Don Hector Aguanari
Don Hector Aguanari was born in the small hamlet of Punchana,
upriver fromthe jungle city of iquitos, Peru, on the Amazon
River. As he grew-up, hewould watch his father, famed healer
and Ayahusquero, Don Manuel Aguanari(Mentioned in Luis Eduardo
Lunaâs Book on "Vegetalismo"), perform varioushealings
and Ayahuasca ceremonies.
One of the ones that impressed him the most, and that he vividly
recalls,is the time his father was brought a woman with a
very swollen belly and inexcruciating pain. Upon diagnosing
her with Ayahuasca, Don Manuel saw that she had been harmed
by anotherAyahuascquero, using a veryhard-to-cure type of
sorcery: She had been made pregnant by an anaconda!!! (This
is not a too-unusual an occurrence, as Pablo Amaringo portrays
suchphenomena in one of his paintings included in his and
Luis EduardoLunaâs book on Ayahuasca Iconography. Also,
I have heard accountsfrom various healers who claim tohave
been confronted by similar phenomena).
Therefore, Don Manuel set-out to prepare a medicine from the
very strongand highly regarded (as both, potentially healing
or harmful) Katawa tree,whose resine is extremely caustic.
When the woman drank the medicine, sheexperieneced very painful
contortions in her belly, as the anaconda within writhed in
pain. Finally, aseveryone had fallen asleep, the anaconda
came out of the woman, leavingonly a trace of phlegm and blood
on her path.
All such experiences undoubtedly had a strong influence on
DonManuelâs young son, Hector. However, Hector didnât
set-out tobecome a shaman nor an Ayahuasquero until much later-on
in life, choosing rather to respond to the exigencies of making
a living andraising a family in Iquitos.
It was when he was in his late thirties, that he first started
to learn themedicine-way of Ayahuasca, "out of necessity",
as heexplains. He and his wife had fallen into a very hard
rut, they literallyrepulsed each other, and couldnât
have the same mind on any topic. They consulted an Ayahuasquerowho
told them they had been done harm to (ensorcelled) by envious
peoplewho wished them apart, but even though both of them
saw it was true in their Ayahuasca visions,both of them resisted
believing it. Not until his wife left him forPucallpa did
Don Hector seriously approach his Ayahuasquero healer, who
then helped cleanse him and his wife of theirsorcery, and
helped call-back the soul of Don hectorâs wife back
tohim. Two months later, Don hectorâs wife, completely
of her own volition, and without communication betweenthem,
was back in Iquitos, reunited with Don Hector. The healer
howevertold Don hector that not until he learned the medicine
way would he findpeace and be free from trouble.
Therefore, Don Hector set-out to learn the hard path of becoming
anAyahuasca healer.He was the last to join a group of five
apprentices to his teacher. Aftermany rigurous diets, trials
and tribulations, it beceme evident that onlyhim among the
five would emerge empowered as a full-blown Ayahuasca shaman.
Many where the difficulties on his learning path, but one
that stands-outin his mind was when he was just about to graduate,
and he entered a vision during an Ayahuasca session where
he saw the whole worldending, and such was the horror and
sadness of what he was experiencingthat he wept unconsolably
and promised himself that he would never takeAyahuasca again.
However, he withstood the trial and emerged victorious, and
ever since he has been a practicingAyahuasca shaman with a
thriving clientele, and coutless healings to hisname.
He conducts his ceremonies caringly and very strongly. His
singing ispowerful, and beautiful. His ritual-style is quite
traditional, usingmostly the leaf-bundle called "Shacapa"
for instrumentation, and singing in a combination of Quechua,
nativeamazonian languages and Spanish. He combines traditional
jungle iconographywith Christian iconography in his songs,
as is quite common among suchpractitioners in the Peruvian
Amazon.
His healing songs came mostly from his teacher, but amazingly
enough, eventhough long dead, his father, Don Manuel, now
comes to help Don Hector inhis ceremonies, and all of Don
Manuelâs songs have come back to DonHector, who now
uses them.
Don Hector is in his sixties now, and going strong. He counts
twenty-onestudents to his name, both men and women. His main
apprentice is hisfoster-son Fernando, and together they sing
well in ceremonies. "It is good to have apprentices that
learn well" says Don Hector,"because when one is
in trouble, oneâs students may beable to help"
.