Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 6
Bissu Priests Perform 3-Day Ma’giri Ritual in Sulawesi, Reviving 1,000-Year Tradition
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 6

Bissu Priests Perform 3-Day Ma’giri Ritual in Sulawesi, Reviving 1,000-Year Tradition

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 6

Summary

  • Segeri village’s bissu priests led a three-day rice-planting ceremony in November, climaxing with the ma’giri ritual in which dancers drove daggers into their necks without bleeding.
  • The self-stabbing display is meant to win the gods’ blessings before planting season and to demonstrate the spiritual power long associated with the bissu.
  • Sulawesi’s bissu are revered as religious figures who embody both male and female traits, part of the Bugis understanding of five genders and a bridge between earthly and celestial realms.
  • For more than 1,000 years, they have been called on for weddings, births and deaths, making the annual Segeri procession both an agricultural rite and a public affirmation of gender fluidity.

Insights

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