• Home
  • News
  • Lifestyle
  • Law
  • Business
  • Education

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Cannabis COAs are a silent quality crisis

November 6, 2025

Switching from THC to CBD?

November 6, 2025

New Jersey’s Incoming Governor Supports Legalizing Marijuana Home Cultivation

November 5, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Friday, November 7
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Smoke Explorer
  • Home
  • News

    New Jersey’s Incoming Governor Supports Legalizing Marijuana Home Cultivation

    November 5, 2025

    Nebraska Tribe Says State Officials Are Punishing It For Legalizing Marijuana By Suspending Talks On Separate Tobacco Tax Deal

    November 4, 2025

    Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office Is Receiving Complaints About Anti-Marijuana Initiative Petitioners’ Tactics

    November 2, 2025

    Florida Marijuana Legalization Campaign Sues State Over ‘Nonsensical’ Delay In Ballot Initiative Review

    November 1, 2025

    Bad Bunny, Weed, the Super Bowl and the Evolution of American Identity

    October 30, 2025
  • Lifestyle

    Where’s the Money, Man? Inside Cannabis’ Long Wait for Capital to Return

    October 30, 2025

    Drug Myths: Does Sugar Stop Your High?

    October 30, 2025

    Why California’s Treasurer Says the State’s Adult-Use Cannabis Law Is a Failure

    October 29, 2025

    My First Cannabis Bong Hit

    October 29, 2025

    The Creature from the Black Leather Lagoon

    October 27, 2025
  • Law

    Minnesota city approves opening of government-run marijuana store

    November 2, 2025

    Marijuana MSOs settle $860 million lawsuit over failed boomtime merger

    October 30, 2025

    Effort to end legal cannabis sales in Massachusetts ‘on track’

    October 29, 2025

    Marijuana MSO Curaleaf sues New Jersey to avoid ‘death penalty’

    October 27, 2025

    Is CBD Legal in Dubai?

    October 26, 2025
  • Business

    Cannabis COAs are a silent quality crisis

    November 6, 2025

    Ten Cannabis Marketing Blindspots and how to fix them

    November 4, 2025

    Cannabis Drinks Surge despite Alcohol Sales Decline

    November 2, 2025

    What If Barstool and Vice Hotboxed a Studio? Proper Smoke Network by First Smoke x Proper Doinks Has Arrived

    October 31, 2025

    4 Ways to Distribute Content

    October 29, 2025
  • Education

    Switching from THC to CBD?

    November 6, 2025

    The Science of Flavor with Rove – Cannabis & Tech Today

    November 4, 2025

    Cannabis vs Hemp CBD: What’s Best For You?

    November 2, 2025

    What is HHC vs THC?

    October 31, 2025

    Why Religion Was Never Sober: Lessons from Gary Laderman’s ‘Sacred Drugs’

    October 29, 2025
Smoke Explorer
You are at:Home»News»The Anthropologist Who Became a Shaman Cult Leader
News

The Anthropologist Who Became a Shaman Cult Leader

adminBy adminFebruary 20, 2023No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Browsing through an antique bookstore in Quito, I stumbled on a book called Shabono: A Visit to a Remote and Magical World in the South American Rain Forest, written by an anthropologist named Florinda Donner. Published in 1982, I expected it to be like most academic texts: interesting but long-winded and dusty. Instead, I got a gripping adventure that puts even Indiana Jones to shame. 

The book opens with Donner, a German immigrant studying anthropology in California, feeling hopeless. She’s spent weeks on the border between Venezuela and Brazil shadowing Indigenous healers who refuse to reveal the secrets of their trade. Preparing to return to the U.S. empty-handed, she befriends a kind but crazy old woman who wants to introduce her to her village, located deep inside the rainforest. The woman dies on the journey, and when Donner arrives at the village, she joins a ceremony where she drinks banana soup seasoned with the woman’s ashes. 

And that’s just the first couple chapters. Later, Donner experiences existential hallucinations after snuffing epená, a tryptamine derivative, and narrowly avoids getting kidnapped by another tribe. 

The story of Shabono is so compelling I found it hard to believe it was true, which – it turns out – it wasn’t. While the book was praised for its writing, it was torn apart for lack of academic rigor. Some anthropologists believe Donner made everything up, claiming she never left the U.S. and plagiarized the account of a Brazilian woman who had once been held captive in the same region of the Amazon. 

As shocked as I was to learn all this, the rabbit hole proved to go much, much deeper. 

It’s hard to separate the story of Florinda Donner from that of Carlos Castenada. Castenada, like Donner, was a California-based anthropologist accused of fabricating his studies on Indigenous healing. He claims to have met Don Juan Matus, the Yaqui sorcerer at the center of his bestselling 1968 book The Teachings of Don Juan, whilst waiting for a Greyhound bus in Arizona. Critics questioned Don Juan’s existence, and Castenada, who didn’t like being questioned, offered no help in trying to locate him. 

Although The Teachings was shunned in academic circles, it made a huge impact on the general population. Castenada’s recollections of inhaling the dust of psilocybin mushrooms and turning into a crow after smoking devil’s weed were required reading for anyone involved in the sex and drugs culture of the late 60s.  

Though he might have been a lousy anthropologist, Castenada was a masterful storyteller who knew how to use his gift to bewitch those around him. Following the publication of his third Don Juan book, Castenada – by then a multimillionaire – purchased a two-story house in Los Angeles’ Westwood Village. This is where his personal writerly following would flourish into what some would now consider to have been a full-blown cult. 

One of Castenada’s followers was Gloria Garvin, who sought him out after reading The Teachings under the influence of pumpkin pie laced with hashish. 

“You have always been like a bird, like a little bird in a cage,” Garvin recalled Castenada telling her during their initial meeting. “You are wanting to fly, you’re ready, the door is open—but you’re just sitting there. I want to take you with me. I’ll help you soar. Nothing could stop you if you come with me.” Staying in touch, Castenada urged her to study anthropology at UCLA, his alma mater. 

Also from UCLA Castenada recruited Florinda Donner, whom he helped write Shabono and The Witch’s Dream, among other books. 

Castenada referred to his favorite followers as his “witches.” The witches lived with him at the Westwood compound and wore identical, short haircuts. They also claimed to have met the semi-fictional Don Juan. Witches recruited other witches at Castenada’s L. Ron Hubbard-inspired lectures and seminars on shamanism and human transcendence – preferably “women with a combination of brains and beauty and vulnerability,” according to ex-followers interviewed by Salon. 

To become a real witch, they say, you had to sleep Castenada, who presented himself as celibate in public.

Testimony maintains Castenada’s following had all the characteristics of a cult. Followers were pressured into cutting off contact with their friends and family. Only Donner, who was considered Castenada’s intellectual and spiritual equal, remained in touch with her parents, albeit sporadically. After being separated from their loved ones, Castenada encouraged them to quit their jobs to make them financially dependent on him. Conformity was rewarded, mainly in the form of his sought-after affection.

Despite his obsession with immortality, Carlos Castenada died of liver cancer in April 1998. “Befitting of a man who made an esthetic out of mystery,” the New York Times reported when news of his death was made public after being withheld for weeks, “even his age is uncertain.” 

As soon as one mystery left the world, another entered. A day after Castenada’s death, Donner and three other women close to Castenada disconnected their phones and seemingly vanished into thin air. Patricia Partin, Castenada’s adopted daughter, also went missing. Her abandoned Ford Escort was found in Death Valley. Years later, her remains were found there as well.  

None of the disappearances were properly investigated by the LAPD, and so far, every citizen journalist and internet sleuth attempting to uncover the fate of the witches has run into a dead end. 

Ex-followers believe the women took their own lives. In life, Castenada often talked about suicide, framing death as the gateway to a higher plain of existence. When his health began to decline, the witches reportedly acquired guns. Taisha Abelar, one of the witches who disappeared alongside Donner, started drinking, but told those around her she wasn’t “in any danger of becoming an alcoholic” because, Salon quotes, “I’m leaving.” Also per Salon, Castenada had told Partin to take her Ford Escort “and drive it as fast as you can into the desert” if “you ever need to rise to infinity.” Suspicious, but ultimately inconclusive. 

Those who survived Castenada are convinced he genuinely believed everything he preached. As one ex-follower told Salon, “he became more and more hypnotized by his own reveries.” 

It seems the witches did as well. In Shabono, Donner parades fiction as fact. While she may have originally tried to parade fiction for fact in order to obtain fame and fortune, readers get the stronger impression that, the further the young anthropologist ventured into her own fantasy world of life and death and drugs and mysticism, the harder it became for her to separate the real from the imagined. 

At any rate, it’s a really, really well-written book.

Source link

Anthropologist Cult Leader Shaman
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleVirginia House GOP Lawmakers Kill Senate-Passed Marijuana 280E Tax Relief Bill That Governor Opposed
Next Article How Hip-Hop Icons Naughty By Nature Blazed Past the Sleepers
admin

Related Posts

New Jersey’s Incoming Governor Supports Legalizing Marijuana Home Cultivation

November 5, 2025

Nebraska Tribe Says State Officials Are Punishing It For Legalizing Marijuana By Suspending Talks On Separate Tobacco Tax Deal

November 4, 2025

Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office Is Receiving Complaints About Anti-Marijuana Initiative Petitioners’ Tactics

November 2, 2025

Comments are closed.

Our Picks

Cannabis COAs are a silent quality crisis

November 6, 2025

Switching from THC to CBD?

November 6, 2025

New Jersey’s Incoming Governor Supports Legalizing Marijuana Home Cultivation

November 5, 2025

The Science of Flavor with Rove – Cannabis & Tech Today

November 4, 2025
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Business

Cannabis COAs are a silent quality crisis

By adminNovember 6, 20250

(Illustration: mg Creative) Achieving accurate testing starts with knowing what is being measured – and…

Switching from THC to CBD?

November 6, 2025

New Jersey’s Incoming Governor Supports Legalizing Marijuana Home Cultivation

November 5, 2025

The Science of Flavor with Rove – Cannabis & Tech Today

November 4, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Smoke Unlimited about Weed & CBD vaping.

From Our Partners
About Us
About Us

Get all the current news stories, latest trends and legislation regarding cannabidiol, products, usages and its benefits. So don’t miss out any buzz and stay tuned! We offer a minute to minute updates regarding Marijuana industry.

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Our Picks

Cannabis COAs are a silent quality crisis

November 6, 2025

Switching from THC to CBD?

November 6, 2025

New Jersey’s Incoming Governor Supports Legalizing Marijuana Home Cultivation

November 5, 2025
Sponsors
Copyright © 2025. SmokeExplorer.com
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.