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Superstitions of tree worship over the world

To the savage the world in general is
animate, and trees and plants are no exception to the rule. He thinks
that they have souls like his own, and he treats them accordingly.
“They say,” writes the ancient vegetarian Porphyry, “that primitive
men led an unhappy life, for their superstition did not stop at
animals but extended even to plants. For why should the slaughter of
an ox or a sheep be a greater wrong than the felling of a fir or an
oak, seeing that a soul is implanted in these trees also?”
At Upsala, the old religious capital of Sweden, there was a
sacred grove in which every tree was regarded as divine. The heathen
Slavs worshipped trees and groves. The Lithuanians were not converted
to Christianity till towards the close of the fourteenth century, and
amongst them at the date of their conversion the worship of trees was
prominent. Some of them revered remarkable oaks and other great shady
trees, from which they received oracular responses. Some maintained
holy groves about their villages or houses, where even to break a twig
would have been a sin. They thought that he who cut a bough in such a
grove either died suddenly or was crippled in one of his limbs.
Proofs of the prevalence of tree-worship in ancient Greece and
Italy are abundant. In the sanctuary of Aesculapius at Cos, for
example, it was forbidden to cut down the cypress-trees under a
penalty of a thousand drachms. But nowhere, perhaps, in the ancient
world was this antique form of religion better preserved than in the
heart of the great metropolis itself. In the Forum, the busy centre of
Roman life, the sacred fig-tree of Romulus was worshipped down to the
days of the empire, and the withering of its trunk was enough to
spread consternation through the city. Again, on the slope of the
Palatine Hill grew a cornel-tree which was esteemed one of the most
sacred objects in Rome. Whenever the tree appeared to a passer-by to
be drooping, he set up a hue and cry which was echoed by the people in
the street, and soon a crowd might be seen running helter-skelter from
all sides with buckets of water, as if (says Plutarch) they were
hastening to put out a fire.
Hidatsa Indians of North America believe that every natural
object has its spirit, or to speak more properly, its shade. To these
shades some consideration or respect is due, but not equally to all.
For example, the shade of the cottonwood, the greatest tree in the
valley of the Upper Missouri, is supposed to possess an intelligence
which, if properly approached, may help the Indians in certain
undertakings; but the shades of shrubs and grasses are of little
account. When the Missouri, swollen by a freshet in spring, carries
away part of its banks and sweeps some tall tree into its current, it
is said that the spirit of the tree cries, while the roots still cling
to the land and until the trunk falls with a splash into the stream.
Formerly the Indians considered it wrong to fell one of these giants,
and when large logs were needed they made use only of trees which had
fallen of themselves.
The Wanika of Eastern Africa fancy that every tree, and
especially every coco-nut tree, has its spirit; “the destruction of a
cocoa-nut tree is regarded as equivalent to matricide, because that
tree gives them life and nourishment, as a mother does her child.”
In Thailand, Siamese monks, believing that there are souls
everywhere, and that to destroy anything whatever is forcibly to
dispossess a soul, will not break a branch of a tree, “as they will
not break the arm of an innocent person.” These monks, of course, are
Buddhists. But Buddhist animism is not a philosophical theory. It is
simply a common savage dogma incorporated in the system of an
historical religion.
Reverence for trees is an important part of Buryat tradition.
They especially revere large or unusual trees, which are believed to
be the residence of powerful spirits. They may be honored by tying on
pieces of cloth or placing offerings of tobacco to the spirit of the
tree as they would pass during their travels. A tree symbolizes the
world center, where heaven and earth touch, where all times and places
converge. For this reason trees are considered to be places of prayer.
Below is a barisaa, "prayer tree," on which Buryats have tied ribbons,
bud, onto its branches in honor of the spirits. The tying on of the
ribbons is done with a specific intention for healing, luck, or some
other purpose, and the spirits are believed to heed the intentions
conveyed by the ribbons.
Sometimes it is only particular sorts of trees that are supposed to be
tenanted by spirits. At Grbalj in Dalmatia it is said that
among great beeches, oaks, and other trees there are some that are
endowed with shades or souls, and whoever fells one of them must die
on the spot, or at least live an invalid for the rest of his days. If
a woodman fears that a tree which he has felled is one of this sort,
he must cut off the head of a live hen on the stump of the tree with
the very same axe with which he cut down the tree. This will protect
him from all harm, even if the tree be one of the animated kind.
Old peasants in some parts of Austria still believe that
forest-trees are animate, and will not allow an incision to be made in
the bark without special cause; they have heard from their fathers
that the tree feels the cut not less than a wounded man his hurt. In
felling a tree they beg its pardon. It is said that in the Upper
Palatinate also old woodmen still secretly ask a fine, sound tree to
forgive them before they cut it down. So in Jarkino the woodman craves
pardon of the tree he fells.
The Basoga of Central Africa think that, when a tree is cut
down, the angry spirit which inhabits it may cause the death of the
chief and his family. To prevent this disaster they consult a
medicine-man before they fell a tree. If the man of skill gives leave
to proceed, the woodman first offers a fowl and a goat to the tree;
then as soon as he has given the first blow with the axe, he applies
his mouth to the cut and sucks some of the sap. In this way he forms a
brotherhood with the tree, just as two men become blood-brothers by
sucking each other’s blood. After that he can cut down his
tree-brother with impunity.
In India, many trees are worshipped in the temple and are associated
either with the village, temple or the deity. Later, these trees
became the sthalavrikshas i.e., the sacred trees. There are a number
of places which are named after these sacred trees or the vrikshas. In
South India, shrines were often erected in places where a certain
tree was regarded as the abode of the deity and worshipped as such.
These trees later became the sthalavrikshas. Examples are found in the
mango (ekamra) tree of Kanchi, jambu (Indian black plum) of
Jumbukeswaram near Tiruchirappalli, mullai (jasmine) shrub of
Tirumullaivayil, nelli (Indian gooseberry) of Tirunellikka, panai
(Indian plum) of Tirupanaiyur and tillai (blinding tree) of
Chidambaram.
The durian-tree of the East Indies, whose smooth stem often
shoots up to a height of eighty or ninety feet without sending out a
branch, bears a fruit of the most delicious flavour and the most
disgusting stench. The Malays cultivate the tree for the sake of its
fruit, and have been known to resort to a peculiar ceremony for the
purpose of stimulating its fertility. Near Jugra in Selangor there is
a small grove of durian-trees, and on a specially chosen day the
villagers used to assemble in it. Thereupon one of the local sorcerers
would take a hatchet and deliver several shrewd blows on the trunk of
the most barren of the trees, saying, “Will you now bear fruit or not?
If you do not, I shall fell you.” To this the tree replied through the
mouth of another man who had climbed a mangostin-tree hard by (the
durian-tree being unclimbable), “Yes, I will now bear fruit; I beg of
you not to fell me.”
The conception of trees and plants as animated beings naturally
results in treating them as male and female, who can be married to
each other in a real, and not merely a figurative or poetical, sense
of the word. The notion is not purely fanciful, for plants like
animals have their sexes and reproduce their kind by the union of the
male and female elements. But whereas in all the higher animals the
organs of the two sexes are regularly separated between different
individuals, in most plants they exist together in every individual of
the species. This rule, however, is by no means universal, and in many
species the male plant is distinct from the female. The distinction
appears to have been observed by some savages, for we are told that
the Maoris “are acquainted with the sex of trees, etc., and have
distinct names for the male and female of some trees.” The ancients
knew the difference between the male and the female date-palm, and
fertilised them artificially by shaking the pollen of the male tree
over the flowers of the female. The fertilisation took place in
spring. Among the heathen of Harran the month during which the palms
were fertilised bore the name of the Date Month, and at this time they
celebrated the marriage festival of all the gods and goddesses.
Different from this true and fruitful marriage of the palm are the
false and barren marriages of plants which play a part in Hindoo
superstition. For example, if a Hindoo has planted a grove of mangos,
neither he nor his wife may taste of the fruit until he has formally
married one of the trees, as a bridegroom, to a tree of a different
sort, commonly a tamarind-tree, which grows near it in the grove. If
there is no tamarind to act as bride, a jasmine will serve the turn.
The expenses of such a marriage are often considerable, for the more
Brahmans are feasted at it, the greater the glory of the owner of the
grove. A family has been known to sell its golden and silver trinkets,
and to borrow all the money they could in order to marry a mango-tree
to a jasmine with due pomp and ceremony.
Sometimes it is the souls of the dead which are believed to animate
trees. The Dieri tribe of Central Australia regard as very
sacred certain trees which are supposed to be their fathers
transformed; hence they speak with reverence of these trees, and are
careful that they shall not be cut down or burned. If the settlers
require them to hew down the trees, they earnestly protest against it,
asserting that were they to do so they would have no luck, and might
be punished for not protecting their ancestors.
Some of the Philippine Islanders believe that the souls of
their ancestors are in certain trees, which they therefore spare. If
they are obliged to fell one of these trees, they excuse themselves to
it by saying that it was the priest who made them do it. The spirits
take up their abode, by preference, in tall and stately trees with
great spreading branches. When the wind rustles the leaves, the
natives fancy it is the voice of the spirit; and they never pass near
one of these trees without bowing respectfully, and asking pardon of
the spirit for disturbing his repose.
In China it has been customary from time immemorial to plant
trees on graves in order thereby to strengthen the soul of the
deceased and thus to save his body from corruption; and as the
evergreen cypress and pine are deemed to be fuller of vitality than
other trees, they have been chosen by preference for this purpose.
Hence the trees that grow on graves are sometimes identified with the
souls of the departed. Among the Miao-Kia, an aboriginal race of
Southern and Western China, a sacred tree stands at the entrance of
every village, and the inhabitants believe that it is tenanted by the
soul of their first ancestor and that it rules their destiny.
Sometimes there is a sacred grove near a village, where the trees are
suffered to rot and die on the spot. Their fallen branches cumber the
ground, and no one may remove them unless he has first asked leave of
the spirit of the tree and offered him a sacrifice. Trees that bleed
and utter cries of pain or indignation when they are hacked or burned
occur very often in Chinese books.
In most, if not all, of these cases the spirit is viewed as
incorporate in the tree; it animates the tree and must suffer and die
with it. But, according to another and probably later opinion, the
tree is not the body, but merely the abode of the tree-spirit, which
can quit it and return to it at pleasure. The inhabitants of Siaoo,
an East Indian island, believe in certain sylvan spirits who
dwell in forests or in great solitary trees. At full moon the spirit
comes forth from his lurking-place and roams about. He has a big head,
very long arms and legs, and a ponderous body. In order to propitiate
the wood-spirits people bring offerings of food, fowls, goats, and so
forth to the places which they are supposed to haunt. The people of
Nias think that, when a tree dies, its liberated spirit becomes a
demon, which can kill a coco-nut palm by merely lighting on its
branches, and can cause the death of all the children in a house by
perching on one of the posts that support it. Further, they are of
opinion that certain trees are at all times inhabited by roving demons
who, if the trees were damaged, would be set free to go about on
errands of mischief. Hence the people respect these trees, and are
careful not to cut them down.
As we can see, ideas about tree spirits varied greatly among different
tribes and races. Some trees were indwelt by kindly spirits; others
harbored the deceptive and cruel. The Finns believed that most trees
were occupied by kind spirits. The Swiss long mistrusted the trees,
believing they contained tricky spirits. The inhabitants of India and
eastern Russia regard the tree spirits as being cruel. The Patagonians
still worship trees, as did the early Semites. Long after the Hebrews
ceased tree worship, they continued to venerate their various deities
in the groves. Except in China, there once existed a universal cult of
the tree of life.
Reference:
Sir James George Frazer (1854–1941). The Golden Bough. 1922.

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