There can be few more exotic jobs than herding clouds in the
Tibetan Himalayas. Shamans in the Amdo region keep watch from the mountain
peaks and warn villagers of approaching storms. Their predictions are based on
a combination of weather experience and trusted formula such as "when the
clouds over Ami Kodtse are like sheep's hair, it will hail in the village."
Nor do the shamans just passively observe conditions; a "weather
shaman" or "cloud herder" claims to be able to ward off bad
weather. According to their beliefs, the weather is caused by the interaction
between humans, spirits and nature. Weather shamans believe that extreme
weather conditions are a reflection of a spiritual imbalance -- that our
thoughts of fear, guilt, anger, etc. are being reflected by the environment. The
shamans intercede with the spirits, who in turn influence the weather. As well
as prayers and chants, a slingshot, like those used to herd sheep and yaks in Tibet ,
may be used to herd the clouds, or they may be driven off by firing arrows.
In his book Mindscaping
the Landscape of Tibet, film maker and anthropologist Dan Smyer Yu
describes a dawn excursion with a weather shaman in 2010. The mountains were
shrouded under a murky white blanket and there seemed to be little chance of filming,
but the shaman assured Yu that he could break the fog. The shaman chanted
praises to the mountain spirits for a full 15 minutes, at which point the fog
lifted and the Himalayan peaks emerged like islands from a sea of cloud.
Perhaps the result was coincidence, but the shamans do seem better at gaining the confidence of their audience than most meteorologists.
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