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The Healer
by Caysie Gilbark, UCSD, Anthropology 10/09
Lynda Yracébûrû is a Gypsy
healer focusing in the modality of Vas Pesh. Although she has not
always had knowledge of her Romani past, she now treats many people
with many different diseases and disorders using Romani healing
methods. After her own personal struggles, she discovered her own inner
power and how she was to use it to help people. In an attempt to
understand the healer myself, I obtained an interview with her to gain
knowledge of her past, present and future.
As I parked my car in the woody farm area of
Escondido, California, I wasn’t quite sure what to expect. The area
that Lynda’s farm is located in is its own different world from the
busy city environment around it. It is quiet aside from the sounds of a
breeze going through trees and a few people talking to the llamas in a
pen to the right of my car. The earthy, farm surroundings made me
nervous about interviewing Lynda at her home because I was out of my
element. I managed to start my walk up to the front door. As I was
making my way to ring the bell, I came across Lynda in the driveway
where she told me she was going to take the trash out and would be
return shortly. I waited and reviewed my notes until she returned. As
she walked up to me, I extended my hand to shake hers and introduced
myself. I was instantly flooded with a feeling of being at ease when
she said to me that she was “a hug person” and asked my permission to
give me a hug. After a firm and kind hug, we made our way up to the
front of the house and she took me into a room in which the walls were
all windows. Looking around you can see that the house is the home to a
couple at one with nature. There are Native American artwork pieces and
photographs all over the walls. Even though the house was filled with
boxes for an impending move to New Mexico, it was obvious that it was
not just a house –it was a home and I was very luckily accepted into
it. Sitting down at her table, I looked at Lynda and realized she was
not what I had envisioned when I read the word “Gypsy” on her website.
In my opinion, there is a preconceived notion in our culture that
Gypsies, or Romani people, are very eclectic and strange looking people
who do nothing but travel from place to place doing art. They are
almost seen as an outcast in society. What I was looking at, however,
was a warm looking woman who looked like she could have been my next
door neighbor. It seems that the word Gypsy has actually come to
represent something that it does not necessarily mean. According to
Smith (1997, 244), “The Romani Nation is, therefore, a political,
cultural and social symbol (rather than a geographical construct)
through which the world is divided into two spheres, the Gypsy and the
non-Gypsy.” To me, this means that the Gypsy is anyone who comes from
this background or takes part in the culture’s behaviors of being
nomadic or leading a life that, to us, is considered unconventional.
Being Gypsy – Rom – is more than just moving from place to place.
It is a culture and a lifestyle that has evolved over time to include
people who, just like Lynda, are mostly sedentary.
After sitting down, I realized that I was not going to need to ask many
questions. It was obvious that it was not going to be an interview; it
was going to be a storytelling. The first thing that this storytelling
had to offer was Lynda’s account of her medical past. She hadn’t always
known that she was a Gypsy healer or practiced the healing modality of
Vas Pesh. She had originally found her medical start as a
cardiovascular x-ray technologist and got her start in teaching
hospitals around the Northern bay area of California. Devoting
her days and nights to work, she would struggle through shifts lasting
up to sixteen hours long at a time. After fifteen years working
in the hospitals and helping heal other people in the Western medical
field, she began to feel herself deteriorate. The radiation from
working with x-rays had begun to poison Lynda’s body causing bleeding,
degenerative bone dis-ease resulting in dental deterioration, kidney
failure, severe pain, migraine headaches, tears and bone spurs in her
spine. After spending close to two decades working within the Western
medical system and helping patients, she needed to become the patient
herself. With her life force seeming to fade, she tried everything
Western medicine had to offer and realized that she had become just
another number. Lynda quickly became bankrupt and had an emotional and
physical breakdown. She had finally realized toward the end that the
Western medicine she had encountered had done nothing but simply “put a
band-aid” on the problem and eventually led to her body feeling an
addiction to any chemical medication she was given. Miserable and alone
in the hospital, she felt that she was ready to die.
At this point in her life, Lynda had what some might consider to be a
revelation. I could see her face light up as she ran her fingers over
her hands and told me, “I instinctively knew to hold my hands in
different ways or to hold certain areas of my hands and wait for the
pulses because if there are no pulses there is no energy flow.
Different finger represent different organs in our body and if there is
no energy flow, there is no life.” Through this, she discovered
what she called a “cellular knowing” of healing oneself through the
hands. She began to do research on the different modalities of the hand
and instead of calling what she discovered “learning”; she called it
“remembering” because she felt that she already knew this and it was
just buried deep inside of her. She took what she “remembered” and she
put it to use in her own healing and began to explore her own hands.
She would massage her hands, hold stones in her hands and place stones
on the places of her body needing help. After a while of working with
the healing modality of Vas Pesh, she began to feel better; she began
to feel the life re-entering her body. Her body healed itself and she
never had to go on to take any further medications from the Western
medicine system that had been failing her so far. This revelatory time
of Lynda’s life was made complete by the entrance of her partner Maria.
Maria Yraceburu, a Native American healer, ceremonialist and authur,
was able to help revive the energy flow in Lynda’s body by giving her
herbs and using stones.
Not only did Maria help Lynda’s health, but
she also fueled the healing curiosity in her mind. With the help and
suggestions of her partner, Lynda began to trace her roots back to her
father who was a Hungarian Gypsy. During the time her father was young,
the Gypsy, or Romani, lifestyle was not something that was seen as
acceptable. The Romani people would have to live their lives
“undercover”, as Lynda put it. They were at risk for persecution by the
Nazis and even the general public. Her father, being ashamed of his
roots, hid the fact that Lynda was, in fact, a descendant of the Romani
people. Upon discovering her heritage later in life, she began to learn
how to heal from the woman she calls her “adopted grandmother”,
Juliette de Bairacli Levy. Juliette was an herbalist and healer that
was considered to be among the first Gypsy scholars by many people. She
taught Lynda the ways of her people and encouraged her to explore the
history of the Romani healers in her lineage. When Lynda spoke about
Juliette, I could see the love and respect radiating from her. It was
very evident that Juliette changed her life.
After
I asked what, in Juliette de Bairacli Levy’s teachings, inspired
her the most, Lynda gave me two examples. The first thing that inspired
her was a legend handed down generation to generation. In the
story a Gypsy woman who was captured by Adolf Hitler during the
Holocaust ends up being the cause of his demise. Auschwitz had just
been created and among the first to be put into it were the Gypsies.
Hitler had been using the Gypsies to test out the gas chambers. He had
one Gypsy woman that he kept for his own entertainment and to get herbs
from. One day, he asked her to read his future from his palm and when
she did, she saw a horrific sight. Hitler was not happy with her
reading and tried to force her to tell him what he was doing was right.
She refused and later, when he came to get herbs from her, she poisoned
him with an herb that led him to go insane and resulted in his suicide.
This story was told to Lynda by Juliette and deeply touched her heart
and soul. The second moment that deeply inspired her and changed her
life was the moment Juliette finally read her palm. Lynda would beg
Juliette to read the future that lies in her palm but Juliette would
always refuse. Finally, after some coaxing, Juliette read her palm and
told her one thing. She said, “This is the medicine of your people. Use
it. Share it. Be well.” This simple statement became the motto and
basis of Lynda’s healing.
Through her work with Juliette, Maria and her own exploration, Lynda
has gathered an extensive understanding of how the human body works.
One of the most notable things during our conversation was her
pronunciation of the word “disease”. Rather than creating a liaison
between the two syllables, Lynda pronounces the word “dis-ease”. The
simple pronunciation is an enormous indication of how she treats her
clients and their illnesses. Lynda views the body as a whole in which
the mind, spirit, and body all come together. When a person is feeling
ill and is not feeling at ease, they are experiencing dis-ease.
Dis-ease can stem from a large range of sources from organ failure to
depression. Unlike the treatment for disease we are familiar with
receiving from many Western doctors, treating dis-ease is more about
treating the body naturally and as a whole.
In Lynda’s current practice, she uses many methods to work with
individuals and groups, that either seek her out , or she asks if she
may help them but the main focus is the healing modality of Vas Pesh or
“handwalking”. In Vas Pesh, the hands are massaged in and caressed in
areas that correspond to parts of the body. Not only are the hands used
to “chart health” in a sense, but they are actually the way that the
body is healed. I was fortunate enough to have Lynda offer to show me
what Vas Pesh was all about. She took my left hand first because that
was the receiving hand. This is where the energy is entering the body.
As she began to apply pressure and simulate different parts of my hand,
there was tightness in sections of my hand that I hadn’t noticed
before. She felt her way through my hands finding tense areas that
represented different issues of the body and massaged them until they
were loose again. She told me that by doing this, she was releasing the
blocked blood and energy flow back into those areas of my body in order
to make them healthier. After doing the pressure massage on my hands,
she ran her fingers over the two deepest creases in my hands- what she
called my “life line and heart line”. By doing this, she told me, it
would increase the power of my overall blood and energy flow to my
whole body and give my life force a jump start. She soon switched to my
right hand and repeated everything- the massage and running her fingers
over my life and heart lines exactly twenty four times each. It is her
philosophy that if you teach someone to do this on their own, you are
basically teaching them to heal themselves.
Vas Pesh has many uses, from healing simple things such as headaches to
saving someone from a fatal illness. Lynda stated that “anything the
mind could possibly conceive, Vas Pesh can help heal”. One significant
example of handwalking’s healing powers came in the form of a story
from Lynda’s recent past. She and her partner Maria had been at a
gathering in which a tree was cut down and carried to the top of a very
steep hill. There was an elderly woman walking up the hill when she
began to exhibit the classic early signs of a heart attack. Having a
background in cardiology, Lynda immediately recognized it and began to
“work” or massage the woman’s life line and heart line. This gave the
woman the strength to survive and when she was able, see a Western
doctor who was amazed that she survived.
Another extremely important healing tool that can be taken away from
having Lynda work with you is the importance of water. She suggests
that people should drink at least half of their body weight in ounces
each day to “maintain and sustain the system since our bodies are
seventy-five to eighty percent water”. When someone is beginning
to feel ill or is in pain, she suggests that they step their water
intake up to their entire body weight in ounces each day. She told me,
much to my surprise, that eighty percent of the symptoms that people
ask her for help to relieve are signs of dehydration. She is an extreme
advocate for the use of hydration to maintain health who actually has
been jokingly nicknamed “the water Nag” because she is constantly
insisting that water is the key to health.
Lynda also joins forces with her partner Maria to an extra unique form
of alternative healing. They combine the concepts of Maria’s Native
American healing with Lynda’s Gypsy healing to create a whole new
entity. One of the methods of Tlish Diyan healing they use is a sweat
lodge that multiple people participate in. "They host this sweat lodge
in which people can come and basically eliminate the toxins from their
bodies by sweating them out. They sit in a closed up area in which
steam is created and they are subjected to high temperatures that
trigger the body’s natural reaction to sweat to cool the body which, in
turn, eliminates any toxins that would have been lingering in the
system" (Walker 1966).
The final – and in my opinion, the most interesting – healing method
that Lynda discussed with me is the assistance of the snake skin she
has named “Tzegojuni”. While explaining to me that she has had this
snake skin for over fifteen years, she searched through a box until she
removed a bundle wrapped with rabbit fur. She had found him as road
kill and knew his spirit could help others. She asked my permission to
remove “him” and introduced me to the snake skin that is
Tzegojuni. After she places him in my hands, I noticed he was still as
soft as a snake that was still alive. He was smooth and gentle in my
hands. Lynda began to explain to me while I held Tzegojuni that he
helps transmute dis-ease by being placed over the body during a
ceremony in which his spirit goes through the body and finds the issues
and rids the body of them.
After putting Tzegojuni back into his bundle, Lynda and I
began to talk about what comes next in her life. Lynda will be taking
her practices to New Mexico where she will continue to work with
individuals with a mixture of her modalities and her partner Maria’s
modalities. Along with her spreading health thru this modality to the
people she consults, she will also be continuing the line of Gypsy
healers by teaching people through a workshops and classes how to heal
using the body’s energy. She teaches groups of people how to heal using
Vas Pesh, stones, music, chakras and herbs. BodyWisdom Trainings
consists of 4 sessions lasting 5 days long over the course of two
years. Although she has the plans to continue teaching in New Mexico,
she is willing to go wherever life will take her.
Being invited into the home and life of Lynda
Yracébûrû was a truly informative look into the life
of a true, modern day Romani healer. After overcoming the struggles and
obstacles that life had handed her and discovering her heritage, she
began a journey into a new life in which she is able to give back to
the people around her by sharing her healing through Vas Pesh and her
other mixed healing methods. Whether it is saving a life on a mountain
or simply relieving a patient’s headache, Romani healing has become an
integral part of Lynda’s life. In regards to the medicine of her
people, her mentor once told her to “use it, share it, [and to] be
well” and Lynda will continue to do just that.
Her mentor once told her to practice the medicine of her people; to
“use it, share it, [and to] be well” and that is exactly what Lynda
intends to do.
Keep checking our calendar for future Vas Pesh classes.
with Lynda!
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