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Herbal
Ally - Sacred Corn Mother
an article by Susun S. Weed
"Corn
rigs, an' barley rigs, An corn rigs are bonnie;
I'll ne'er forget that happy night, Amang the rigs
wi' Annie."
It Was Upon A Lammas Night by Robert Burns
The least known of the eight major Pagan holy days
is Lammas, celebrated in the Northern Hemisphere
on the first of August. (The other primary holy
days are the Summer and Winter Solstices, the Spring
and Fall Equinoxes, and the Cross Quarter Days of
Beltane, May Day, and Halloween.)
Lammas, or "Loaf Mass", is the Feast of the First
Harvest, the Feast of Bread. This Holy Day honors
the women who created agriculture and bred the crops
we cultivate, especially the grains, or corn. In
the British Isles, celebrants make corn dollies
from the last of the newly-harvested wheat. The
corn dolly holds the energy of the grain Goddess
and, when placed above the door or the mantle, will
bring good luck to the household all year.
When we think of corn, we think of succulent cobs
of crisp, sweet, buttery yellow or white kernels:
immature Zea mays, Indian corn. You know, corn.
As in sweet corn, popcorn, blue corn, decorative
corn, corn bread and corn chowder. Corn!
But, did you ever wonder why it's corn? "Korn" is
an old Greek word for "grain". Wheat and oats, barley
and even rice, are korn. This usage is preserved
in the song "John Barleycorn must die". When Europeans
crossed the Atlantic and were introduced to the
beautiful grain the Native Americans grew, they,
of course, called it "corn”. And nowadays we think
of corn as only that, but corn is Kore (pronounced
"core-a"), the Great Mother of us all.
Her name, in its many forms - Ker, Car, Q're, Kher,
Kirn, Kern, Ceres, Core, Kore, Kaur, Kauri, Kali
- is the oldest of all Goddess names. From it we
derive the English words corn, kernel, carnal, core,
and cardiac. "Kern" is Ancient Greek for "sacred
womb-vase in which grain is reborn".
The Goddess of Grain is the mother of civilization,
of cultivation, of endless fertility and fecundity.
To the Romans she was Ceres, whose name becomes
"cereal". To the Greeks, she was Kore, the daughter,
and Demeter (de/dea/goddess, meter/mater/mother)
as well. To the peoples of the Americas, she is
Corn Mother, she-who-gave-herself-that-the-People-may-live.
She is one of the three sister crops: corn, beans
and squash. In the British Isles she was celebrated
almost to the present day as "Cerealia, the source
of all food".
Honoring grain as the staff of our life dates at
least as far back as Ancient Greece. Nearly four
thousand years ago, the Eleusinian mysteries, which
were regarded as ancient mysteries even then, centered
on the sacred corn and the story of Demeter and
her daughter Kore or Persephone. Initiates, after
many days of ceremony, were at last shown the great
mystery: an ear of Korn. Korn dies and is reborn,
traditionally after being buried for three days.
Corn and grain are magic. The one becomes many.
That which dies is reborn.
Many Native American stories repeat this theme of
death and rebirth, but with a special twist. In
some origin of corn stories a woman is brutally
murdered, in others she demands to be killed. No
matter. Once she is dead, she is cut into pieces
and planted. From her dismembered body, corn grows.
Again and again, everywhere around the world, the
story of grain is the story of humanity. The sacred
symbolism of grain speaks loudly to the human psyche.
To the Ancients, the light in our lives is the Kore,
the core, the soul, the seed, of each being.
Real, whole grains sustain us. Real, whole grains
are sacred. Real, whole grains reconnect us with
our human lineage. When we eat them, we feel satisfied
in a deep and fundamental way. When we eat them,
we ground ourselves, we nourish ourselves in multiple
way.
But bleached and enriched grains do not sustain
life, nor are they inherently sacred. Grains that
have had the bran and the germ stripped away do
last longer, but have little to offer us physically
or spiritually. When we eat them, we feel empty.
Thus, many of us have come to equate bad news weight
gain with carbohydrates, specifically, grains. Grains
are the Goddess who sacrificed for us; they aren't
to blame. It's the processing that does us in.
August is a good time to make peace with the Corn
Mother. Switch to organic corn chips; some supermarkets
carry them. Try out whole wheat pasta; my simple
recipe below makes the best lasagna you ever ate;
you won't believe it's whole wheat. Explore millet,
kasha, quinoa, teff, kamut, spelt, wild rice, brown
basmati, and my dietary mainstay: Lundberg organic
short-grain brown rice. Cheer Ceres. Throw your
own whole grain Carnaval!
Grains are medicine, too. Corn silk is an important
remedy to help bladder woes. A handful of rice or
barley boiled in several quarts of water is a folk
remedy for anyone who lacks appetite or who has
digestive woes. We're all familiar with the heart-healthy
effects of eating oats. And oatstraw infusion, made
from the grass of the oat plant, is considered a
longevity tonic in India.
Celebrate the Corn Mother any way you can. Invite
Her into your life as food, as medicine, as decoration.
And don't be surprised if you feel happier and healthier
than ever before. The green blessings of the grains
are special blessings indeed.
The Best - and Easiest - Lasagna Ever serves 6 generously
1 package, 8 ounces, whole wheat lasagna noodles
(uncooked) 2 quarts organic tomato sauce (fire-roasted
if possible) † pound ricotta † pound feta, crumbled
† pound mozzarella, grated
Heat tomato sauce to a simmer. Spoon a thin, even
layer into your deepest, largest baking pan. Cover
with a layer of raw lasagna noodles. Add one-third
of each cheese, sprinkling to make an even layer.
Repeat two more times, ending with cheese. Cover
with waxed paper; then cover with foil. Bake at
300F for 1†-2 hours. Allow lasagna to settle while
you spread pesto on whole wheat sourdough bread
and pop it into the hot oven for 15 minutes. I usually
serve this with cooked greens (kale or mustard greens
are excellent choices) and a big wild salad.
Susun Weed
PO Box 64
Woodstock, NY 12498
Fax: 1-845-246-8081
Visit Susun Weed at: www.susunweed.com
and www.ashtreepublishing.com
For permission to reprint this article, contact
us at: susunweed@herbshealing.com
Susun S. Weed is the author of four highly-acclaimed
books on herbs and women's health: Wise Woman Herbal
for the Childbearing Year, Healing Wise, New Menopausal
Years the Wise Woman Way and Breast Cancer? Breast
Health! the Wise Woman Way. Ms. Weed lectures world-wide
on women's health and herbal medicine. From her
home in New York State's Catskill Mountains, she
directs the activities of the Wise Woman Center,
acts as editor-in-chief of Ash Tree Publishing,
personally oversees the work of 400 correspondence
students, and trains herbal and shamanic apprentices.
Susun has lived the simple life for nearly 40 years
as an herbalist, goatkeeper, homesteader, and feminist.
She has been called "a true radical - deeply rooted,"
"a modern pioneer," and "one of the founding mothers
of herbal medicine in the United States†.
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