Finnish Goddess Mythology and the Golden Woman: Climate Change, Earth-based Indigenous knowledge and the Gift
Kaarina Kailo 2018
Introduction (Continued)
I will explore the little-known Finno-Ugric Gift ecologies and lifeways as carriers of this knowledge—something to which we are waking up slowly. We are beginning to value the rich resources of berries and mushrooms in the woods, and to collect fishermen’s, woodworkers’, handicraft peoples’ and tradition keepers’ lore (Mustonen 2009). I founded with Sari Koopman the tradition-gathering association of Lore&Loom with this in mind. Through the remnants of prehistoric cultures reflected in Finno-Ugric stories, Norse sagas and Russian legends,[6] we can gain knowledge of the ancient worldview and replant the seeds of lost best practices. Stories are not just stories. They have the power to change paradigms, the models by which we live and to trigger interest in us for deeper ecovisions than what patriarchal master narratives allow for.
Ancient legends and narratives are indeed an inspiring window for peeking into past wisdom although many of them are just plain entertainment, humor or even silly tales. What is more, the myths and legends that have been written down between the l2th and the l9th centuries in Scandinavia and the present-day Finland bear the distorting marks of Christian and patriarchal societies. However, thanks to modern matriarchal and gender studies, as well as archeomythology (among many other new fields), we now have methods for recovering at least some of the reality behind the intentional distortions of the primary materials.
……..My own theoretical stance combines the best insights of ecofeminists (for all their variety), and the theories produced at the interface of these schools of thought by our network, Feminists for a Gift Economy (www.gift-economy.com). The mind-shifting new theories that have led me to write this and other books combine the findings of modern matriarchal studies and the theories of the Gift or Gifting by Indigenous and non-indigenous women in our network. Genevieve Vaughan, whose theories of the Gift and of the maternal epistemology are among my major influences, started as a critic of Marxist theories and semiotics….
I believe we would all agree, in our research network, that the study of representations and myths by which we live, is as important as the macrolevel analysis of the means of production and the politics of self and other in neoliberal capitalist modernism. The stories we are brought up with are not just entertainment or edutainment. We think through the core stories and myths that help naturalize our notions about how the genders (perceived as male and female) should live and behave, and about what is desirable or undesirable in human lifeways……
Having written books and articles dealing with neoliberal politics, with monoacculturation, monoculture and the patriarchal worldview from a Marxist-ecofeminist perspective, I do not belittle the role of the more recognizably “political” stance (Kailo 2018c, 2010, 2007a). Because the label of “essentialism” is often used to discredit alternative feminist methods that value the “feminine” or the “maternal”, I emphasize that the focus here is not on biology but on gendered worldviews and metaphors adopted to guide our thinking. The maternal order of matriarchal societies is based on maternal values, and men, too, identify with the human norm of homo donans (giving human), not the homo economicus (economically oriented human) that represents the current masculated norm of the human. Homogenizing global culture with its obsessive materialism must be replaced by a return to local culture, local food production, local currency, local democracy, and local wisdom of living in harmony with nature instead of with the abuses of agro-business. Multidimensional diversity should replace the monocultures of the mind that are also reflected in the hierarchical dualisms also of monotheistic religions of the One and Only True (Male) God (Mies & Shiva l993; Goettner-Abendroth (l995 [1980]—–
Many feminist scholars share my concern about the impact of stories as the mythic underpinnings of patriarchal thought policing and mind colonization. For example, they approach myths as reflection pools of social and gender relations. There are many political reasons for studing women’s myths and mythic history. It is a pursuit in its own right, as women have the right to know of alternatives to the patriarchal master narratives that offer a slanted, perverted, distorting lens regarding past woman-friendly societies. However, women’s mythologies also provide information that together with other multidisciplinary methods help revisit past societies with their alter-native social arrangements, gender relations, and attitudes towards the environment.
In this book I present Finnish origin myths, believing as do Native people, that they often contain the original instructions of a culture, or reflect the primal gender of the divinities. They also reveal our affinities with the ecocosmology of other Northern, neighboring people. ….
For theorists of patriarchy, the heroism-oriented patriarchal mythic narratives form a small but all-the-more influential period in the overall history of humanity. As Gimbutas (l991) and Von Werlhof (2011) among others have proven, the patriarchal Kurgan invasion from the East gradually led to the erosion and overthrow of the more peaceful, matriarchal cultures in Europe.[7]
This book seeks to transmit the view that we need to foster and promote Earth democracy as a radical form of openness, using the best practices and knowledge systems that the world has today. These go beyond the Eurocentric corporate monocultural view of only one truth. We need to become aware of the limitations and biases of the dominant scientific model as well as of all types of master narratives. To mend the broken webs of the planet requires undoing the master identity, the short-sighted human norm based on homo economicus.
… Pohjola is my term with Terra Feminarum for the mysterious area of Northern Europe and its neighboring Finno-Ugric and Uralic peoples, that no doubt shared influences across Paleolithic-Neolithic times, and even beyond. Trying to locate and situate this mystical Land in a geographically and temporally indisputable manner would be hubris. Science is at best educated guesswork and creative speculation based on the selection and combination of facts and theories. Men have not abstained from unfounded and unproven vast generalizations regarding their gods and the universality of patriarchy; the desire to present such a view has overridden scientific rigor. Women generally have to provide twice as much proof when challenging the “master”.
Since I do not strictly separate the Finns and neighboring peoples with similar, if not identical, ethnolinguistic backgrounds, I reveal the affinities between the Indigenous Goddess and her many mythic kin-relations across the North, including the Norse sagas. Together, they form a picture of a more widely spread convergence zone of great ecologically-oriented deities and Guardian Spirits than would be permitted by the study of any one figure in ethnic isolation. Finnish Goddesses as providers of ancient ecological wisdom are not well-known, particularly in English, yet they provide a fertile context for bringing forward knowledge of the socially sustainable ways of the past.
The book consists of five chapters that elaborate on the key notions and themes of the book: Chapter One: Modern Matriarchal Studies; Chapter Two: The Gift Economy and Gift Imagary; Chapter Three: Indigenous Knowledge and Earth-Based Feminism; Chapter Four: The Golden Woman—Earthbody Warnings from Prehistory; and Chapter Five: Finnish Goddesses and Great Mothers.
Because there is little, if anything, in the way of representing a non-patriarchal approach to Finnish mythology or eco-myths, I begin my survey of the traces of Pohjola and its female figures of power by introducing a Great Mother who confirms the existence in the North of matriarchal eras and lands—the Golden Woman—Zolataja Baba. I present the information I have unearthed so far regarding the matriarchal roots of this powerful figure from Permia and from among several Finno-Ugric nations (based on research in Russia or in Russian). My background is in theories of the Gift, of Indigenous knowledge systems, Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Finnish mythology. Together with my familiarity with the recent findings within modern matriarchal studies, this allow me to complement the classic studies on Finno-Ugric deities and the ancient worldview from a new kaleidoscopic gender-sensitive perspective.
(End of the two parts.)
(Meet Mago Contributor) Kaarina Kailo.
Notes:
[6] Russia, of course, was founded by the Norse at Kiev.
[7]Earth Democracy has been introduced as a concept by Vandana Shiva (2016). I use the term also as short-hand for ecological and social sustainability, which includes the realization that ecological problems result not only from the abuse of the environment, but of the poor, women, Indigenous people and vulnerable populations.
Re: Finnish Mythology… I would like to read this book – your words: “Stories are not just stories. They have the power to change paradigms” speak to the critical importance of recovering our mythology and allowing it to inform our lives.