Iboga for heroin /opiate addiction...
Dimitri Mugianis closing a session for drug addicts using elements of a shamanic ceremony.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/07/nyreg ... .html?_r=2&
At this needle exchange, run by the New York Harm Reduction Educators, Mr. Mugianis helps treat drug users with fire-dancing and other techniques he learned by traveling several times to Gabon in West Africa to visit a group that practices Bwiti, a folk religion whose essential practice is consuming a hallucinogenic plant called iboga.
After taking large amounts of
Iboga during all-night shamanic ceremonies of dance and music, said Mr. Mugianis, a former addict himself, he was initiated as a follower, and now he uses the techniques in New York to treat drug addicts.
“My job in the Bwiti is to dance with heroin addicts,” he said with a laugh after Thursday’s meeting, during which he held a furry civet skin and waved a ceremonial rattle from Gabon. He danced and sermonized about being reborn in the Easter season, using an impassioned style that combined beatnik phrasing, a preacher’s cadence and a savvy street hustler’s strut.
Years ago, Mr. Mugianis said, he kicked his own drug addiction by using ibogaine, a derivative of the iboga root.
Its advocates call ibogaine a cure for heroin addiction, but it is banned in the United States. Mr. Mugianis began acquiring it through an underground network to treat other drug addicts. He has stopped including ibogaine in his treatments since being arrested in a sting operation conducted by federal agents in Seattle in 2011, he said.
The Thursday group, which he leads with a social worker, Brian Murphy, is called We Are the Medicine, because the healing is communal, said Mr. Mugianis, who worships with his fellow Bwiti followers at a temple in Queens. They hope to gain religious status and fight for the right to use ibogaine as a sacrament to end addiction.
“They took away my magic powder, so I thought they were my enemy, but now I realize we were dancing together,” he said. “Even the arrest was part of my initiation — it was a blessing.”