And they cried aloud, and cut themselves after their manner with knives and lancets, till the blood gushed out upon them. I Kings 18:28
Such  ancient writers as Seneca, Lucian, Statius, and Apuleius, thus  describes the processions of the strolling bands wandering about with  the Syrian goddess:— "A discordant howling opens the scene. Then they  fly wildly through one another, with the head sunk down to the ground,  but turning round in circles so that the loose flowing hair drags  through the mire; thereupon they first bite themselves on the arms, and  at last cut themselves with two-edged swords which they are wont to  carry.
Then begins a new scene. One of them, who surpasses all  the rest in frenzy, begins to prophesy with sighs and groans, openly  accuses himself of his past sins, which he now wishes to punish by the  mortifying of the flesh, takes the knotted whips, and lashes his back,  and cuts himself with swords, until the blood trickles from his mangled  body."
Van Lennep gives illustrations of these practices which  help in visualizing the Carmel  scene.   " Our modern dervishes indulge  in these cuttings only on special occasions, as, for instance, when a  procession is organised, and proceeds to the suburbs of a town to pray  for rain, or for deliverance from some public calamity: they then  exhibit some of their fanatical performances, calling upon God, and  cutting themselves with knives and swords, so that the blood runs, or  piercing their almost naked bodies with wooden or iron spikes, from  which they hang small mirrors. They sometimes become so exhausted with  pain and loss of blood as to faint away, so that they have to be borne  off."
Sometimes those who are not dervishes are carried away by a  similar impulse, and hope to render themselves acceptable to God by  undergoing these voluntary tortures.
Friday, March 4, 2011
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Woah. Yikes.
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