tests of obedience such as waiting on others (as at fraternity parties) or various other forms of housework. In some cases, the hazee may be made to eat raw eggs, peppers, hot sauce, or drink too much alcohol. Some hazing even includes eating or drinking vile things such as bugs or rotting food.<ref>Chris Glavin, [https://www.k12academics.com/education-issues/hazing/methods Hazing Methods] ''K12 Academics''. Retrieved June 16, 2022.</ref>
  
===Trade union===
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===Gangs===
In [[trade union|unionised]] [[organization]]s, the "initiation" is typically no more than a brief familiarization with basic procedures and the provision of a copy of the appropriate [[collective bargaining]] [[contract|agreement]] that governs the work performed by members of the union. Some unions also charge a one-time initiation fee, after which the joining [[person]] is officially deemed to be a member in good standing.
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[[Gang]]s often require new members to commit [[crime]]s before accepting them as part of the gang:
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<blockquote>In some New Guinean tribes when a boy wants to become a man, he should go to enemy’s village and kill a pig. After that his community will accept him as an adult. In industrial Port Moresby women have replaced pigs. “First, a young gang member should steal something, money or a car — and he will be admitted to the gang. After that he must prove that his intentions are serious and he must rape a woman to complete his initiation. And it is better if a boy kills her afterwards, there will be less problems with the police,” one of the leaders of “Dirty Dons 585” Raskol gang, Peter Moses, revealed.<ref>Vlad Sokhin, [https://www.vladsokhin.com/work/crying-meri/ Crying Meri: Violence Against Women in Papua New Guinea] Retrieved June16, 2022.</ref></blockquote>
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New members may be physically beaten (also known as a "beat-in" or a "jump-in") by fellow gang members to demonstrate their courage, willingness, and loyalty. Female members may be required to have sex with male members as a form of initiation, also known as "sex in," though they may also be "jumped-in" like their male counterparts. Female members who were “sexed-in” as part of gang initiation were often viewed with lower respect than those that were "jumped-in," even when promised they would become full-fledged members.<ref>Deborah Burris-Kitchen, ''Female Gang Participation'' (Edwin Mellen Press, 1997, ISBN 978-0773486171).</ref> Sexed-in members also face greater risk of sexual exploitation and abuse by fellow male members.<ref>Winifred L. Reed and Scott H. Decker, [https://www.ojp.gov/pdffiles1/nij/190351.pdf ''Responding to Gangs: Evaluation and Research''] (National Institute of Justice, July 20020. Retrieved June 16, 2022.</ref>
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===Tribes===
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[[Tribe]]s often have initiations, although in contemporary times where modernization has occurred, initiation is often not taken as seriously as before. Initiation may be thought of as an event which may help teens prepare themselves to be good husbands and wives. In some African tribes, boys take about 3–4 months participating in initiation rites and girls take about 1–2 months.
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In many African tribes, initiation involves [[circumcision]] of males and sometimes [[female genital cutting|genital mutilation]] of females as well. For example, the initiation done in the [[Bapedi]] tribe of [[South Africa]] is normally regarded as a stage where a boy is to be taught manhood and a girl to be taught womanhood. Initiation is considered necessary for the individual to be regarded as a full member of the tribe. Otherwise, the individual may not be allowed to participate in ceremonies or even in social rituals such as [[marriage]]: A man will not be allowed to marry or have any special relationship with a woman who did not go to an initiation, because she is not considered to be a woman.
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[[File:Etiopia - omo river valley DSC 2835 (40).jpg|thumb|right|400px|The bull jumping ceremony of the [[Hamar people|Hamar]] tribe in [[Ethiopia]]]]
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The Hamar tribe in [[Ethiopia]] are known for their unique custom of "bull jumping," which initiates a boy into manhood. The boy must run back and forth twice across the backs of a row of bulls or castrated steers, and is ridiculed if he fails.<ref>Jane Wharton, [http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/559757/Hamer-tribe-bull-jumping-ceremony-Omo-Valley-Ethiopia The making of a man: Inside a bull jumping ceremony with Ethiopia's Hamer tribe] ''The Express'', February 22, 2015. Retrieved June 16, 2022.</ref>
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[[Australian Aborigine|Australian Aboriginal]] tribes usually had long periods of time to help prepare adolescent boys, teaching them traditional lore before they were ready to attend large elaborate ceremonies at the time of initiation when they were finally recognized as full-fledged men in their society. Most tribes had circumcision and [[scarification]] as part of the male initiation rituals, while many [[Central Australian]] tribes also practiced [[subincision]].
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The [[Mawé people|Sateré-Mawé]] people of [[Brazil]] use intentional [[Paraponera clavata|bullet ant]] stings as part of their initiation rites to become warriors.<ref>Steve Backshall, [https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/bitten-by-the-amazon-ptmjffcg8ff Bitten by the Amazon] ''The Sunday Times'', January 6, 2008. Retrieved June 16, 2022.</ref>
  
===Tribe===
 
 
[[File:Brooklyn Museum 2011.3.1 Bwami Hat for Kindi Level.jpg|thumb|300px|This hat would only have been worn by initiates to Kindi, the highest level of [[Bwami]]. Tail hair of an elephant, a [[metaphor]] for Kindi, crowns the hat. European-made buttons began to replace [[cowrie shell]]s as prestige items on such Bwami [[paraphernalia]] as the Western presence grew in eastern Congo in the early twentieth century]]
 
[[File:Brooklyn Museum 2011.3.1 Bwami Hat for Kindi Level.jpg|thumb|300px|This hat would only have been worn by initiates to Kindi, the highest level of [[Bwami]]. Tail hair of an elephant, a [[metaphor]] for Kindi, crowns the hat. European-made buttons began to replace [[cowrie shell]]s as prestige items on such Bwami [[paraphernalia]] as the Western presence grew in eastern Congo in the early twentieth century]]
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The Lega people are a [[Bantu]] ethnic group of the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]]. They traditionally live in small village groups, with no central authority. Within a community, a chief inherits his position on a [[patrilineal]] basis, and his close relatives have highest rank. Counterbalancing this hereditary structure, the Bwami society also regulates social and political life. This society has seven levels for men and four for women and is open to all.
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An initiate advances through the ranks through a complex system of instruction, payment, and initiation, achieving increasing status. A member of the highest level is recognized as a Kindi, a social leader with great [[moral authority]].<ref> Daniel P. Biebuyck, ''Lega Culture: Art, initiation, and moral philosophy among a Central African people'' (University of California Press, 1973, ISBN 978-0520020856).</ref>
  
Tribes often have initiations. The initiation done in the [[Bapedi]] tribe of South Africa is normally regarded as a stage where a boy is to be taught manhood and a girl to be taught womanhood. In many African tribes, initiation involves [[circumcision]]]] of males and sometimes [[female genital cutting|genital mutilation]] of females as well. Initiation is considered necessary for the individual to be regarded as a full member of the tribe. Otherwise, the individual may not be allowed to participate in ceremonies or even in social rituals such as marriage. A man will not be allowed to marry or have any special relationship with a woman who did not go to an initiation, because she is not considered to be a woman.
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A salient shared cultural feature of the Min peoples of the [[New Guinea]] Highlands is initiation into a secret male religious cult.<ref name=Brumbaugh>Robert C. Brumbaugh, [https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1525/eth.1980.8.4.02a00050 Models of Separation and a Mountain Ok Religion] ''Journal of the Society of Psychological Anthropology'' 8(4) (Winter 1980): 332-348. Retrieved June 16, 2022.</ref> For example, the [[Urapmin people]] used to practice a type of male initiation known in as ''ban'', which involved elaborate rituals that were a central part of Urapmin social life. The ''ban'' was a multistage process which involved beatings and manipulation of various objects. At each stage, the initiate was offered revelations of secret knowledge (Urap: ''weng awem''), but at the next stage these would be shown to be false (Urap: ''famoul''). These initiations were abandoned with the adoption of [[Christianity]], and the Urap have expressed relief at no longer having to administer the beatings which were involved.<ref> Joel Robbins, ''Becoming Sinners: Christianity and Moral Torment in a Papua New Guinea Society'' (University of California Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0520238008).</ref>
  
Initiation may be thought of as an event which may help teens prepare themselves to be good husbands and wives. Where modernization is occurring, initiation is not taken so seriously as before, although there are still certain areas which still perform initiations.
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===Universities===
[[File:Etiopia - omo river valley DSC 2835 (40).jpg|thumb|right|400px|The bull jumping ceremony of the [[Hamar people|Hamar]] tribe in Ethiopia]]
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[[File:Deposition_-_Holzschnitt_16._Jahrhundert.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Deposition: Polishing off the horns. Woodcut from the sixteenth century]]
  
In some African tribes, boys take about 3–4 months participating in initiation rites and girls take about 1–2 months.
+
The '''''deposition''''' (from [[Latin]] ''depositio cornuum'', "taking off the horns") was a semi-official initiation ritual which was common at [[university|universities]] throughout Europe from the [[Middle Ages]] until the eighteenth century.<ref> Michael Waters, [https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/deposition-hazing-ritual A Violent 15th-Century Freshman Hazing Ritual Involving Boar Tusks and Razors] ''Atlas Obscura'', July 10, 2017. Retrieved June 17, 2022.</ref> The basis for the deposition was the idea that the arriving student was still wild and unpolished before his matriculation – like an animal – and had to be relieved of the signs of his uncivilized state before he could be accepted as part of the University. The student only had to go through the deposition once in his life; he would receive a deposition certificate (''Depositionsschein'' in [[German language|German]]) which he could show in case of transferring to another university.
  
[[Australian Aboriginal]] tribes usually had long periods of time to help prepare adolescent boys, teaching them traditional lore before they were ready to attend large elaborate ceremonies at the time of initiation when they were finally recognized as full-fledged men in their society. Most tribes had circumcision and [[scarification]] as part of the male initiation rituals, while many [[Central Australian]] tribes also practiced [[subincision]].
+
The deposition consisted of scolding, in which the unworthiness of the new student would be clarified to him, in ritual removal of animal-like artificial body parts with the help of over-dimensioned tools, as well as beating and other abuse, which would have the function of a purification ritual.
  
A salient shared cultural feature of the Min peoples of the [[New Guinea Highlands]] is initiation into a secret male religious cult.<ref name="b332">{{Harvcoltxt|Brumbaugh|1980|p=332}}</ref> For example, the [[Urapmin people]] used to practice a type of male initiation known in [[Urapmin language|Urap]] as ''ban''.<ref name="r2001_904">{{Harvcoltxt|Robbins|2001|p=904}}</ref> These elaborate rituals were a central part of Urapmin social life.<ref name="b29">{{Harvcoltxt|Barker|2007|p=29}}</ref> The ''ban'' was a multistage process which involved beatings and manipulation of various objects.<ref name="r2001_904" /> At each stage, the initiate was offered revelations of secret knowledge (Urap: ''weng awem''), but at the next stage these would be shown to be false (Urap: ''famoul'').<ref name="r2001_904" /> These initiations were abandoned with the adoption of Christianity, and the Urap have expressed relief at no longer having to administer the beatings which were involved.<ref name="r1998_307-308">{{Harvcoltxt|Robbins|1998|pp=307–308}}</ref>
+
In the speeches at the ritual, models from classical antiquity for the deposition process would be cited. Reference would be made to the examination of the [[Sparta]]n youth, to the customs of the Academy of [[Plato]], and the water consecration among the Athenian [[Sophism|Sophists]] of Late [[Classical antiquity|Antiquity]].
  
The [[Mawé people|Sateré-Mawé]] people of [[Brazil]] use intentional [[Paraponera clavata|bullet ant]] stings as part of their initiation rites to become warriors.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/travel/Holidays/Wildlife/article77936.ece | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140222144437/http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/travel/Holidays/Wildlife/article77936.ece | url-status=dead | archive-date=February 22, 2014 |newspaper=The Sunday Times | location=London | title=Bitten by the Amazon | first=Steve | last=Backshall | date=6 January 2008 | access-date=13 July 2013}}</ref>
+
The arriving student would in the Middle Ages be known by the term ''beanus'', derived from the [[French language|French]] ''bec jaune'', "yellow beak" (cf. English "greenhorn"). The beanus would be treated by his new fellow students as a ''pecus campi'' ("animal of the field") and outfitted correspondingly. He would have to don a hood with horns and put the teeth of a [[boar]] sticking out of his mouth. He would then have to listen to a speech about his own unworthiness. The animal-like traits would then be knocked off with the help of over-sized tools. The body of the student would be additionally abused, symbolizing the cleansing and beautification. During the process wood-working tools would be used, as the student still was an "uncouth man" (German ''ungehobelt'', unplaned).
 +
 
 +
At the [[University of Leipzig]], the tools used in the deposition ritual are still preserved and kept in the art collection. The tools include those used for knocking off or polishing away the animal-like parts ([[axe]], [[pliers]], [[grindstone (tool)|grindstone]]), tools for woodworking ([[plane (tool)|plane]]), and for personal hygiene ([[shaving]] brush, shaving cream, shaving knife, [[ear spoon]]). Injuries to new students were common with the use of these tools.
 +
 
 +
After this, examinations would be carried out, and additional speeches of admonition would be held. Finally, the leader of the ritual would put [[salt]] in the mouth of the beanus (''sal sapientiae'', "salt of wisdom"), pour [[wine]] over his head (''vinum laetitiae'', "wine of joy") and declare him free of his "beanism." After the payment of the relevant fee, an entrance examination would follow, carried out by a [[professor]], and the matriculation by the [[Rector (academia)|rector]] of the university.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 79: Line 98:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
+
* Aman, Reinhold (ed.). ''Maledicta 12''. Maledicta Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0916500320
 +
* Bernard, Christian. ''So Mote It Be!''. Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, 2004. ISBN 978-1893971073
 +
* Biebuyck, Daniel P. ''Lega Culture: Art, initiation, and moral philosophy among a Central African people''. University of California Press, 1973. ISBN 978-0520020856
 +
* Burris-Kitchen, Deborah. ''Female Gang Participation''. Edwin Mellen Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0773486171
 
* Eliade, Mircea. ''Rites and Symbols of Initiation''. Spring Publications, 2017 (original 1965). ISBN 978-0882140612
 
* Eliade, Mircea. ''Rites and Symbols of Initiation''. Spring Publications, 2017 (original 1965). ISBN 978-0882140612
 
+
* Robbins, Joel. ''Becoming Sinners: Christianity and Moral Torment in a Papua New Guinea Society''. University of California Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0520238008
 
 
*{{cite book
 
  | last = Barker
 
  | first = John
 
  | year = 2007
 
  | title = The Anthropology of Morality in Melanesia and Beyond
 
  | publisher = Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
 
  | isbn = 978-0754671855
 
  }}
 
*{{cite journal
 
  | last = Brumbaugh
 
  | first = Robert
 
  | year = 1980
 
  | title = Models of Separation and a Mountain Ok Religion
 
  | journal = Ethos
 
  | volume = 8
 
  | issue = 4
 
  | pages = 332–348
 
  | doi = 10.1525/eth.1980.8.4.02a00050
 
  }}
 
*{{cite journal
 
  | last = Robbins
 
  | first = Joel
 
  | title = God Is Nothing but Talk: Modernity, Language, and Prayer in a Papua New Guinea Society
 
  | journal = American Anthropologist
 
  | volume = 103
 
  | issue = 4
 
  | pages = 901–912
 
  | year = 2001
 
  | doi = 10.1525/aa.2001.103.4.901
 
  }}
 
*{{cite journal
 
  | last = Robbins
 
  | first = Joel
 
  | title = Becoming Sinners: Christianity and Desire among the Urapmin of Papua New Guinea
 
  | journal = Ethnology
 
  | volume = 37
 
  | issue = 4
 
  | pages = 299–316
 
  | year = 1998
 
  | doi = 10.2307/3773784
 
  | jstor = 3773784
 
  }}
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
All links retrieved
+
All links retrieved June 16, 2022.
 
*[https://geography.name/initiation-rites/ Initiation Rites in Africa] ''Geography''
 
*[https://geography.name/initiation-rites/ Initiation Rites in Africa] ''Geography''
 
*[https://wildernessquest.org/initiation-and-rites-of-passage/ Initiation and Rites of Passage] ''Wilderness Quest''
 
*[https://wildernessquest.org/initiation-and-rites-of-passage/ Initiation and Rites of Passage] ''Wilderness Quest''
 
*[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/1JmvdLwyr5vYH7nzjmmBhL7/why-would-you-do-this Why would you do this?] ''BBC Two: Extraordinary Rituals''
 
*[https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/1JmvdLwyr5vYH7nzjmmBhL7/why-would-you-do-this Why would you do this?] ''BBC Two: Extraordinary Rituals''
  
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
+
[[Category:Social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Anthropology]]
 
[[Category:Anthropology]]
 
+
[[Category:Psychology]]
  
 
{{Credits|Initiation|1085124727}}
 
{{Credits|Initiation|1085124727}}

Latest revision as of 20:51, 17 June 2022

New monks of Kriya Yoga are renamed by their guru during the 3 day initiation ceremony in Amarkantak, Annupur, India

Initiation is a rite of passage marking entrance or acceptance into a group or society. It could also be a formal admission to adulthood in a community or one of its components. In an extended sense it may also signify a transformation in which the initiate is "reborn" into a new role. The initiation experience tends to bring new members closer to the group, developing social cohesion, and increasing their commitment both to the other members and the purpose of the group.

The components of the initiation vary widely from study of scripture and public affirmation of faith, through tests of knowledge or physical fortitude, to participating in humiliating, dangerous, or even criminal activities. Examples of initiation ceremonies include Christian baptism or confirmation, Jewish Bar or Bat Mitzvah, acceptance into a fraternal organization, secret society, or religious order, or graduation from school or recruit training.

Characteristics

Initiation rituals have been theorized to lead to the development of social cohesion though group identification and identity fusion.[1]

Studies of certain social forms of initiation, such as hazing in college fraternities and sororities, suggest that severe initiations produce cognitive dissonance.[2] Dissonance is then thought to produce feelings of strong group attraction among initiates after the experience, because they want to justify the effort expended.[3] A 2017 study found that groups that share painful or strong negative experiences can cause visceral bonding, and pro-group behavior. For example, students of Brazilian Jiu Jitsu who had experienced painful belt-whipping gauntlets had a higher willingness to donate time or risk their lives for the club.[4]

On the other hand, rewards during mild initiations have important consequences in that initiates who feel more rewarded express stronger group identity: A reward led to higher group identity than no reward. ... Interestingly, a mild initiation followed by a reward led to more group identity than a severe initiation followed by a reward.[5] Such findings support the idea of group socialization proposed by Levine and Moreland in which the relationship between the individual and the group "is assumed to change in systematic ways over time and both parties are viewed as active social influence agents."[6]

As well as group attraction, initiations can also produce conformity among new members.[7] Psychology experiments have also shown that initiations increase feelings of affiliation.[8]

Mircea Eliade defined initiation as "a basic change in existential condition," which liberates man from profane time and history. "Initiation recapitulates the sacred history of the world. And through this recapitulation, the whole world is sanctified anew... [the initiand] can perceive the world as a sacred work, a creation of the Gods."[9]

Eliade noted a variety of functions fulfilled by initiation rituals:

  • "this real valuation of ritual death finally led to conquest of the fear of real death."
  • "[initiation's] function is to reveal the deep meaning of existence to the new generations and to help them assume the responsibility of being truly men and hence of participating in culture."
  • "it reveals a world open to the trans-human, a world that, in our philosophical terminology, we should call transcendental."
  • "to make [the initiand] open to spiritual values."

Types

The Okipa ceremony was a test for young Mandan men to prove themselves as warriors. The ceremony as witnessed by George Catlin, circa 1835

Eliade described several types of initiation:[9]

  • Puberty rites: Rituals "by virtue of which adolescents gain access to the sacred, to knowledge, and to sexuality— by which, in short, they become human beings." These are "collective rituals whose function is to effect the transition from childhood or adolescence to adulthood." They represent "above all the revelation of the sacred."
  • Initiation into a mystical vocation: "the vocation of a medicine man or a shaman." This is limited to the few who are "destined to participate in a more intense religious experience than is accessible to the rest of the community."
  • Entering into a Secret society
  • Other specialized initiations.

Examples

Religious and spiritual

Freemasonry initiation, eighteenth century

A spiritual initiation rite normally implies a shepherding process where those who are at a higher level guide the initiate through a process of greater exposure of knowledge. This may include the revelation of secrets, hence the term secret society for such organizations, usually reserved for those at the higher level of understanding. One famous historical example is the Eleusinian Mysteries of ancient Greece, thought to go back to at least the Mycenaean period or "Bronze Age."

In the context of ritual magic and esotericism, an initiation is considered to cause a fundamental process of change to begin within the person being initiated and its "evolution operates within both the material world and the spiritual world."[10] The person conducting the initiation (the initiator), being in possession of a certain power or state of being, transfers this power or state to the person being initiated. Thus the concept of initiation is similar to that of apostolic succession. The initiation process is often likened to a simultaneous death and rebirth, because as well as being a beginning it also implies an ending as existence on one level drops away in an ascension to the next.

Initiation is a key component of Judaism, Sufism, and Shia Islam, Vaishnavism, Sant Mat, Surat Shabd Yoga, Vajrayana Buddhism, Wicca, and similar religious gnostic traditions. It denotes acceptance by the Guru and also implies that the Chela (student or disciple) agrees to the requirements (such as living an ethical lifestyle, meditating, and so forth).

Naval and military

Equator crossing ceremony on Empress of Australia, August 1941

Some communities on board a military vessel and also of military soldiers tend to form a closed "family" which absorbs in members, who are often formally accepted after some kind of test or hazing.

In addition, there can be similar rites of passage associated with parts of naval and military life, which do not constitute true initiations as the participants are already and remain members of the same community. One such rite is associated with crossing the equator on board a naval ship, but it can even be taken by passengers on board a cruise liner, who are not and do not become members of anything but the so-called "equator crossing club."

College Fraternities and Sororities

Main article: Hazing

Traditionally, college fraternities and sororities conduct initiation rituals known as hazing for potential new members ("Pledges"). Hazing activities can involve forms of ridicule and humiliation within the group or in public, while other hazing incidents are akin to pranks. A "snipe hunt" is such a prank, when a newcomer or credulous person is given an impossible task, such as being sent to find a tin of Tartan paint, or a "dough repair kit" in a bakery.[11]

Paddling depicted on 1922 cover of College Humor magazine

Spanking may be involved, mainly in the form of paddling, sometimes over a lap, a knee, furniture, or a pillow.

Submission to senior members of the group is common, often with meaningless tests of obedience such as waiting on others (as at fraternity parties) or various other forms of housework. In some cases, the hazee may be made to eat raw eggs, peppers, hot sauce, or drink too much alcohol. Some hazing even includes eating or drinking vile things such as bugs or rotting food.[12]

Gangs

Gangs often require new members to commit crimes before accepting them as part of the gang:

In some New Guinean tribes when a boy wants to become a man, he should go to enemy’s village and kill a pig. After that his community will accept him as an adult. In industrial Port Moresby women have replaced pigs. “First, a young gang member should steal something, money or a car — and he will be admitted to the gang. After that he must prove that his intentions are serious and he must rape a woman to complete his initiation. And it is better if a boy kills her afterwards, there will be less problems with the police,” one of the leaders of “Dirty Dons 585” Raskol gang, Peter Moses, revealed.[13]

New members may be physically beaten (also known as a "beat-in" or a "jump-in") by fellow gang members to demonstrate their courage, willingness, and loyalty. Female members may be required to have sex with male members as a form of initiation, also known as "sex in," though they may also be "jumped-in" like their male counterparts. Female members who were “sexed-in” as part of gang initiation were often viewed with lower respect than those that were "jumped-in," even when promised they would become full-fledged members.[14] Sexed-in members also face greater risk of sexual exploitation and abuse by fellow male members.[15]

Tribes

Tribes often have initiations, although in contemporary times where modernization has occurred, initiation is often not taken as seriously as before. Initiation may be thought of as an event which may help teens prepare themselves to be good husbands and wives. In some African tribes, boys take about 3–4 months participating in initiation rites and girls take about 1–2 months.

In many African tribes, initiation involves circumcision of males and sometimes genital mutilation of females as well. For example, the initiation done in the Bapedi tribe of South Africa is normally regarded as a stage where a boy is to be taught manhood and a girl to be taught womanhood. Initiation is considered necessary for the individual to be regarded as a full member of the tribe. Otherwise, the individual may not be allowed to participate in ceremonies or even in social rituals such as marriage: A man will not be allowed to marry or have any special relationship with a woman who did not go to an initiation, because she is not considered to be a woman.

The bull jumping ceremony of the Hamar tribe in Ethiopia

The Hamar tribe in Ethiopia are known for their unique custom of "bull jumping," which initiates a boy into manhood. The boy must run back and forth twice across the backs of a row of bulls or castrated steers, and is ridiculed if he fails.[16]

Australian Aboriginal tribes usually had long periods of time to help prepare adolescent boys, teaching them traditional lore before they were ready to attend large elaborate ceremonies at the time of initiation when they were finally recognized as full-fledged men in their society. Most tribes had circumcision and scarification as part of the male initiation rituals, while many Central Australian tribes also practiced subincision.

The Sateré-Mawé people of Brazil use intentional bullet ant stings as part of their initiation rites to become warriors.[17]

This hat would only have been worn by initiates to Kindi, the highest level of Bwami. Tail hair of an elephant, a metaphor for Kindi, crowns the hat. European-made buttons began to replace cowrie shells as prestige items on such Bwami paraphernalia as the Western presence grew in eastern Congo in the early twentieth century

The Lega people are a Bantu ethnic group of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. They traditionally live in small village groups, with no central authority. Within a community, a chief inherits his position on a patrilineal basis, and his close relatives have highest rank. Counterbalancing this hereditary structure, the Bwami society also regulates social and political life. This society has seven levels for men and four for women and is open to all. An initiate advances through the ranks through a complex system of instruction, payment, and initiation, achieving increasing status. A member of the highest level is recognized as a Kindi, a social leader with great moral authority.[18]

A salient shared cultural feature of the Min peoples of the New Guinea Highlands is initiation into a secret male religious cult.[19] For example, the Urapmin people used to practice a type of male initiation known in as ban, which involved elaborate rituals that were a central part of Urapmin social life. The ban was a multistage process which involved beatings and manipulation of various objects. At each stage, the initiate was offered revelations of secret knowledge (Urap: weng awem), but at the next stage these would be shown to be false (Urap: famoul). These initiations were abandoned with the adoption of Christianity, and the Urap have expressed relief at no longer having to administer the beatings which were involved.[20]

Universities

Deposition: Polishing off the horns. Woodcut from the sixteenth century

The deposition (from Latin depositio cornuum, "taking off the horns") was a semi-official initiation ritual which was common at universities throughout Europe from the Middle Ages until the eighteenth century.[21] The basis for the deposition was the idea that the arriving student was still wild and unpolished before his matriculation – like an animal – and had to be relieved of the signs of his uncivilized state before he could be accepted as part of the University. The student only had to go through the deposition once in his life; he would receive a deposition certificate (Depositionsschein in German) which he could show in case of transferring to another university.

The deposition consisted of scolding, in which the unworthiness of the new student would be clarified to him, in ritual removal of animal-like artificial body parts with the help of over-dimensioned tools, as well as beating and other abuse, which would have the function of a purification ritual.

In the speeches at the ritual, models from classical antiquity for the deposition process would be cited. Reference would be made to the examination of the Spartan youth, to the customs of the Academy of Plato, and the water consecration among the Athenian Sophists of Late Antiquity.

The arriving student would in the Middle Ages be known by the term beanus, derived from the French bec jaune, "yellow beak" (cf. English "greenhorn"). The beanus would be treated by his new fellow students as a pecus campi ("animal of the field") and outfitted correspondingly. He would have to don a hood with horns and put the teeth of a boar sticking out of his mouth. He would then have to listen to a speech about his own unworthiness. The animal-like traits would then be knocked off with the help of over-sized tools. The body of the student would be additionally abused, symbolizing the cleansing and beautification. During the process wood-working tools would be used, as the student still was an "uncouth man" (German ungehobelt, unplaned).

At the University of Leipzig, the tools used in the deposition ritual are still preserved and kept in the art collection. The tools include those used for knocking off or polishing away the animal-like parts (axe, pliers, grindstone), tools for woodworking (plane), and for personal hygiene (shaving brush, shaving cream, shaving knife, ear spoon). Injuries to new students were common with the use of these tools.

After this, examinations would be carried out, and additional speeches of admonition would be held. Finally, the leader of the ritual would put salt in the mouth of the beanus (sal sapientiae, "salt of wisdom"), pour wine over his head (vinum laetitiae, "wine of joy") and declare him free of his "beanism." After the payment of the relevant fee, an entrance examination would follow, carried out by a professor, and the matriculation by the rector of the university.

Notes

  1. Harvey Whitehouse and Jonathan A. Lanman, The Ties That Bind Us Current Anthropology 55(6) (2014): 674–695. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  2. Elliot Aronson and Judson Mills, The effect of severity of initiation on liking for a group Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 59(2) (1959): 177–181. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  3. Leon Festinger, The psychological effects of insufficient rewards American Psychologist 16(1) (1961): 1–11. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  4. Harvey Whitehouse, Jonathan Jong, et al., The evolution of extreme cooperation via shared dysphoric experiences Scientific Reports 7 (2017):44292. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  5. Caroline Kamau, What does being initiated severely into a group do? The role of rewards International Journal of Psychology 48(3) (2013): 399-406. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  6. John M. Levine and Richard L. Moreland, Group Socialization: Theory and Research European Review of Social Psychology 5(1) (1994): 305-336. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  7. Caroline F. Keating, Jason Pomerantz, et al., Going to college and unpacking hazing: A functional approach to decrypting initiation practices among undergraduates Group Dynamics: Theory, Research, and Practice 9(2) (2005): 104–126. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  8. Hein F. M. Lodewijkx, Martijn van Zomeren, and Jef E. M. M. Syroit, The anticipation of a severe initiation: Gender differences in effects on affiliation tendency and group attraction Small Group Research 36(2) (2005): 237–262. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Mircea Eliade, Rites and Symbols of Initiation (Spring Publications, 1965. ISBN 978-0882140612).
  10. Christian Bernard, So Mote It Be! (Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, 2004, ISBN 978-1893971073).
  11. Reinhold Aman (ed.), Maledicta 12 (Maledicta Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0916500320).
  12. Chris Glavin, Hazing Methods K12 Academics. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  13. Vlad Sokhin, Crying Meri: Violence Against Women in Papua New Guinea Retrieved June16, 2022.
  14. Deborah Burris-Kitchen, Female Gang Participation (Edwin Mellen Press, 1997, ISBN 978-0773486171).
  15. Winifred L. Reed and Scott H. Decker, Responding to Gangs: Evaluation and Research (National Institute of Justice, July 20020. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  16. Jane Wharton, The making of a man: Inside a bull jumping ceremony with Ethiopia's Hamer tribe The Express, February 22, 2015. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  17. Steve Backshall, Bitten by the Amazon The Sunday Times, January 6, 2008. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  18. Daniel P. Biebuyck, Lega Culture: Art, initiation, and moral philosophy among a Central African people (University of California Press, 1973, ISBN 978-0520020856).
  19. Robert C. Brumbaugh, Models of Separation and a Mountain Ok Religion Journal of the Society of Psychological Anthropology 8(4) (Winter 1980): 332-348. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  20. Joel Robbins, Becoming Sinners: Christianity and Moral Torment in a Papua New Guinea Society (University of California Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0520238008).
  21. Michael Waters, A Violent 15th-Century Freshman Hazing Ritual Involving Boar Tusks and Razors Atlas Obscura, July 10, 2017. Retrieved June 17, 2022.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Aman, Reinhold (ed.). Maledicta 12. Maledicta Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0916500320
  • Bernard, Christian. So Mote It Be!. Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, 2004. ISBN 978-1893971073
  • Biebuyck, Daniel P. Lega Culture: Art, initiation, and moral philosophy among a Central African people. University of California Press, 1973. ISBN 978-0520020856
  • Burris-Kitchen, Deborah. Female Gang Participation. Edwin Mellen Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0773486171
  • Eliade, Mircea. Rites and Symbols of Initiation. Spring Publications, 2017 (original 1965). ISBN 978-0882140612
  • Robbins, Joel. Becoming Sinners: Christianity and Moral Torment in a Papua New Guinea Society. University of California Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0520238008

External links

All links retrieved June 16, 2022.

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