Tuesday 30 November 2021

with dreams of poets and the songs of seals

with the dreams of poems and the songs of seals

Totem Latamat
Return to the Earth Ceremony at The Crichton

The sweeping blast, the sky o’ercast,
The joyless winter-day,
Let others fear, to me more dear
Than all the pride of May….
(Robert Burns, Winter: a Dirge)




Totem Latamat’s story began long before Jun Tiburcio and the people of Cuhumatlan approached a cedar tree in the woods of Vera Cruz. For us, this story really started then with images carved out of that scented wood, images that embodied elements of Jun’s culture and carried a message from them to the rest of the world as represented by the gathering of parliaments, countries, cultures, optimism and faiths at COP26


Indigenous artwork, Totem Latamat has traveled over 9,000km from Mexico to UK for COP26. Moving up the country, the 4.5m Indigenous Mexican response to climate change is travelling to important cultural hubs across the UK including London, Coventry, Milton Keynes and Manchester drawing powerful links between Indigenous experience and local heritage. From the Border Crossings Origins Festival news about Totem Latamat. Find out more here


There is a personal account of the Totem’s travels by Graham Harvey here. Graham visited the Totem in most of its venues across the UK

At the end of COP26, at Jun’s request, Totem Latamat was to be given to the earth: a gift from the earth of Mexico to that of Scotland. With this gesture, the Totem would invite continued reflection on the connections between communities, facing challenges and processes that cross boundaries, defy politics and affect everyone and everything: human and non-human alike.

Return to the Earth

T
otem Latamat, we welcome you
With air and breath,
With fire and hope,
With stone and death
With love and passion 

 (From Welcoming, 1)

This sense of earth-reaching-to-earth and a gift that is offered to all communities informed a ceremony that came from an environmental (animist) awareness of the world. Creeping Toad, Border Crossings and other friends created a ceremony that belonged to no particular religious tradition but where there was space for individuals to find their own sense of connection and prayer as they wished. The imagery used was of these islands: speaking of weather and wildlife, of music and laughter, children playing and watchful grandparents. From fungi to birds, everyone was drawn into our reception of Totem Latamat.


Michael Walling from Border Crossings setting the scene

The Totem spent a week standing in the grounds of The Crichton in Dumfries and being used as a focus for discussions and workshops. With its expanding role as a centre for community activity, The Crichton offers the Totem a resting place where it will remain a centre for discussion, challenge and inspiration.


taking the strain

Totem Latamat, we rejoice in you
with playing children
with resting birds
with rooted fungi
with burrowing grubs 

(From Reception: how will we receive Totem)

On a wind-swept Saturday morning in the middle of November, we gathered round the Totem, speaking words of welcome and words of reception. Robbie Burns’ wonderful Winter Dirge” set the scene. Reaching out from human perspectives to the wider landscape, we invited the environs of The Crichton to embrace Totem, to welcome it into this world of wind and rain, high skies and flying geese.

Totem Latamat,
With the earth of our land,
The bones of our people,
The dreams of our poets,
The songs of our seals,
We embrace you. 

(From Embracing: a wider and older landscape than us)

We recognised the invitation and acknowledged the challenge that the Totem brings: inviting us to become our own Hummingbird messengers and challenging us to be the wide-seeing eagles with strength under their wings.

Totem under snow, late November 2021


Totem Latamat, may
Our dreamers,
Our thinkers,
Our talkers,
Our singers,
Our storytellers,
Our warriors,
Our poets,
Our grandmothers,
Our grandchildren,
All our people,
Each of our people,
Totem Latamat,
May all our folk
Be inspired by you 

(from inspiration, acknowledging and accepting )


And we toppled Totem so that when the ropes were dropped, Totem lay on the ground ready for flowers to grow around the hummingbirds, an open door for the wasps we found looking for somewhere to hibernate, an adventure ground for a cuddly rabbit and a child’s inquisitive fingers. The Totem will rest there on the lawns of The Crichton as the lawns around it are planted with wildflowers. There are already plans for a seasonal cycle of visiting workshops, creating new stories of connections between people and place, hearing of people’s hummingbird moments and their eagle resolution, of the ideas and actions they have planted of the upraised arms they have offered to their family, friends and the rest of the world.



some of the ceremony team

Totem Latamat,
Here, we offer you
Our friendship,
Our laughter,
Our silence,
Our reflection.

Totem Latamat,
Here we offer you
A long slow sleep on grass,
Under sun,
Under moon,
Under our wind and rain,

Here we offer
Dissolution,
The slow dance of decay
Of becoming everything else who visits you 
(from: Reception: what do we offer)

Visitors stayed. Lingered. Stopped to touch, to talk, to wonder. We found our first new residents of the Totem with the wasp queens mentioned above: looking for somewhere to hibernate. Reciprocity and respect lie within the Totem's messages and within many indigenous understandings of our relationship with the earth and it was encouraging to watch and listen and share with people their awareness of our need to give back - to acknowledge what is given to us so freely by the world around us. Without us saying anything, people left gifts: tokens from pockets and bags. People simply touched, stroked wood, felt the curves of a hummingbird's head, the folds of a wing's feathers and went away with a token in return: a red rag, a strip of cloth to wear as a bracelet, to tie up hair, to hide ina pocket until cloth, story and resolution are shared somewhere else.

Totem Latamat might have "retired" but it is still telling stories. Its hummingbirds are still sharing messages.

You can watch a short film of the totem at the Crichton on the centre's website:   https://www.crichton.co.uk/totem-latamat-has-retired-to-the-crichton/


The full text of the ceremony will be available if anyone wants to see it, be annoyed by it, or adapt it for their own use shortly. A link for a download will be posted here

A big thank you
  • to the Return to the Earth team: Michael Walling, Ian Buckley and Graham Harvey
  • To Alex Alberda from Manchester Museum for deft application of ideas and scissors
  • To the Open University for being there, supporting, encouraging, joining in
  • To The Crichton team for their hospitality, warmth and imagination
  • To the Border Crossings Origins Team for drawing all this together
  • And to Jun Tiburcio, the artists, and the people of Cuhumatlan in Vera Cruz, Mexico who gave us the travelling wonder that is the Totem Latamat
Photos c/o The Crichton, Dumfries and Mike Bolam Photography

Notes

1: All these verses come from different sections of the Return to the Earth. Ceremony held at The Crichton on Saturday 20th November 2021




 


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