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Haoma



 
 
Haoma is the Avestan language
Avestan language

Avestan is a Eastern Iranian language that was used to compose the sacred hymns and canon of the Zoroastrianism Avesta. Iranian languages are part of the hypothetical Indo-Iranian languages Language group....
 name of a plant and its divinity, both of which play a role in Zoroastrian
Zoroastrianism

Zoroastrianism is the religion and philosophy based on the teachings ascribed to the prophet Zoroaster, after whom the religion is named. The term Zoroastrianism is in general usage, essentially synonymous with Mazdaism, i.e., the worship of Ahura Mazda, exalted by Zoroaster as the supreme divine authority....
 doctrine and in later Persian culture and mythology. The Middle Persian
Middle Persian

Middle Persian is the Iranian languages language/ethnolect of Southwestern Iran that during Sassanid times became a prestige dialect and so came to be spoken in other regions as well....
 form of the name is hom, which continues to be the name in Modern Persian
Persian language

name=Persian|nativename=|pronunciation=[f??r'si]|image=|caption=Farsi in Perso-Arabic script |states= Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Bahrain....
 and other living Iranian languages.

Sacred haoma has its origins in Indo-Iranian religion and is the cognate of Vedic
Vedas

The Vedas are a large body of texts originating in History of India. They form the oldest layer of Sanskrit literature and the oldest Hindu scripture of Hinduism....
 soma
Soma

Soma , or Haoma , from Proto-Indo-Iranian *sauma-, was a ritual drink of importance among the early Indo-Iranians, and the later Vedic civilization and Greater Iran cultures....
. For haoma's relationship to Vedic soma, see comparison to soma.

Avestan haoma and Sanskrit
Sanskrit

Sanskrit is a historical Indo-Aryan language, one of the liturgical languages of Hinduism and Buddhism, and one of the 22 official languages of India....
 soma derived from proto-Indo-Iranian
Proto-Indo-Iranian language

Proto-Indo-Iranian, is the Linguistic reconstruction proto-language of the Indo-Iranian languages branch of Indo-European language. Its speakers, the hypothetical Proto-Indo-Iranians, are assumed to have lived in the late 3rd millennium BC, and are usually connected with the early Andronovo archaeological horizon....
 *sauma.






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Haoma is the Avestan language
Avestan language

Avestan is a Eastern Iranian language that was used to compose the sacred hymns and canon of the Zoroastrianism Avesta. Iranian languages are part of the hypothetical Indo-Iranian languages Language group....
 name of a plant and its divinity, both of which play a role in Zoroastrian
Zoroastrianism

Zoroastrianism is the religion and philosophy based on the teachings ascribed to the prophet Zoroaster, after whom the religion is named. The term Zoroastrianism is in general usage, essentially synonymous with Mazdaism, i.e., the worship of Ahura Mazda, exalted by Zoroaster as the supreme divine authority....
 doctrine and in later Persian culture and mythology. The Middle Persian
Middle Persian

Middle Persian is the Iranian languages language/ethnolect of Southwestern Iran that during Sassanid times became a prestige dialect and so came to be spoken in other regions as well....
 form of the name is hom, which continues to be the name in Modern Persian
Persian language

name=Persian|nativename=|pronunciation=[f??r'si]|image=|caption=Farsi in Perso-Arabic script |states= Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Bahrain....
 and other living Iranian languages.

Sacred haoma has its origins in Indo-Iranian religion and is the cognate of Vedic
Vedas

The Vedas are a large body of texts originating in History of India. They form the oldest layer of Sanskrit literature and the oldest Hindu scripture of Hinduism....
 soma
Soma

Soma , or Haoma , from Proto-Indo-Iranian *sauma-, was a ritual drink of importance among the early Indo-Iranians, and the later Vedic civilization and Greater Iran cultures....
. For haoma's relationship to Vedic soma, see comparison to soma.

Etymology

Both Avestan haoma and Sanskrit
Sanskrit

Sanskrit is a historical Indo-Aryan language, one of the liturgical languages of Hinduism and Buddhism, and one of the 22 official languages of India....
 soma derived from proto-Indo-Iranian
Proto-Indo-Iranian language

Proto-Indo-Iranian, is the Linguistic reconstruction proto-language of the Indo-Iranian languages branch of Indo-European language. Its speakers, the hypothetical Proto-Indo-Iranians, are assumed to have lived in the late 3rd millennium BC, and are usually connected with the early Andronovo archaeological horizon....
 *sauma. The linguistic root of the word haoma, hu-, and of soma, su-, suggests 'press' or 'pound'. (Taillieu, 2002)

As a plant


In the Avesta

The physical attributes, as described in the texts of the Avesta
Avesta

The Avesta is the primary collection of sacred texts of Zoroastrianism, composed in the Avestan language....
, include:
  • the plant has stems, roots and branches (Yasna
    Yasna

    Yasna is the name of the primary liturgical collection of texts of the Avesta as well as the name of the principal Zoroastrianism act of worship at which those verses are recited....
     10.5).
  • it has a pliant asu (Yasna 9.16). The term asu is only used in conjunction with a description of haoma, and does not have an established translation. It refers to 'twigs' according to Dieter Taillieu, 'stalk' according to Robert Wasson, 'fibre' or 'flesh' according to Ilya Gershevitch, 'sprouts' according to Lawrence Heyworth Mills
    Lawrence Heyworth Mills

    The Rev. Dr. Lawrence Heyworth Mills , who generally published as L. H. Mills, was Professor of the Persian language at Oxford University....
    .
  • it is tall (Yasna 10.21, Vendidad 19.19)
  • it is fragrant (Yasna 10.4)
  • it is golden-green (standard appellation, Yasna 9.16 et al)
  • it can be pressed (Yasna 9.1, 9.2)
  • it grows on the mountains, 'swiftly spreading', 'apart on many paths' (Yasna 9.26, 10.3-4 et al) 'to the gorges and abysses' (Yasna 10-11) and 'on the ranges' (Yasna 10.12)


The indirect attributes (i.e. as effects of its consumption) include:
  • it furthers healing (Yasna 9.16-17, 9.19, 10.8, 10.9)
  • it furthers sexual arousal (Yasna 9.13-15, 9.22)
  • it is physically strengthening (Yasna 9.17, 9.22, 9.27)
  • it stimulates alertness and awareness (Yasna 9.17, 9.22, 10.13)
  • the mildly intoxicating extract can be consumed without negative side effects (Yasna 10.8).
  • it is nourishing (Yasna 9.4, 10.20) and 'most nutritious for the soul' (Yasna 9.16).


In present-day Zoroastrianism

Many of the physical attributes as described in the texts of the Avesta coincide with the choice of plant used in present-day Zoroastrian practice. Although it cannot be ruled out that the plant, as it is used today, is a surrogate of the plant that was revered by ancient Zoroastrians, the choice of such a surrogate would presumably have been made to suit ancient practice. In present-day preparation of parahaoma (for details, see Ab-Zohr
Ab-Zohr

The Ab-Zohr is the culminating rite of the greater Yasna service, the principal Zoroastrianism act of worship that accompanies the recitation of the Avesta#The Yasna liturgy....
), ...
  • the twigs are repeatedly pounded in the presence of a little water, which suggests ancient haoma was also water-soluble.
  • the twigs have to be imported by Indian-Zoroastrians, who believe that they are, for climatic reasons, not obtainable on the Indian subcontinent.
  • very small quantities are produced.
According to Falk, Parsi-Zoroastrians use a variant of Ephedra, usually Ephedra procera, imported from the Hari River valley in Afghanistan. (Falk, 1989)

Botanic identification


Since the late 1700s, when Anquetil-Duperron and others made portions of the Avesta available to western scholarship, several scholars have sought a representative botanical equivalent of the haoma as described in the texts and as used in living Zoroastrian practice. Most of the proposals concentrated on either linguistic evidence or comparative pharmacology or reflected ritual use. Rarely were all three considered together, which usually resulted in such proposals being quickly rejected.

Ephedra Distachya
In the late 19th century, the highly conservative Zoroastrians of Yazd
Yazd

Yazd , is the capital of Yazd province in Iran, "the second most ancient and historic city in the world" and a centre of Zoroastrian culture. The city is located some 175 miles southeast of Isfahan ....
 (Iran) were found to use Ephedra
Ephedra

Ephedra, from the plant Ephedra sinica, has been used as an herbal remedy in traditional Chinese medicine for 5,000 years for the treatment of asthma and hay fever, as well as for the common cold....
 (genus Ephedra
Ephedra (genus)

Ephedra is a genus of gymnosperm shrubs, the only genus in the family Ephedraceae and order Ephedrales. These plants occur in dry climates over a wide area mainly in the northern hemisphere, across southern Europe, north Africa, southwest and central Asia, southwestern North America, and, in the southern hemisphere, in South A...
), which was locally known as hum or homa and which they exported to the Indian Zoroastrians. (Aitchison, 1888) The plant, as Falk also established, requires a cool and dry climate, i.e. it does not grow in India (which is either too hot or too humid or both) but thrives in central Asia. Later, it was discovered that a number of Iranian languages
Iranian languages

The Iranian languages are a branch of the Indo-European languages and its subfamily, Indo-Iranian languages. These languages are mainly spoken by the Iranian Peoples....
 and Persian dialects have hom or similar terms as the local name for some variant of Ephedra. Considered together, the linguistic and ritual evidence appeared to conclusively establish that haoma was some variant of Ephedra.

In the latter half of the 20th century, several studies attempted to establish haoma as a psychotropic substance, and based their arguments on the assumption that proto-Indo-Iranian *sauma was a hallucinogen. This assumption, which invariably relied on professed Vedic 'evidence' (one hymn of c. 120), was, as Falk (1989) and Houben (2003) would later establish, not supported by either the texts or by the observation of living practice. Moreover, the references to entheogen
Entheogen

An entheogen , in the strictest sense, is a psychoactive substance used in a religion or shamanism context. Historically, entheogens are derived primarily from plant sources and have been used in a variety of traditional religious contexts....
ic properties were only in conjunction with a fermentation of the plant extract, which does not have enough time to occur in living custom.

In the conclusion of his observations on a 1999 Haoma-Soma workshop in Leiden, Jan E. M. Houben writes: "despite strong attempts to do away with Ephedra by those who are eager to see *sauma as a hallucinogen, its status as a serious candidate for the Rigvedic Soma and Avestan Haoma still stands" (Houben, 2003, 9/1a). This supports Falk, who in his summary noted that "there is no need to look for a plant other than Ephedra, the one plant used to this day by the Parsis." (Falk, 1989)

As a divinity

The Yazata
Yazata

Yazata is the Avestan language word for a Zoroastrianism concept. The word has a wide range of meaning but generally signifies a divinity. The term literally means "worthy of worship" or "worthy of veneration."...
 Haoma, also known by the middle Persian name Hom Yazad, is the epitome of the quintessence of the haoma plant, venerated in the Hom Yašt, the hymns of Yasna 9-11.

In those hymns, Haoma is said to appear before Zoroaster in the form of a "beautiful man" (this is the only anthropomorphic reference), who prompts him to gather and press haoma for the purification of the waters (see Aban
Aban

Apas is the Avestan language term for "the waters", which—in its innumerable aggregate states—is represented by the Apas, the hypostases of the waters....
). Haoma is 'righteous' and 'furthers righteousness', is 'wise' and 'gives insight' (Yasna 9.22). Haoma was the first priest, installed by Ahura Mazda
Ahura Mazda

Ahura Mazda is the Avestan language name for a divinity exalted by Zoroaster as the one uncreated Creator, hence God.The Zoroastrianism is described by its adherents as Mazdayasna, the worship of Mazda....
 with the sacred girdle aiwiyanghana (Yasna 9.26) and serves the Amesha Spenta
Amesha Spenta

is an Avestan language term for a class of divinity/divine concepts in Zoroastrianism, and literally means "Bounteous Immortal."The noun is amesha "immortal", and spenta "furthering, strengthening, bounteous, holy" is an adjective of it. Later middle Persian variations of the term include A...
s in this capacity (Yasht
Avesta

The Avesta is the primary collection of sacred texts of Zoroastrianism, composed in the Avestan language....
 10.89). "Golden-green eyed" Haoma was the first to offer up haoma, with a "star-adorned, spirit-fashioned mortar," and is the guardian of "mountain plants upon the highest mountain peak." (Yasht 10.90)

Haoma is associated with the Amesha Spenta
Amesha Spenta

is an Avestan language term for a class of divinity/divine concepts in Zoroastrianism, and literally means "Bounteous Immortal."The noun is amesha "immortal", and spenta "furthering, strengthening, bounteous, holy" is an adjective of it. Later middle Persian variations of the term include A...
 Vohu Manah (Avestan, middle Persian Vahman or Bahman), the guardian of all animal creation. Haoma is the only divinity with a Yasht who is not also represented by a day-name dedication in the Zoroastrian calendar
Zoroastrian calendar

The Zoroastrian calendar is a religious calendar used by members of the Zoroastrian faith, and it is an approximation of the solar calendar. To this day, Zoroastrianism, irrespective of geographic location, adhere to this calendar for religious purposes....
. Without such a dedication, Haoma has ceased to be of any great importance within the Zoroastrian hierarchy of angels.

In tradition and folklore

In Ferdowsi's
Ferdowsi

Hakim Abu'l-Qasim Firdawsi Tusi , more commonly transliterated as Ferdowsi , was a highly revered Persian people poet. He was the author of the Shahnameh, the national epic of Iran as well as other Persian communities in other countries....
 Shahnameh
Shahnameh

File:Ferdowsi tehran.jpg Shahnam?, or Shahnama , "The Great Book" , is an enormous poetic opus written by the Persian literature Ferdowsi around 1000 AD and is the national epic of Iran....
, which incorporates stories from the Avesta (with due acknowledgement), Hom appears as a hermit, dweller of the mountains, incredibly strong. He binds Afrasiab (middle Persian, Avestan: "the fell Turanian Frangrasyan", Yasna 11.7) with the sacred girdle, and drags him from deep within the earth (named the hankana in Avestan, hang-e-Afrasiab in middle Persian) where Afrasaib has his "metal-encircled" kingdom that is immune to mortal attack.

In another episode, Viva?hat is the first of the humans to press haoma, for which Hom rewards him with a son, Jamshid
Jamshid

Jamshed, Jamshid or Jam in Middle Persian and New Persian, or Yima in Avestan is a mythological figure of Greater Iranian culture and tradition....
. Yasna 9.3-11 has Zoroaster
Zoroaster

Zoroaster or Zarathushtra , also referred to as Zartosht , was an ancient Iranian peoples prophet and religious poet. The hymns attributed to him, the Gathas, are at the liturgical core of Zoroastrianism....
 asking the divinity who (first) prepared haoma and for what reward, to which Haoma recalls Vivahngvant (Persian: Viva?hat) to whom Yima Xshaeta (Jamshid
Jamshid

Jamshed, Jamshid or Jam in Middle Persian and New Persian, or Yima in Avestan is a mythological figure of Greater Iranian culture and tradition....
) is born; Athwya (Abtin) to whom Thraetaona (Feredon) is born; and Thrita to whom Urvaxshaya and Keresaspa (Karshasp and Garshasp) are born. The latter two are also characters in priestly heroic tradition, and among conservative Zoroastrians of the hereditary priesthood, Haoma is still prayed to by those wanting children (in particular, honorable sons who will also become priests). The account given in the Indian Vedas closely agrees with that of the Iranian Avesta. The first preparers of Soma are listed as Vivasvat, who is the father of Yama and Manu, and Trita Aptya.

A legendary 'White Hom' grows at the junction of the "great gathering place of the waters" and a mighty river. . According to the Zadspram, at the end of time, when Ormuzd
Ahura Mazda

Ahura Mazda is the Avestan language name for a divinity exalted by Zoroaster as the one uncreated Creator, hence God.The Zoroastrianism is described by its adherents as Mazdayasna, the worship of Mazda....
 triumphs over Ahriman
Angra Mainyu

Angra Mainyu is the Avestan language name of Zoroastrianism's Hypostasis of the "destructive spirit". The Middle Persian equivalent is Ahriman....
, the followers of the good religion will share a parahom made from the 'White Hom', and so attain immortality for their resurrected bodies. (Zadspram 35.15)

James Darmesteter
James Darmesteter

James Darmesteter , France author and antiquarian, was born of Jewish parents at Ch?teau Salins, in Alsace.The family name had originated in their earlier home of Darmstadt....
, in his 1875 thesis on the mythology of the Avesta, speculating on the Parsi belief that Ephedra twigs do not decay, wrote: "it comprises the power of life of all the vegetable kingdom... both the ved and the avesta call it the 'king of healing herbs'... the zarathustri scriptures say that homa is of two kinds, the white haoma and the painless tree (no doubt the source of the 'tree of knowledge' and 'the tree of life' in the biblical paradise)... could it be that soma is the tree of life
Tree of life

The concept of a many-branched tree illustrating the idea that all life on earth is related has been used in tree of life , religion, philosophy, mythology and other areas....
? the giver of immortality?"

The Indian-Zoroastrian belief mentioned above also manifests itself in the present-day Zoroastrian practice of administering a few drops of parahaoma to the new-born or dying (see Ab-Zohr
Ab-Zohr

The Ab-Zohr is the culminating rite of the greater Yasna service, the principal Zoroastrianism act of worship that accompanies the recitation of the Avesta#The Yasna liturgy....
). The belief also appears to be very old, and be cross-cultural. As Falk, recalling Aurel Stein
Marc Aurel Stein

Sir Marc Aurel Stein was a Hungarian archaeologist. He was also a professor at various Indian universities. Stein was inspired by Sven Hedin's 1898 work, Through Asia....
 discovery of Ephedra plants interred at 1st century CE Tarim Basin
Tarim Basin

The Tarim Basin is a large endorheic basin occupying an area of more than 400,000 km2. It is located in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in PRC's far west....
 burial sites, notes: "an imperishable plant, representing or symbolizing the continuity of life, is most appropriate to burial rites" (Falk, 1998).

It is possible that the barsom (Var. Avestan baresman) bundle of twigs was originally a bundle of Haoma stalks. The Haoma divinity is identified with priesthood (see Haoma as a divinity), while the barsom stalks "cut for the bundles bound by women" (Yasna 10.17) is the symbol and an instrument of the Zoroastrian priesthood. Today the barsom is made from pomegranate twigs (cf: preparation of parahaoma for the Ab-Zohr
Ab-Zohr

The Ab-Zohr is the culminating rite of the greater Yasna service, the principal Zoroastrianism act of worship that accompanies the recitation of the Avesta#The Yasna liturgy....
).

The Haoma plant is a central element in the legend surrounding the conception of Zoroaster
Zoroaster

Zoroaster or Zarathushtra , also referred to as Zartosht , was an ancient Iranian peoples prophet and religious poet. The hymns attributed to him, the Gathas, are at the liturgical core of Zoroastrianism....
. In the story, his father Pouroshaspa took a piece of the Haoma plant and mixed it with milk. He gave his wife Dugdhova one half of the mixture and he consumed the other. They then conceived Zoroaster who was instilled with the spirit of the plant.

According to tradition, Zoroaster received his revelation on a riverbank while preparing parahaoma for the Ab-Zohr
Ab-Zohr

The Ab-Zohr is the culminating rite of the greater Yasna service, the principal Zoroastrianism act of worship that accompanies the recitation of the Avesta#The Yasna liturgy....
 (Zatspram 21.1), that is, for the symbolic purification of Aban
Aban

Apas is the Avestan language term for "the waters", which—in its innumerable aggregate states—is represented by the Apas, the hypostases of the waters....
 ("the waters"). This symbolic purification is also evident in Yasna 68.1, where the celebrant makes good for the damage done to water by humanity: "These offerings, possessing haoma, possessing milk, possessing pomegranate, shall compensate thee".

Comparison of haoma/soma

Beyond the establishment of a common origin of haoma and soma and numerous attempts to give that common origin a botanic identity, little has been done to compare the two. As Indologist Jan Houben also noted in the proceedings of a 1999 workshop on Haoma-Soma, "apart from occasional and dispersed remarks on similarities in structure and detail of Vedic and Zoroastrian rituals, little has been done on the systematic comparison of the two" (Houben, 2003, 9/1a).

Houben's observation is also significant in that, as of 2003, no significant comparative review of cultural/sacred Haoma/Soma had extended beyond Alfred Hillebrandt's 1891 comparison of the Vedic deity and the Zoroastrian divinity.

All more recent studies that address commonality have dealt only with botanic identification of proto-Indo-Iranian *sauma. Houben's workshop, the first of its kind, dealt with "the nature of the Soma/Haoma plant and the juice pressed from it" and that "the main topic of the workshop (was) the identity of the Soma/Haoma." (Houben, 2003, 9/1b)

See also

  • preparation and use of parahaoma in the Ab-Zohr
    Ab-Zohr

    The Ab-Zohr is the culminating rite of the greater Yasna service, the principal Zoroastrianism act of worship that accompanies the recitation of the Avesta#The Yasna liturgy....
    , "offering to waters".
  • Soma
    Soma

    Soma , or Haoma , from Proto-Indo-Iranian *sauma-, was a ritual drink of importance among the early Indo-Iranians, and the later Vedic civilization and Greater Iran cultures....
    , the Vedic equivalent of Haoma.
  • other Tree of life
    Tree of life

    The concept of a many-branched tree illustrating the idea that all life on earth is related has been used in tree of life , religion, philosophy, mythology and other areas....
     concepts.


Bibliography

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