Don
Agustin Rivas Vazques
Don Agustin Rivas Vasquez was
born in the village of Tamshiyacu, on the shores of the amazon
river. Growing up there he was exposed, as are most people
in the small villages that dot the amazon-river basin, to
the amazing practices of famed shamans, some good, others
dangerous. As a child, he saw a famed "Banco", or
supreme shaman, the "spirits' stool", bring his
mother back from the brink of death because of a magical dart
some bewitching shaman had sent her. He saw the "Banco"
extract the dart by sucking it out, long-distance, all the
way from the mosquitoe-net where he was sitting while embodying
shamanic spirits. Don Agustin's life was to take a long detour
when he was sent-out at age 13 to the Town of Iquitos to attend
Seminary school, where he helped the priest as an altar boy.
However, rebellious and precocious as he was, he escaped and
went on a long journey that would lead him to Lima, back to
Iquitos, to Pucallpa and eventually to his native land, back
to the village of Tamshiyacu where he now lives. Don Agustin
learned many traits in his journeys, but among them stands-out
his becoming a master wood-worker, making fine furniture in
Lima. After he settled in Pucallpa, where he raised his family,
that skill with handling wood took-on another shape when,
after beginning his shamanic apprenticeship there with famous
ayahuasqueros, he saw in a vision countless wood sculptures
parading-by, and the voice of his dead grand-mother telling
him he had to sculpt them. And so his art developed simultaneously
as his shamanic apprenticeship. Don Agustin set-out to sculpt
the many forms he had seen in his visions, creating amazingly
haunting sculptures that reflect the phantasmagoria of Amazonian
shamanism and some of the many fantastic creatures that populate
it. Don Agustin would go-out into the forest marshes looking
for Remo-Caspi trees, which have very contorted root-systems,
to find roots with forms suitable for his visions, and would
manifest his visions around the natural forms of the roots.
Often-times, while working on his sculptures, Don Agustin
would also be undergoing a special diet for learning the shamanic
use of certain plants, remaining in isolation, and eating
only white rice, green plantains, and one kind of pure fish
for one, two or three months at a time. When it came time
to show his work, his teacher, Don Ramon, blew a special "Icaro"
(Magical whistle-tune) into a perfume, which he gave Don Agustin
to place on his sculptures so they would sell well. In fact,
Don Agustin became a very famous sculptor, of national and
international renown, having been invited by the Austrian
government to do an exhibition of his work there. Simultaneously,
Don Agustin had begun to heal people, and his teacher, Don
Ramon, and his wife -also a shaman, both had a dream whereby
they empowered Don Agustin to begin curing. His curing practice
started with children, but soon -and through many more diet/retreats
in isolation in the forest- he started to cure adults as well.
A great moment in his life was when he had to cure his own
teacher Don Ramon, from a sorcery he had received from his
own son. Also, he cured Don Eulogio Brito, a Shipibo shaman
with whom he would occasionally study as well. He knew then
that he was ready...he had learned many Icaros and Mariris
from the spirits of many plants and ancient shamans, and had
acquired the "Yachay", or magical phlegm that Amazonian
shamans use for extracting harm from people, and as spirit-helpers
for his curing. However, what made his shamanic practice come
to the forefront, over his artistic success, was a terrible
accident while high on a tree where he was cutting a branch
to sculpt. The branch snapped throwing him up in the air.
To prevent a fatal fall, he grabbed onto the trunk of a Palm
tree, which had poisonous spines that tore all his nerve filaments
out from both his arms. After a painful surgery in Austria,
sponsored by the same people who had supported his art, Don
Agustin recuperated partial use of all his fingers, but without
any sensibility in them. Unable to continue his art-work full-time,
Don Agustin dedicated himself fully to curing people. He started
to treat young drug-addicts at a jungle encampment he had
many kilometers outside Pucallpa, with great results. Also,
foreign people were also coming to see him for help. Eventually
many people from abroad became interested in his work and
took him to North America and Europe, to conduct workshops
in Peruvian Amazon Shamanism. More groups from those countries
started coming to his jungle camp as well. He was forced-out
of his jungle camp by coca growers however, and so Don Agustin
decided to go back to his birth place, the village of Tamshiyacu,
and build a jungle encampment in the vecinity. He called this
camp "Yushin Taita", and thanks to his great ability
as a builder and incredible stamina for hard and never-ending
work, he has turned it into a paradise where both local and
foreign people come for help and healing. Many people from
all over the world visit him there, and truly a University
of Ayahuasca and a Healing clinic has been established, where
people come for healing, vision, transformation and empowerment.
Later followed another camp, further into the jungle, where
he goes with people to conduct special retreats. it is called
Otorongo, or Jaguar, and features an amazing five-story conical
building Don Agustin saw in a Dream; it serves both as a temple
for curing ceremonies, and as dormitory. Don Agustin's artistic
sensibility found in shamanism another manifestation, as he
is an exquisite musician (something he cultivated all his
life as a past-time) who can truly enact healing through the
power of sound, not only with the traditional whistled-tunes
(Icaros) and magical songs (Maririrs), but also with non-traditional
instruments like Maracas (Rattles), drums, and even a Harmonica.
He even created an instrument he was taught about in a vision,
"El Arco del Duende", or the Fairy's Bow, which
makes the sweetest most haunting music, and takes people on
journeys to incredible magical realms.
Through his music and healing
powers, Don Agustin is a master alchemist, who knows how to
massage the emotional, physical, mental and spiritual bodies,
and bring well-being to people's lives. He embodies, in my
opinion, what shamanism is all about; namely, the personal
engagement with the manifold forces surrounding us, and the
capacity to turn them into beneficent and beautiful energy
patterns to bring health, love, happiness and prosperity into
people's lives. Don Agustin not only engages the natural and
supernatural forces surrounding us, but also the very concrete
(though maybe not so real) forces of modernization impinging
evermore on cultures and traditions in remote areas of the
world. He embraces and welcomes change, and -as in child's
play- can turn consumer objects into magical healing tools,
and pollutants such as stress into fertilizer for the earth
(he makes people vomit-out their stress).