Post by bluefedish on Mar 9, 2008 0:52:20 GMT -5
A term rarely used by modern scholars because it is subject to so many interpretations. In its widest sense, for example, Dr. Johannes Weissenborn defined the term 'worship' to mean “the sum of all human utterances and actions which are to be understood as reactions on wonderful and – so far as man’s faculties go – inexplicable phenomena in his environment”. Therefore, animal worship could be considered to involve many of the animal rituals performed by humans, especially in pre-modern societies, such as the glorification of animal deities, animal sacrifice, and even simply showing great respect for animal beings.
The development of Christianity and Islam has affected the spread of animal worship The idea that divinity embodies itself in animals, such as a deity incarnate, and then lives on earth among human beings has been marginalized by Christian and radical Islamic religions. In churches such as Independent Assemblies of God and Pentecostal, animals have very little religious significance. Animals have become less and less important and symbolic in cult rituals and religion, especially among African cultures, as Christianity and Islamic religions have spread.
The origins of animal worship have been the subject of many theories. The classical author Diodorus explained the origin of animal-worship by recalling the myth in which the gods, supposedly threatened by giants, hid under the guise of animals. The people then naturally began to worship the animals that their gods had disguised themselves as and continued this act even after the gods returned to their normal state. In 1906, Weissenborn suggested that animal worship resulted from man’s natural curiosity. Primitive man would observe an animal that had a unique trait and the inexplicability of this trait would appeal to man’s curiosity. Wonder resulted from primitive man’s observations of this distinctive trait and this wonder eventually induced adoration. Thus, primitive man worshipped animals that had inimitable traits. Lubbock put forward a more recent view. Lubbock proposed that animal-worship originated from family names. In societies, families would name themselves and their children after certain animals and eventually came to hold that animal above other animals. Eventually, these opinions turned into deep respect and evolved into fully developed worship of the family animal.
Animal cults may be classified in two ways:
* according to their outward form
* according to their inward meaning, which may of course undergo transformations.
Classification by Outward Form
There are 2 broad divisions:
* all animals of a given species are sacred, perhaps owing to the impossibility of distinguishing the sacred few from the profane crowd.
* 1 or a fixed number of a species are sacred. It's probable that the 1st of these forms is the primary one and the 2nd in most cases a development from it due to:
1. the influence of other individual cults.
2. anthropomorphic tendencies.
3. the influence of chieftainship, hereditary and otherwise.
4. annual sacrifice of the sacred animal and mystical ideas connected therewith.
5. syncretism, due either to unity of function or to a philosophic unification.
6. the desire to do honor to the species in the person of one of its members, and possibly other less easily traceable causes.
Classification by Inward Meaning
Treating cults according to their meaning, which is not necessarily identical with the cause which first led to the deification of the animal in question, we can classify them under ten specific heads:
Pastoral Cults: Falls into 2 sub-types, in which the species:
1. is spared.
2. sometimes receives special honor at intervals in the person of an individual.
Hunting Cults: The species is habitually killed, but:
1. occasionally honored in the person of a single individual.
2. each slaughtered animal receives divine honors.
Danerous or Noxious Animals: The cult of danerous animals is due:
1. to the fear that the soul of the slain beast may take vengeance on the hunter.
2. to a desire to placate the rest of the species.
Animals Regarded as Human Souls or Their Embodiment: Animals are frequently regarded as the abode, temporary or permanent, of the souls of the dead, sometimes as the actual souls of the dead. Respect for them is due to two main reasons:
1. The kinsmen of the dead desire to preserve the goodwill of their dead relatives.
2. They wish at the same time to secure that their kinsmen are not molested and caused to undergo unnecessary suffering.
Totemistic Cults: One of the most widely found modes of showing respect to animals is known as totemism (see totem), but except in decadent forms there is but little positive worship; in Central Australia, however, the rites of the Wollunqua totem group are directed towards placating this mythical animal, and cannot be termed anything but religious ceremonies.
In secret societies we find bodies of men grouped together with a single tutelary animal; the individual, in the same way, acquires the nagual or individual totem, sometimes by ceremonies of the nature of the bloodbond.
Cults of Tree & Vegetation Spirits: Spirits of vegetation in ancient and modern Europe and in China are conceived in animal form.
Cults of Ominous Animals: The ominous animal or bird may develop into a deity.
Cults, Probably Derivative, of Animals Associated with Certain Deities: It is commonly assumed that the animals associated with certain deities are sacred because the god was originally theriomorphic; this is doubtless the case in certain instances; but Apollo Smintheus, Dionysus Bassareus and other examples seem to show that the god may have been appealed to for help and thus become associated with the animals from whom he protected the crops, and so on.
Cults of Animals used in Magic: The use of animals in magic may sometimes give rise to a kind of respect for them, but this is of a negative nature. See, however, articles by Preuss in Globus, vol. lxvii., in which he maintains that animals of magical influence are elevated into divinities. michael uses magic such as this. he is an ancient emperor of Islamic Empire.
Animal Cults
When a god is respected or worshipped by means of a representative animal, an animal cult is formed. The origin of such cults developed from a distinction that primitive man lacked between animals and humanity. This lack of discernment caused humans to look upon animals as equals. Therefore, it was just as simple for them to represent their gods in an animal form as opposed to a human form because in primitive man’s judgment animals and human were equal.
Some Animal Cults:
Bear
The Ainu
Bison & Cattle
Crow & Raven
Dog
Elephant
Fish & Whale
Frigate Bird
Goat
Hawk
Horse
Leopard
Lion
Lizard
Mantis
Monkey
Rabbit
Rat
Serpent
Sheep
Tiger
Wolf
Ancient Egypt: It was once thought that animal worship in ancient Egypt originated from helmets. The helmets of Ancient Egyptian chiefs were shaped as animal heads and thus, became a basis for a theory to the origin of animal worship in Ancient Egypt. There are some problems with this claim, however. This theory can not be generalized to account for other cultures. While other cultures did participate in animal worship, not all of them possessed animal war helmets like Egypt. John Lubbock also argued that animal worship in Egypt appeared before the use of the helmets. This is one theory, though, to why animals were held in such high esteem in Egypt.
Animals are a common subject of Egyptian art. There is no other art in the world where animals are depicted as frequently and in such variety as in Egyptian art. While their role in art conveys the importance of animals to the Egyptian culture, animals’ position in Egyptian religion is usually misunderstood. This resulted principally because of Greek and Roman false impressions of Egypt throughout ancient history. Thus, two views arose about the animal kingdom’s role in Egyptian religion.
The first view was posed by Herodotus. He alleged that Egyptian animal worship implicated “praying to the god to whom the particular creature, whichever it may be, is sacred”. Contemporary argument would agree with Herodotus’ view, that Egyptians indeed worshipped these animals because they were important to their gods, but were not the gods themselves. The second view was held by Diodorus (first century B.C.) and he stated that “the Egyptians are fanatically addicted to the worship of certain animals, the dead as well as the living”. Diodorus’ idea of Egyptian animal worship was that the animals were the gods, but this appears not to be the case.
The Egyptians depicted their gods in both human and animal form because in Ancient Egyptian culture, humans did not have the degree of superiority over the animal kingdom that Western culture currently dictates. Humans and animals were equal in the Egyptian’s eyes. Egyptians worshipped these gods that they portrayed in animal form, but this does not mean that these gods were simple, earthly animals. When they worshipped these creatures the Egyptians were, in fact, worshipping the gods that they represented, not the animal itself, which is Herodotus’ view of Egyptian religion. How animals came to be associated with their related god is extremely hard to prove, due to lack of historical data.
Some Present-Day Religions with High Regard for Animals
Buddhism: One of the most important sanctions of the Buddhist faith is the concept of ahimsa, or refraining from the destruction of life. According to Buddhist belief, humans do not deserve preferential treatment over other living beings. Thus, the world is not specifically meant for human use and should be shared equally amongst all creatures. Buddhists recognize that all animals are sentient and are capable of feeling pain, grief, fear, happiness, and hunger, unlike some other religious sects. The Dalai Lama once said in an interview, “Even ants and other insects will run away from danger… They have intelligence and want to live too. Why should we harm them?”. Not believing in inflicting harm on any living, sentient being, most Buddhists also follow a vegetarian diet to avoid causing pain to animals.
Avoiding the destruction of life can also hinder aspects outside of a Buddhist’s diet, such as travel plans. In order to avoid crushing any living thing, be it plant, insect, or animal, Buddhist monks do not travel during rainy seasons. Originally, shortly after Buddhism was first founded, monks traveled during all seasons, but the public opinion changed this. The people protested that so much life was crushed and destroyed when monks traveled during the wet season. As a result, monks were required to seek shelter during this season and abstain from going on journeys.
Buddhists believe that to harm another living creature is to, in fact, harm yourself as all life-forms are interrelated. Buddhists have a great deal of respect for all living creatures, sometimes even laying aside their own needs for the protection of animals. There are many parables that depict humans sacrificing their lives so that an animal may live. A prominent story is one where a Buddhist, sacrificing himself, laid down before a lioness so that she could feed her hungry cubs.
Jainism: Mahavira, the founder of Jainism, believed that the only way to be released from the cycle of life (birth, death, and then rebirth), one must follow, like Buddhists, ahimsa and not harm any living creature. Some Jainists will carry a broom with them and sweep their path as they walk to avoid stepping on any living creature. Jainists will also wear masks over their mouths to prevent swallowing insects and inspect their fruit for worms. The fruit inspection is not, however, because of their aversion of worms, but for the protection of the worms themselves. Jainists are also only allowed to eat during daylight hours, when their vision is not restricted, so that they avoid eating insects or other small creatures that could possibly be in their food.
There is a form of Jainism referred to as lay Jainism that has somewhat less restraining rules. Basically lay Jains must distinguish between what forms of violence are necessary and unnecessary, but do not have to abstain from it entirely. This results in avoiding all forms of hunting, tilling the soil (tilling involved disturbing creatures embedded in the earth), and brewing (brewing involved using living organisms such as yeasts). Food will never be prepared especially for them. They beg for food from others believing that because the food was prepared for someone else, they are not the cause of violence towards living creatures. Jainists who have the financial capabilities will often visit animal markets and buy animals destined for slaughter, simply to protect them from their deaths.
Hinduism: The primary religion of India. Like several other religions that profess animal respect and consideration, ahimsa is a major concept in Hindu belief. Humans and animals are one family and therefore, humans should treat all living creatures with respect and kindness. Their pets are often treated as if they are truly members of the family. While Hindi respect all creatures, the cow is probably the most sacred.
There are some exceptions to ahimsa in Hinduism. While Hindu belief forbids the slaughter of animals for human sustenance, animal sacrifice is a common and accepted ritual. An explanation for this supposed paradox is that a sacrificial animal is not really considered to be an animal, but a symbol. Thus, when the animal is sacrificed, they are sacrificing the symbol and not the animal. Scientific experimentation would also be allowed, so long as the result would be important for society and there were no other alternatives. The killing of an animal for human pleasure or lavishness is prohibited. An example of such lavishness would be a fur coat made from animal skin.
Shamanism & Animals: Animals were an important aspect of the Shaman religion in Central Asia. Also known as “assistant spirits,” “guardian spirits,” and “helping spirits,” animal spirits are an integral part of a shaman’s work. The more animal spirits a shaman had under his control, the more powerful the shaman. When a shaman set out to journey spiritually to the outer world, animals were a key component, assisting him in his work. There were three primary reasons for a shaman to take such a journey: to find a lost soul, to bring an animal spirit to the high gods, or to lead a soul to its new resting place in the underworld. All of these were extremely important to followers of shamanism and animals were extremely important in facilitating the shaman’s efforts.
An example of animal spirits in Shamanism comes from the Yenisei Ostiaks culture. During a healing procedure, a shaman invokes a number of animal spirits to help him. The spirits arrive and enter his body. The shaman is not possessed by these spirits; he is free to expel them at any time. His body begins to leap all over the place, symbolizing that his soul is rising, leaving the earth and going up to the sky. It is a bird spirit that is lifting him through the atmosphere and he cries for it to take him higher so he can see further. According to Adolf Friedrich, at this point the shaman’s essence has, in fact, transformed into the bird spirit that crossed the threshold into his body. He finally spots what he is looking for, the soul of his ill patient. Still assisting him, the animal spirits carry the shaman to the patient’s soul. The shaman retrieves it and returns the soul to its rightful place, healing the patient. Without the presence of animal spirits, the shaman could not have accomplished such a feat.
In the Inner Eurasian religion, the transformation of a shaman’s essence into an animal spirit is referred to as “becoming animal”. The importance of animals in this shamanic religion is shown by the capabilities that animals grant to human beings. Without the assistance of animals, humans from Inner Eurasia were not capable of reaching the sky, traveling rapidly throughout the earth, or going beneath the earth’s outer crust, all of which were important activities to the culture. Heaven was not attainable for a person without the assistance of an eagle. Because of the eagle, an animal, the Inner Eurasians believed that they were capable of achieving their after-life and living in the home of their ancestors and Supreme God after their departure from the earth. Heaven was represented by the people in assemblies of animals, usually grouped in sevens or nines. When participating in hunting or warfare, Inner Eurasians also took on animal qualities because they believed it would increase their success. Animals were a central part of this religion.
Selected Source:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_worship
The development of Christianity and Islam has affected the spread of animal worship The idea that divinity embodies itself in animals, such as a deity incarnate, and then lives on earth among human beings has been marginalized by Christian and radical Islamic religions. In churches such as Independent Assemblies of God and Pentecostal, animals have very little religious significance. Animals have become less and less important and symbolic in cult rituals and religion, especially among African cultures, as Christianity and Islamic religions have spread.
The origins of animal worship have been the subject of many theories. The classical author Diodorus explained the origin of animal-worship by recalling the myth in which the gods, supposedly threatened by giants, hid under the guise of animals. The people then naturally began to worship the animals that their gods had disguised themselves as and continued this act even after the gods returned to their normal state. In 1906, Weissenborn suggested that animal worship resulted from man’s natural curiosity. Primitive man would observe an animal that had a unique trait and the inexplicability of this trait would appeal to man’s curiosity. Wonder resulted from primitive man’s observations of this distinctive trait and this wonder eventually induced adoration. Thus, primitive man worshipped animals that had inimitable traits. Lubbock put forward a more recent view. Lubbock proposed that animal-worship originated from family names. In societies, families would name themselves and their children after certain animals and eventually came to hold that animal above other animals. Eventually, these opinions turned into deep respect and evolved into fully developed worship of the family animal.
Animal cults may be classified in two ways:
* according to their outward form
* according to their inward meaning, which may of course undergo transformations.
Classification by Outward Form
There are 2 broad divisions:
* all animals of a given species are sacred, perhaps owing to the impossibility of distinguishing the sacred few from the profane crowd.
* 1 or a fixed number of a species are sacred. It's probable that the 1st of these forms is the primary one and the 2nd in most cases a development from it due to:
1. the influence of other individual cults.
2. anthropomorphic tendencies.
3. the influence of chieftainship, hereditary and otherwise.
4. annual sacrifice of the sacred animal and mystical ideas connected therewith.
5. syncretism, due either to unity of function or to a philosophic unification.
6. the desire to do honor to the species in the person of one of its members, and possibly other less easily traceable causes.
Classification by Inward Meaning
Treating cults according to their meaning, which is not necessarily identical with the cause which first led to the deification of the animal in question, we can classify them under ten specific heads:
Pastoral Cults: Falls into 2 sub-types, in which the species:
1. is spared.
2. sometimes receives special honor at intervals in the person of an individual.
Hunting Cults: The species is habitually killed, but:
1. occasionally honored in the person of a single individual.
2. each slaughtered animal receives divine honors.
Danerous or Noxious Animals: The cult of danerous animals is due:
1. to the fear that the soul of the slain beast may take vengeance on the hunter.
2. to a desire to placate the rest of the species.
Animals Regarded as Human Souls or Their Embodiment: Animals are frequently regarded as the abode, temporary or permanent, of the souls of the dead, sometimes as the actual souls of the dead. Respect for them is due to two main reasons:
1. The kinsmen of the dead desire to preserve the goodwill of their dead relatives.
2. They wish at the same time to secure that their kinsmen are not molested and caused to undergo unnecessary suffering.
Totemistic Cults: One of the most widely found modes of showing respect to animals is known as totemism (see totem), but except in decadent forms there is but little positive worship; in Central Australia, however, the rites of the Wollunqua totem group are directed towards placating this mythical animal, and cannot be termed anything but religious ceremonies.
In secret societies we find bodies of men grouped together with a single tutelary animal; the individual, in the same way, acquires the nagual or individual totem, sometimes by ceremonies of the nature of the bloodbond.
Cults of Tree & Vegetation Spirits: Spirits of vegetation in ancient and modern Europe and in China are conceived in animal form.
Cults of Ominous Animals: The ominous animal or bird may develop into a deity.
Cults, Probably Derivative, of Animals Associated with Certain Deities: It is commonly assumed that the animals associated with certain deities are sacred because the god was originally theriomorphic; this is doubtless the case in certain instances; but Apollo Smintheus, Dionysus Bassareus and other examples seem to show that the god may have been appealed to for help and thus become associated with the animals from whom he protected the crops, and so on.
Cults of Animals used in Magic: The use of animals in magic may sometimes give rise to a kind of respect for them, but this is of a negative nature. See, however, articles by Preuss in Globus, vol. lxvii., in which he maintains that animals of magical influence are elevated into divinities. michael uses magic such as this. he is an ancient emperor of Islamic Empire.
Animal Cults
When a god is respected or worshipped by means of a representative animal, an animal cult is formed. The origin of such cults developed from a distinction that primitive man lacked between animals and humanity. This lack of discernment caused humans to look upon animals as equals. Therefore, it was just as simple for them to represent their gods in an animal form as opposed to a human form because in primitive man’s judgment animals and human were equal.
Some Animal Cults:
Bear
The Ainu
Bison & Cattle
Crow & Raven
Dog
Elephant
Fish & Whale
Frigate Bird
Goat
Hawk
Horse
Leopard
Lion
Lizard
Mantis
Monkey
Rabbit
Rat
Serpent
Sheep
Tiger
Wolf
Ancient Egypt: It was once thought that animal worship in ancient Egypt originated from helmets. The helmets of Ancient Egyptian chiefs were shaped as animal heads and thus, became a basis for a theory to the origin of animal worship in Ancient Egypt. There are some problems with this claim, however. This theory can not be generalized to account for other cultures. While other cultures did participate in animal worship, not all of them possessed animal war helmets like Egypt. John Lubbock also argued that animal worship in Egypt appeared before the use of the helmets. This is one theory, though, to why animals were held in such high esteem in Egypt.
Animals are a common subject of Egyptian art. There is no other art in the world where animals are depicted as frequently and in such variety as in Egyptian art. While their role in art conveys the importance of animals to the Egyptian culture, animals’ position in Egyptian religion is usually misunderstood. This resulted principally because of Greek and Roman false impressions of Egypt throughout ancient history. Thus, two views arose about the animal kingdom’s role in Egyptian religion.
The first view was posed by Herodotus. He alleged that Egyptian animal worship implicated “praying to the god to whom the particular creature, whichever it may be, is sacred”. Contemporary argument would agree with Herodotus’ view, that Egyptians indeed worshipped these animals because they were important to their gods, but were not the gods themselves. The second view was held by Diodorus (first century B.C.) and he stated that “the Egyptians are fanatically addicted to the worship of certain animals, the dead as well as the living”. Diodorus’ idea of Egyptian animal worship was that the animals were the gods, but this appears not to be the case.
The Egyptians depicted their gods in both human and animal form because in Ancient Egyptian culture, humans did not have the degree of superiority over the animal kingdom that Western culture currently dictates. Humans and animals were equal in the Egyptian’s eyes. Egyptians worshipped these gods that they portrayed in animal form, but this does not mean that these gods were simple, earthly animals. When they worshipped these creatures the Egyptians were, in fact, worshipping the gods that they represented, not the animal itself, which is Herodotus’ view of Egyptian religion. How animals came to be associated with their related god is extremely hard to prove, due to lack of historical data.
Some Present-Day Religions with High Regard for Animals
Buddhism: One of the most important sanctions of the Buddhist faith is the concept of ahimsa, or refraining from the destruction of life. According to Buddhist belief, humans do not deserve preferential treatment over other living beings. Thus, the world is not specifically meant for human use and should be shared equally amongst all creatures. Buddhists recognize that all animals are sentient and are capable of feeling pain, grief, fear, happiness, and hunger, unlike some other religious sects. The Dalai Lama once said in an interview, “Even ants and other insects will run away from danger… They have intelligence and want to live too. Why should we harm them?”. Not believing in inflicting harm on any living, sentient being, most Buddhists also follow a vegetarian diet to avoid causing pain to animals.
Avoiding the destruction of life can also hinder aspects outside of a Buddhist’s diet, such as travel plans. In order to avoid crushing any living thing, be it plant, insect, or animal, Buddhist monks do not travel during rainy seasons. Originally, shortly after Buddhism was first founded, monks traveled during all seasons, but the public opinion changed this. The people protested that so much life was crushed and destroyed when monks traveled during the wet season. As a result, monks were required to seek shelter during this season and abstain from going on journeys.
Buddhists believe that to harm another living creature is to, in fact, harm yourself as all life-forms are interrelated. Buddhists have a great deal of respect for all living creatures, sometimes even laying aside their own needs for the protection of animals. There are many parables that depict humans sacrificing their lives so that an animal may live. A prominent story is one where a Buddhist, sacrificing himself, laid down before a lioness so that she could feed her hungry cubs.
Jainism: Mahavira, the founder of Jainism, believed that the only way to be released from the cycle of life (birth, death, and then rebirth), one must follow, like Buddhists, ahimsa and not harm any living creature. Some Jainists will carry a broom with them and sweep their path as they walk to avoid stepping on any living creature. Jainists will also wear masks over their mouths to prevent swallowing insects and inspect their fruit for worms. The fruit inspection is not, however, because of their aversion of worms, but for the protection of the worms themselves. Jainists are also only allowed to eat during daylight hours, when their vision is not restricted, so that they avoid eating insects or other small creatures that could possibly be in their food.
There is a form of Jainism referred to as lay Jainism that has somewhat less restraining rules. Basically lay Jains must distinguish between what forms of violence are necessary and unnecessary, but do not have to abstain from it entirely. This results in avoiding all forms of hunting, tilling the soil (tilling involved disturbing creatures embedded in the earth), and brewing (brewing involved using living organisms such as yeasts). Food will never be prepared especially for them. They beg for food from others believing that because the food was prepared for someone else, they are not the cause of violence towards living creatures. Jainists who have the financial capabilities will often visit animal markets and buy animals destined for slaughter, simply to protect them from their deaths.
Hinduism: The primary religion of India. Like several other religions that profess animal respect and consideration, ahimsa is a major concept in Hindu belief. Humans and animals are one family and therefore, humans should treat all living creatures with respect and kindness. Their pets are often treated as if they are truly members of the family. While Hindi respect all creatures, the cow is probably the most sacred.
There are some exceptions to ahimsa in Hinduism. While Hindu belief forbids the slaughter of animals for human sustenance, animal sacrifice is a common and accepted ritual. An explanation for this supposed paradox is that a sacrificial animal is not really considered to be an animal, but a symbol. Thus, when the animal is sacrificed, they are sacrificing the symbol and not the animal. Scientific experimentation would also be allowed, so long as the result would be important for society and there were no other alternatives. The killing of an animal for human pleasure or lavishness is prohibited. An example of such lavishness would be a fur coat made from animal skin.
Shamanism & Animals: Animals were an important aspect of the Shaman religion in Central Asia. Also known as “assistant spirits,” “guardian spirits,” and “helping spirits,” animal spirits are an integral part of a shaman’s work. The more animal spirits a shaman had under his control, the more powerful the shaman. When a shaman set out to journey spiritually to the outer world, animals were a key component, assisting him in his work. There were three primary reasons for a shaman to take such a journey: to find a lost soul, to bring an animal spirit to the high gods, or to lead a soul to its new resting place in the underworld. All of these were extremely important to followers of shamanism and animals were extremely important in facilitating the shaman’s efforts.
An example of animal spirits in Shamanism comes from the Yenisei Ostiaks culture. During a healing procedure, a shaman invokes a number of animal spirits to help him. The spirits arrive and enter his body. The shaman is not possessed by these spirits; he is free to expel them at any time. His body begins to leap all over the place, symbolizing that his soul is rising, leaving the earth and going up to the sky. It is a bird spirit that is lifting him through the atmosphere and he cries for it to take him higher so he can see further. According to Adolf Friedrich, at this point the shaman’s essence has, in fact, transformed into the bird spirit that crossed the threshold into his body. He finally spots what he is looking for, the soul of his ill patient. Still assisting him, the animal spirits carry the shaman to the patient’s soul. The shaman retrieves it and returns the soul to its rightful place, healing the patient. Without the presence of animal spirits, the shaman could not have accomplished such a feat.
In the Inner Eurasian religion, the transformation of a shaman’s essence into an animal spirit is referred to as “becoming animal”. The importance of animals in this shamanic religion is shown by the capabilities that animals grant to human beings. Without the assistance of animals, humans from Inner Eurasia were not capable of reaching the sky, traveling rapidly throughout the earth, or going beneath the earth’s outer crust, all of which were important activities to the culture. Heaven was not attainable for a person without the assistance of an eagle. Because of the eagle, an animal, the Inner Eurasians believed that they were capable of achieving their after-life and living in the home of their ancestors and Supreme God after their departure from the earth. Heaven was represented by the people in assemblies of animals, usually grouped in sevens or nines. When participating in hunting or warfare, Inner Eurasians also took on animal qualities because they believed it would increase their success. Animals were a central part of this religion.
Selected Source:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_worship