The Original Whore with the Heart of Gold
How the Sacred Prostitute Fell from Grace, and How She May Return
By Levana Lindentree and Bestia Mortale
Finally he reached the portico after the hot, dusty wait outside,
laid his silver in the salver. He was shown to a room where he could shake off
the dust, wash, comb, scent himself, then to the courtyard, paved with pink
marble. Doves scattered as he found a couch, their wings shuffling the air,
which smelled of flowers. A fountain played, and in the distance someone tuned a
stringed instrument, the liquid notes blending with the falling
water.
Then she entered: face soft and grave, hair dressed high, a gown
of thin silk bound about her, showing dark her areolas, her brush of pubic hair.
She came up to him, held out her hand; deep black eyes met his. He found himself
trembling, from fear or desire he couldn't tell.
She led him to a small room, darkened, with a red-shaded lamp, a
low bed. This was the moment he'd longed for, working in the delta, his family's
fields. She took him into her arms, golden arms smelling of honey, the wealth of
her hair poured out over him, and he knew the Goddess had come to him. Surely
this feeling was Hers, this liquid weight of sensation, this woman's body
stroking his, melding to his, running now with scented sweat and juices. He felt
the God take him, and his uncertainty fell away.
The sacred whore appears in the earliest records, integral to
society when humans were first gathering in cities and learning to write. The
major work of the oldest known author, the Sumerian priestess Enheduanna, is a
paean to the hierodule (sacred whore) of heaven, the goddess Inanna, Wendy
Mulford writes in Love Poems by Women. In Babylon, center of the Akkadian
civilization that adopted Sumer's customs after conquering it, women prostituted
themselves to all comers for the glory of Ishtar, a later cognate of Inanna.
Still later, in ancient Greece and Rome, temple prostitution flourished.
Cultures from Japan to Africa have honored the sacred whore.
Things are different now. In most world cultures today,
prostitution, far from being sacred, carries by definition a weight of shame:
"Prostituted" has come to mean, according to Webster's Dictionary, "devoted to
base or unworthy purposes, debased by venality, as in prostituting one's
talents." How could you sink so low as to prostitute yourself? People across the
political spectrum agree prostitution degrades women, destroys family values, is
disgusting, sad and a symptom of social decay. Both the women who sell their
bodies and the men who buy them must suffer pathetically low self-esteem,
conventional wisdom says, because what woman with any self-respect would
willingly be a whore? What kind of loser would pay to have sex with such a
woman?
How did the sale of sex go from paying to enter paradise to paying
for something vile? If we can make ourselves one with the gods by intake of food
and drink - an idea that far predates Christian communion - how much more so
through sex, in its full regalia of joy, pleasure and emotional healing. And
what exactly is wrong with money changing hands for it? We pay even for sacred
food and drink, for ritual wine and bread have to come from somewhere. Why did
the archetype of the sacred whore fall from grace?
First, consider - what do we really mean by "prostitution?" If we
define it simply as sex carried out in exchange for money or other material
reward, we have the problem that "sacred prostitution" is used to describe
activities ranging from sex for a fixed rate of pay, to sex for gifts or cash
whose value varied widely (in Babylon, according to Herodotus, the goddess's
women could not turn away a stranger, whatever price he proffered), to ritual
promiscuity in which no money changed hands. Some consider sacred prostitution
to include the "hieros gamos," the sacred marriage, "the traditional reenactment
of the marriage of the goddess of love and fertility with her lover, the young,
virile vegetation god," as Nancy Qualls-Corbett puts it in The Sacred
Prostitute: Eternal Aspect of the Feminine. Certainly the duties of the ranking
hierodule often included celebrating the sacred marriage, the forerunner of the
Craft's Great Rite, with the king or high priest. Perhaps we could distinguish
mundane prostitution (sex for material reward alone) from sacred prostitution
(sex for spiritual reward, perhaps accompanied with material reward).
Ancient cultures at times made such a distinction in their laws
and social attitudes, but generally during a period of transition. As long as
sex was understood to be a sacred act, there was no need to emphasize the
distinction between sacred and profane prostitution. When sex came to be
regarded as potentially dangerous and shameful unless sanctified, such a
distinction became useful, but often such attitudes evolved into the concept
that sex was a patrilineal breeding function of no sanctity at all. As Merlin
Stone points out in When God Was a Woman, patrilineal cultures tend to abhor
sacred prostitution, because in it inheres a lack of concern for paternity.
Children conceived by the Goddess do not know their fathers.
A useful definition of prostitution is further complicated by
considering just how widespread prostitution really is. As evolutionary
biologists have documented in recent years, the exchange of sex for material
reward is common throughout the entire animal kingdom, because of its
evolutionary advantage. Among the insects, birds, fish and mammals that practice
sex for pay, the female makes a much larger reproductive investment than the
male; "eggs are expensive, sperm is cheap," as Natalie Angier writes in
The Beauty of the Beastly. The female redresses the imbalance in some measure
during courtship by requiring nuptial gifts of food, shelter or other resources
from her suitors.
This practice is compatible with the kind of cooperative child
care we call monogamous behavior. Helen Fisher describes in The Anatomy of Love
how primate and human females alike have been observed to seek gifts in exchange
for "adulterous" sex outside of monogamous relationships, gifts that greatly
improve their children's chances of survival. Their mates tolerate and even pimp
the females for the gifts' sake. Thus the roots of prostitution, and sacred
prostitution, lie as deep as the animal kingdom. In our own
culture, in spite of the jealousy fomented by patriarchal morality, many
husbands tolerate or even encourage some promiscuity on their wives' part once
primary bonds have been established.
In view of the extent of sex for pay, it's no joke that whoring's
called the oldest profession. It is also one of the world's oldest documented
forms of worship. Sacred prostitutes turn up in some of the oldest Sumerian
records. Evidence from a Sumerian seal, described by Iris Furlong in "The
Mythology of the Ancient Near East" in The Feminist Companion to Mythology,
edited by Carolyne Larrington, shows sacred marriage rites may have been
performed in Sumer before the middle of the third millennium B.C. - more than
4500 years ago. Later Sumerian writings give these duties to sacred
prostitutes of the rank "nu gig," and documentary evidence definitely shows
sacred marriage including the ranking holy prostitute as a Sumerian ritual drama
by the end of the second millennium B.C. Ruler and priestess replayed this drama
yearly in the cities Ur and Isin for more than two millennia, until the 20th
century B.C. Sumer and Akkad celebrated the sacred marriage ritual at the Spring
Equinox, then the New Year, after the return of the god Dumuzi or Tammuz from
the underworld. This feast of collective pleasure involved the whole populace
and lasted many days, according to At Mann and Jane Lyle in Sacred Sexuality.
Everything in the rite was designed to stir the senses; men and women anointed
themselves with essences, paints and jewelry, toasted the goddess and her
bridegroom with wine and danced serpentine dances to lyre, flute and drum.
Hierophants and priestesses performed libations and sacrifices and burned as
incense cinnamon, aloes and myrrh. At the ritual's peak, the king approached the
temple with offerings of oil, precious spices and delectable foods to tempt the
goddess. He mounted to the goddess at the temple summit as the crowd chanted
poetry. The ritual was performed as an allegorical masque, according to Furlong,
including speaking parts and probably music; the king played the part of the god
Dumuzi ("faithful son"), and a priestess of the highest rank played the goddess
Inanna or Ishtar in a ritualized enactment of the divine
coupling.
The poetry of the ritual, translated from the Sumerian Gudea
Cylinders, circa 3000 B.C., reflects an attitude toward sex, and sexual
spirituality, much different than that prevailing in Western culture today.
Consider this is sacred poetry, a goddess speaking to a god (ellipses indicate
breaks or unknown words in the original):
When for the wild bull, for the lord, I shall have
bathed,
When for the shepherd Dumuzi I shall have bathed,
When with ... my sides I shall have adorned,
When with amber my mouth I shall have coated,
When with kohl my eyes I shall have painted,
Then in his fair hands my loins shall have been
shaped,
When the lord, lying by the holy Inanna, the shepherd
Dumuzi,
With milk and cream the lap shall have
smoothed...,
When on my vulva his hands shall have laid,
When like his black boat, he shall have... it,
When like his narrow boat, he shall have brought life to
it,
When on the bed he shall have caressed me,
Then shall I caress my lord, a sweet fate I shall decree for
him,
I shall caress Shulgi, the faithful shepherd, a sweet fate I shall
decree for him,
I shall caress his loins, the shepherdship of all the
lands,
I shall decree as his fate. (Quoted by
Qualls-Corbett)
In similar Sumerian poetry, Inanna cries:
Is full of eagerness like the young moon.
My untilled land lies fallow.
Who will plow my high field?
Who will plow my wet ground?
Great Lady, the king will plow your vulva.
I, Dumuzi the King, will plow your vulva.
Then plow my vulva, man of my heart!
Plow my vulva! (Quoted by Qualls-Corbett)
The sacred marriage as a rite acted on many levels. On a physical
level, it renewed fertility. The Sumerians, according to Furlong, considered
their ruler responsible for agricultural prosperity, and all sexual reproduction
on earth, vegetable, animal and human, depended on his intercourse with the
goddess. The sacred marriage also legitimized the king's power; without it, Mann
and Lyle write, he was not considered fit to rule. His leadership ability was
directly linked to his consummating his marriage with the
goddess.
Furthermore, on a deeper level, the ritual was based on
psychological need, Qualls-Corbett writes. The sacred marriage, symbolizing the
union of opposites, represents the need for wholeness, on the level of the
individual psyche and also, we may hazard, on that of the group. It brings
together in equal status the masculine and feminine; it grounds spirit and
spiritualizes earth. Certainly any rite that continues for more than 2000 years
must speak to the human spirit. The sacred marriage furthermore was not
limited to Sumer but was found in different forms throughout the ancient
Mediterranean. The sacred marriage was the realm of the highest ranked sacred
prostitute, the nu gig ("pure or spotless"), but under the Akkadian conquerors
of Sumer, sacred prostitutes made up an entire complex hierarchy. According to
Mann and Lyle, the top-ranking "entu," possibly parallel to the nu gig,
wore special caps and jewelry and carried a ceremonial staff like that
of the ruler. "Naditu" formed the next hierarchical level and came from the
highest families in land. Known for their business acumen, they played an
essential role in the Akkadian economy.
"Quadishtu," the "sacred women," fell next in line, with
"ishtaritu," who specialized in dancing, music and singing. The dance of the
women of Ishtar can be considered the mother of the belly dance. Its components,
like the belly dance's, included snake-like and vigorous hip and pelvic
movements, the wafting of veils, descents to floor and the ritual wearing of a
sash, linked to the girdle that was Ishtar's symbolic emblem. What prompted the
formation of this female hierarchy that danced and made love for the Goddess?
Cultures where the sacred prostitute figured prominently were usually
matrilineal and female-focused, writes Qualls-Corbett, and considered nature,
eroticism and fertility the core of existence. Sacred prostitution there was a
logical development of the Earth Mother cult: If in sacred marriage a ranking
man and woman's intercourse makes land and animals fecund, why not extend that
ritual to all, so everyone can help seek the Goddess's blessing? Further, if sex
is seen as a sacrament, sexual acts are an obvious and natural form of general
worship. Sacred prostitution may also be linked to the tribal custom, found
variously throughout the world, wherein a young girl's virginity is offered to
an appointed tribal member who cannot become her husband. The defloration
ceremony initiates the girl into tribal membership and is offered to the chief
deity of the tribe. A decadent vestige of this custom is found in the medieval
"droit de seigneur," wherein the lord of manor had the right to the first night
with any bride in his demesne. Perhaps also sacred prostitution stemmed from
practical considerations. In a Goddess-centric society, a life in Her service
might be a logical alternative for women who didn't want to pair-bond. Men might
well seek out such priestesses, and casual liaisons pleasing to the Goddess
might become an official service as time went on. In a sex-positive society, the
office of providing sexual companionship and healing to people in need seems an
obvious one. If sexual consultation lines got too long, and other jobs were
neglected, asking for pay would redistribute resources and further honor the
Goddess. Wherever the post of the sacred prostitute came from, societies of
which she was part sang her praises. Sumerians considered the art of ritual
love-making one of the great gifts of the gods. The legend of Inanna and Enki,
in which Inanna lays claim to the sacred rules or orderings of life that confer
sovereignty among the gods, lists the sacred sexual customs as one of these
vital rules. She brings these rules to civilize the people of Erech, the city
most devoted to her, and her trophies include civilization and culture, music,
crafts, judgment and truth as well as the art of civilized love-making and the
office of the sacred prostitute. One Sumerian tablet refers to Erech, Inanna's
city, as the city of "courtesans and prostitutes," Stone writes. There, one of
the duties of Her priestesses, considered incarnations of the goddess, was to
make love to strangers. Another Sumerian fragment describes Inanna sending the
maiden Lilith, the "hand of Inanna," to gather men from the street to bring to
the temple. Lilith in other Sumerian myths figures as an enemy of Inanna, and in
Hebrew myths she is the first wife of Adam, who refused to be sexually
submissive and became a demon who stole children. In contrast to Lilith's fall,
the Sumerians and early Akkadians saw the sacred prostitute as a civilizing
influence. In the epic of Gilgamesh, set by its writers in the second quarter of
the third millennium B.C., according to Furlong, the "harimtu," or sacred
prostitute, figures prominently as such.
In this epic, the earliest found version of which is the Old
Babylonian, written between 1800 and 1600 B.C., the wild man Endiku is sent to
live on the steppe outside Gilgamesh's city, Uruk. There he romps with the wild
animals and tears up the huntsmen's traps. The aggrieved hunters come to
Gilgamesh planning Endiku's capture; Gilgamesh suggests getting a harimtu to
lure him. A harimtu agrees to do so and when Endiku appears lays "bare her
ripeness," opening her garments. This technique works like a charm. Endiku makes
love to her for the next six days and seven nights. After this experience,
Endiku is tamed. He finds he can no longer communicate with the wild animals,
who now flee from him. But he has gained in wisdom and understanding. He goes to
the harimtu and asks advice as to what to do next; she suggests he go to the
city and says she will introduce him to Gilgamesh. However, she cautions, he
first must learn how to act in the king's court. She offers to teach him social
graces, including in Furlong's interpretation how to eat with utensils, and he
accedes. She leads him "like a child" to food and drink, at which he stares, but
he manages to quaff seven pitchers of beer before he is ready to go to Uruk. As
Furlong writes, it appears the harimtu who prepared Endiku was not only sexually
attractive but also cultured, educated and well qualified as a tutor. But, just
as Lilith fell, the sacred prostitute as civilizer became less important in the Gilgamesh epic as it was rewritten over
time. Furlong writes that in the version of the epic written 1000 years after
the Old Babylonian, the description of Endiku's education has become much
shorter, and the harimtu is no longer shown as an educator.
Furthermore, in both the older and newer versions of the epic,
Gilgamesh insults the great goddess Ishtar herself. She has wooed him, offering
gifts, but Gilgamesh replies vituperatively, comparing her to a back door that
does not keep out the wind, a leaky water-skin that drenches its carrier and a
shoe that pinches. He lists her many lovers and underlines that these men all
ended up in the underworld. Endiku also insults Ishtar, which is too much for
the gods, who consign him to a long, slow death. What Ishtar offers Gilgamesh,
Furlong points out, is the standard sacred marriage. Gilgamesh's insulting reply
can be interpreted as an argument against the principle of sacred marriage,
wherein the king's right to reign depends on Ishtar's favors. Furlong explains
that the sacred marriage was a Sumerian royal ceremony, while the author of the
Gilgamesh epic was writing in Akkadian, under the aegis of the conquerors. The
Gilgamesh epic thus quite possibly folds in a political lampoon aimed at an
outmoded, discredited concept of kingship.
The earlier Sumerians wouldn't have treated a whore-goddess so. In
a Sumerian myth including the same characters, Gilgamesh and Endiku are on warm
and friendly terms with Inanna. The Akkadians adopted many customs of their
conquered country, but it is clear their civilization was more patriarchal than the earlier
Sumerian culture. Ishtar, however, remained their tutelary goddess, lady of love
and war, all-powerful. As the Whore of Babylon, Ishtar proudly oversaw the
continuing tradition of sacred prostitution, announcing "A prostitute
compassionate am I," according to Barbara G. Walker's The Women's Encyclopedia
of Myths and Secrets. Ishtar thus was the original whore with the heart of gold.
One of her titles was the Great Goddess Har, Mother of Harlots. Her priestesses
had healing powers; a clay tablet from Nineveh says harlot's spittle cures eye
diseases. Her high priestess, the Harine, was spiritual ruler of her city of
Ishtar. "Har" can be read as a cognate of the Persian houri and Greek hora, and
may also be the origin of "harem," which formerly meant a temple of women or
sanctuary. Under Babylon's Code of Hammurabi, legislation protected the rights
and good name of sacred whores, Qualls-Corbett writes. They were protected from
slander, as were their children, by the same law that upheld married women's
reputations, and they could inherit property from their fathers and receive
income from land worked by their brothers. Notice, however, the law implies that
slander, presumably the slander that the sacred whore is a common prostitute, is
enough of a danger that harimtu must be protected, and notice too that
patrilineal inheritance is the norm. Though special houses were set aside for
sacred prostitutes, residence there was not compulsory. However, if a sacred
prostitute lived outside these houses, she could not open a wine shop on the
pain of death - just as, at Déjà Vu or Razzmatazz today, by law liquor and
erotic dancers can't mix. Perhaps the Babylonian hierodule's wine shop would
have made her office too similar to that of the profane prostitute, who
frequented taverns, Qualls-Corbett theorizes. We see the distinction between
whores sacred and profane has become important in Babylon.
In another aspect of sacred prostitution, Herodotus recorded that
in the third century B.C., as an offering to Ishtar, "Babylonian custom...
compels every woman of the land once in her life to sit in the temple of love
and have intercourse with some stranger... the men pass and make their choice.
It matters not what be the sum of money; the woman will never refuse, for that
were a sin, the money being by this act made sacred (quoted by Qualls-Corbett)." The stranger was viewed as an emissary of the
gods, and when he tossed his coins into a woman's lap, he ritually said, "May
the goddess Mylitta make thee happy." The money went to the woman but was an
offering to the goddess in return for partaking in the rite, Qualls-Corbett
says. Herodotus added, "After their intercourse she (the woman) has made herself
holy in the sight of the goddess and goes away to her home; and thereafter there
is no bribe however great that will get her." By the third century B.C., profane
prostitution was clearly considered shameful. It is interesting to consider the
progression that took place after the Akkadians conquered Sumer, as a
matrilineal culture that openly honored a sexual goddess with sexual rites was
gradually transformed into a male-dominated culture where sex was more and more
considered dangerous and/or shameful. This same transformation occurred in the
three ancient civilizations that most directly influenced modern Western
culture, namely Judea, Greece and Rome.
Why? The easiest answer is that as militaristic patriarchies
established patrilineal descent, female promiscuity could no longer be permitted
to threaten men's knowledge of paternity. For a man to be sure he was father of
his children, the argument goes, he had to restrict access to his women. He had
to make it bad and wrong for his women to have sex with anyone but himself. Any
religion that encouraged female promiscuity had to be opposed. This explanation
is compelling in its simplicity and economic force, but it is not altogether
psychologically satisfying. It explains political repression, but it does not
explain the shame and fear so commonly attached to sex after the goddesses were
discredited.
Joseph Campbell, in The Masks of God: Occidental Mythology,
suggests a more subtle psychological and intellectual explanation when he writes
"we are going to find, throughout the following history of the orthodox
patriarchal systems of the West, that the power of this goddess-mother of the
world overthrown by her sons, is to remain as an ever-present threat to their
castle of reason." Perhaps it was the Oedipal feelings of the sons, combined
with their left-brain orientation, that so turned them against
their lascivious mothers.
Michel Foucault pointed out in The Use of Pleasure, however, that
systems of sexual austerity in classical Greece were not really directed at
women: Women were generally subjected (excepting the liberty they could be
granted by a status like that of courtesan) to extremely strict constraints, and
yet this ethics was not addressed to women. It was an ethics for men: an ethics
thought, written, and taught by men, and addressed to men - to free men,
obviously. A male ethics, consequently, in which women figured only as
objects.
Foucault's observation suggests this ethics was not addressing
men's mothers, or wives, but themselves, their own sexuality. The fascinating
subtext in the development of Jewish, Greek and Roman attitudes towards sex is
that without the guidance of female divinity, men were terrified of their own
sexual obsessions. And it makes a certain sense. Don't we all know that Boys are
only interested in One Thing? And once they get It, they don't want It any
more?
From this perspective, the ecstatic self-castration practiced by
priests of Cybele and Astarte in Roman times does not really fit the Freudian
model of a castrating mother. It was not the goddess, after all, but the
hermaphroditic monster Agdistis who inspired Attis to chop off his testicles,
and his followers in their frenzies presumably took the same inspiration. Granted, sacrifice was often associated with the
fertility rites of spring, but the idea of voluntarily sacrificing one's balls
seems peculiarly male; it is men, not women, who feel such ecstatic ambivalence
about them.
Moreover, precisely this kind of ascetic abnegation of sexuality
characterized the male-dominated religious cultures of the time. Pliny, like the
Pythagoreans before him, admired the virtues he ascribed to elephants: They were
strictly monogamous and had sex only once every three years, and then only to
beget children. Over and over, we find male ascetics in Judea, Greece and Rome
teaching that sex for pleasure, and particularly masturbation, can weaken a man
in ways reminiscent of but worse than actual emasculation.
Why so often in history do we find that female spirituality honors
sex as sacred, while male spirituality finds it degrading, weakening, impure and
sinful? Margaret Mead offers some clues in her remarkable study, Male and
Female. For men, physical sexuality focuses on the moment of ejaculation,
whereas a woman's physical sexuality is much more broadly integrated into her
life, including menstruation, orgasm, intercourse, pregnancy, childbirth
and motherhood. Through the normal course of their lives, women can
automatically build a sense of sexual identity and achievement, even against the
opposition of their culture, whereas ejaculation alone can never be enough for a
man. Mead writes:
In every known human society, the male's need for achievement can
be recognized. The recurrent problem of civilization is to define the male rôle
satisfactorily enough so that the male may in the course of his life reach a
solid sense of irreversible achievement, of which his childhood knowledge of the
satisfactions of childbearing have given him a glimpse. There is another factor
as well. Although both genders share many emotions surrounding sex, including love, tenderness, nurturing and the
kind of testosterone-induced arousal pejoratively referred to as lust, men live
with testosterone levels from 30 to over 100 times higher than those of women,
on average. Trish Thomas in Issue 5 of Future Sex writes of a female-to-male
transsexual named Max, who describes his emotional changes after taking male
hormones:
I [now] understand why men are the animals that they are. You see
sex in so many places that it's not necessarily meant to be. I see a pretty
woman walking down the street and I can't keep my eyes off her. I don't even
realize that I'm staring. Then I think to myself, Well what's wrong with that, I
just think she's good-looking.
Sex for men is like a buzzer that keeps going off whether or not
you want it to, making it hard to integrate sex into the rest of life. Where sex
is concerned, men, not women, are at the mercy of emotion they cannot control.
In Goddess-centric cultures, then, where women's sexuality was primary, it
is not surprising sex was approached with confidence, nurturing and fertility
proudly combined with pleasure. Conversely, as the
Father-Warrior God became dominant, in Judea, Greece and Rome, it makes sense
that the priests of the new order would try to quell such an insistent internal
threat to the hero's self-discipline. Interestingly enough, though, in all three
cultures, the explicitly male intellectual culture that emerged victorious
continued to coexist with a "secret," perhaps no less powerful
female culture that did not seek to declare dominance. Consider
the Hebrew Bible, or Old Testament, from which a great deal of our Western
revulsion for harlotry derives. At the end of "The Hebrew God and His Female
Complements" in The Feminist Companion to Mythology, Athalya Brenner
writes:
Gender issues in the Hebrew Bible can hardly be redeemed for
feminists. On the whole, the Good Book is a predominantly M[ale] document which
reflects a deeply-rooted conviction in regard to woman's Otherness and
inferiority.
The post-reading sensation I experience focuses on the bitter
taste in my mouth. This is my heritage, I cannot shake it off. And it hurts. As
she observes, Jewish patriarchal religion was in intimate competition for more
than 1000 years with the sex-positive Mother-Goddess religions of its near
neighbors. In Exodus 34:12-16, the Father-God tells Moses:
Take heed to yourself, lest you make a covenant with the
inhabitants of the land whither you go, lest it become a snare in the midst of
you. You shall tear down their altars, and break their pillars, and cut down
their Ashe'rim (for you shall worship no other god, for the Lord, whose name is
Jealous, is a jealous God), lest you make a covenant with the inhabitants of the
land, and when they play the harlot after their gods and sacrifice to their gods
and one invites you, you eat of his sacrifice, and you take of their daughters
for your sons, and their daughters play the harlot after their gods and make
your sons play the harlot after their gods.
Similarly, Numbers 25 describes violent struggles against the
harlotry of the Moabites (Ruth was a Moabite), beginning:
While Israel dwelt in Shittim the people began to play the harlot
with the daughters of Moab. These invited the people to the sacrifices of their
gods, and the people ate, and bowed down to their gods.
In Leviticus, the Father-God's pronouncements to Moses about
sexual conduct include the exhortation "Do not profane your daughter by making
her a harlot" and stipulations such as that Aaron's priestly sons must marry
only virgins, not harlots or divorcees and that "the daughter of any priest, if
she profanes herself by playing the harlot, profanes her father; she shall be
burned by fire." Throughout, we encounter the patriarchal language
of
shame, defilement, lewd nakedness (male nudity being the most
forbidden), sin and iniquity.
When the Father-God describes to Ezekiel the quasi-symbolic
harlotry of Samaria and Jerusalem, His revulsion at their defilement has a
sensuous specificity:
They played the harlot in their youth; there their breasts were
pressed and their virgin bosoms handled. (Ezekiel 23:3)
As Brenner points out, the Judaism of the Hebrew Bible was written
by males for males: What it records is the religion of Jewish men. It has been
common to assume that the religion of Jewish women was the same, for was Israel
not a prototypical patriarchy? But the Bible often suggests that in fact Jewish
women actually were "other" in their religion, following the Mother-Goddess in
various forms while their fathers and husbands disapproved, sometimes
harshly, sometimes petulantly, but seldom effectively.
When Hosea wrote in the eighth century B.C., for example, taking
the role for himself of the Father-God, he identified his harlot wife Gomer with
the people of Israel: even then, the identity of the nation was that of its
women, its wicked harlots, the devotees of the Mother-Goddess. Hosea describes
Her rites (4:11-14):
Wine and new wine take away the understanding. My people inquire
of a thing of wood, and their staff gives them oracles. For a spirit of harlotry
has led them astray, and they have left their God to play the harlot. They
sacrifice on the tops of the mountains, and make offerings upon the hills, under
oak, poplar and terebinth, because their shade is good. Therefore your daughters
play the harlot, and your brides commit adultery. I will not punish your
daughters when they play the harlot, nor your brides when they commit adultery;
for the men themselves go aside with harlots, and sacrifice with cult
prostitutes
Although it is the men's books in general of the Hebrew Bible that
have survived to influence our modern outlook, there is one women's book, the
Song of Songs, or Song of Solomon, that provides direct testimony to the spirit
of the Jewish women's mysteries. Anne Baring and Jules Cashford, in The Myth of
the Goddess, recognize Inanna's sacred marriage in such beautiful verses as
(6:10): "Who is this that looks forth like the dawn, fair as the moon, bright as the sun, terrible as an army with
banners?" They point out that the verse, "I am black but comely, O ye daughters
of Jerusalem" (1:5), refers back to the black night ruled by the Goddess, filled
with mystery, wisdom and the power of regeneration, rather than to the later
Iron Age darkness associated with fear and evil.
What the Hebrew Bible testifies above all is how widely sexual
veneration of the Mother-Goddess spread throughout the Near East; it had become,
as Brenner writes, an integral part of Mediteranean culture in the first
millenium B.C..
Just as the strictly clothed nomadic Jewish warriors held up their
Father-God against Her in Palestine, so the naked, phallus-admiring Greek
warriors fought it on different ground in the Peloponnesus. Unlike the Hebrews,
the Greeks did not rely on their religion for justification of patriarchal laws
and practices; instead, they developed powerful military, athletic and
intellectual subcultures that gave life meaning for their men and excluded their
women. Sacred prostitution was always widely practiced in Greece, particularly
in the temples of Aphrodite, most famously in her birthplace Cyprus and in
Corinth. In Corinth, she was known as "Aphrodite the Courtesan" and "Aphrodite
Who Writhes," and Strabo in the first century B.C. says 1000 sacred prostitutes
worked in her temple there, the same number at Mount Eryx in Sicily. But the
proud priestesses of love had in most cases been replaced by slaves, and though
Hesiod said the sacred prostitutes, or Horae, "mellowed the behavior of men,"
their function was more to serve men's pleasure than to enable them through
sacred contact with the Goddess.
The Greeks had been influenced early on by Crete, where the
celebration of sacred marriage was a central rite of a rich, Goddess-centric
civilization, as Baring and Cashford describe. Although the Myceneans borrowed
much from Crete, and the Homeric pantheon was evenly divided between male and
female deities, the Myceneans were already a warlike culture dominated by male
heros, and mother Hera quickly became a jealous, petty-minded wife, subordinate
to Zeus in a most imperfect marriage. By the 6th century B.C., Solon's laws in
Athens gave no rights to women, reducing wives to the status of servants. Common
prostitutes were forced to distinguish themselves from wives by dress and behavior, and their children were explicitly
denied legitimacy and citizenship. Of all Hellenic women, only the high
courtesans known as "hetaerae" seem to have retained the legal and political
rights of male citizens. Not only that, but Greek intellectuals and spiritual
leaders from Pythagoras to Plato championed the rigorous control of sexual
feelings. Virtue lay in abstaining.
And yet, as in the Jewish case, it seems that true sexual
reverence of the Goddess was not as rapidly or thoroughly defeated as legal,
intellectual and political history would suggest. All the hints we have suggest
that the older Goddess-centric attitudes were perpetuated in secret in the
mystery cults. In the mysteries of Eleusis, which the writer Diodorus said came
from Crete, where they were an open festival, it appears Demeter took the
role played by Inanna in Sumer, ruling the endless cycle of death,
fertility and rebirth, and consummating a sacred union. Of her mysteries, Mann
and Lylequote the Bishop of Amaseia, in the 5th century A.D.: "Is there not
performed the descent into darkness, the venerated congress of the hierophant
with the priestess, of him alone with her alone? Are not the torches
extinguished and does not the vast and countless assemblage
believe that in what is done by the two in the darkness is their
salvation?" The wild maenads of Dionysus, too, were not only dangerous, but also
lascivious. And as late as 150 A.D., the women of Corinth took strangers as
lovers on the feast day of Adonis. Greek women, it appears, did not readily
submit to the debased and powerless roles prescribed for them.
Rome provides a third version of the same general story. In early
Rome, reverence for the fertility goddess was given great importance, and the
famous Vestal Virgins may initially have been sacred prostitutes, according to
Mann and Lyle. Vestal Virgins possibly underwent a form of secret marriage
ceremony involving the Pontifex Maximus, who initiated them into their role as
brides of the city, and the phallic deity of the Palladium.
Over time, however, the meaning of the word "virgin" changed from
signifying an unmarried woman to meaning an unsullied female who was patriarchal
property, and the Romans developed a prudery reminiscent of the Victorians. This
is not to deny the soulless and often cruel debauchery whose perverse attraction
drew so many Victorians to become Latinists, but rather to point out that the
Romans themselves exalted a stoic abstinence they did not necessarily
practice.
But sacred prostitution lingered in Rome. Among profane
prostitutes, according to Mann and Lyle, remnants of sacred sexual rituals
remained. A certain class of prostitutes, "lupae," or she-wolves, attracted
clients with wailing howls; remember that the wolf is the symbol of Mother Rome.
Underlining the link between sexual ecstasy and death, the "busturariae" worked
in graveyards, providing sex on tombstones and funeral mourning services. The cult of Isis in Rome may have practiced sacred
prostitution, Mann and Lyle write, and a cult pattern of sacred marriage
emerges, according to Walter Burkert in Ancient Mystery Cults. Certainly Isis'
cult wielded a great following among profane whores.
In the Roman province of Anatolia, Cybele's birthplace (now
Turkey), Strabo records sexual worship in the first century B.C. He reports that
children born from sacred prostitution were considered legitimate and were given
the name and social status of their mothers. "The unmarried mother seems to be
worshipped," he writes, according to Stone. In an Anatolian inscription from 200
A.D. a woman named Aurelia proudly announced she had served in temple by taking
part in sexual customs, as had her mother and all her female
ancestors.
As for ancient European veneration of the sacred whore, we can
only guess at it. Nothing direct comes down to us, only scattered reports from
the conquering Romans. However, Celtic mythology hints at sacred marriage rites.
In Ireland, the king traditionally married the land, personified by one of three
sovereignty goddesses. In Scotland, the Queen Hermutrude was said to have
granted her lovers kingship, yielding her kingdom with herself. The legend of
King Arthur also contains possible evidence of sacred sexual rituals. Lancelot and Mordred contend with Arthur for his
kingship, including, importantly, the favors of Guinevere. If Guinevere was the
sacred whore, standing in for the initiatory goddess, it was she who held true
power. In Germany, Guinevere's name is "Cunneware," meaning female
wisdom.
As late as medieval times, a law was required in Germany to
prevent people building a "hörgr," a house of holy whores, according to Walker.
The Celtic and witch holiday of Beltaine celebrates a sacred marriage feast,
crowning a May King and Queen, also called the Lord and Lady or John Thomas and
Lady Jane. On May Eve, men and women go to the woods to make "green-backs," as
Shakespeare puts it. From the woods, they bring home the May, hawthorn blossoms,
then dance around the phallic Maypole.
Beltaine celebrants decorate the Maypole with ribbons and flowers,
just as the pine tree of Attis was decorated with ribbons and violets, Baring
and Cashford point out, another connection being that, after the Julian calendar
was instituted, May Day was Attis's time of death and resurrection. The Green
Man, connected with the May King, could be a descendent of Dumuzi, also called
the "Green One." The British Morris dancers may be the last descendants of the
Anatolian Corybantes, orgiastic dancers of Cybele. In the non-Western world,
among the Ewe-speaking people of the former African Slave Coast, girls ages 10
to 12 trained in temples and served priests and seminarians as sacred whores,
according to Funk and Wagnalls Standard Dictionary of Folklore, Mythology and
Legend. Japan has a tradition of "Holy Mothers," according to Walker,
promiscuous priestess-shamanesses who enter shrines to lie with priests
possessed by the god's spirit.
In the Southern Provinces of India, large numbers of women
performed as sacred whores, according to Funk and Wagnalls. They made a symbolic
marriage to the gods, and their duties included dancing before the gods as well
as prostitution. In India's Central Provinces, temple dancing girls with similar
duties, initiated after a bargain with their parents, were dressed as brides and
married to a dagger, walking several times around a central post. In Hyderabad,
Hindu girls married Siva and Krishna and were called the gods' servants. The Hindu devadasis, human copies of the
lascivious heavenly nymphs, were promiscuous priestesses who lay with priests
possessed by the god's spirit, Walker writes. Indian Tantric rites both Hindu
and Buddhist incorporate sex; the Tantric word for sacred harlot is "veshya," possible a cognate of Vesta, the name of the Roman hearth-goddess.
Tantra has seen some recent popularity in the United States, but
no more does the sacred whore ply her trade. Even as an archetype - that is, a
numinous image forming part of the inherited psychic structure of all people -
the sacred whore hasn't much currency in the Western world today. Current
attitudes toward the strong, sexual female swing heavily toward the negative;
witness the popularity of such movies as Basic Instinct, Fatal Attraction and
Disclosure, all movies in which archetypally strong, sexual women figure as
destructive forces and where possible are duly punished. Though it's been 2800
years since Hosea, we still need to chastise our lewd women.
The sacred whore is, by contrast, a constructive archetype. The
sacred prostitute is a dynamic, transformative, ecstatic facet of the feminine,
writes Qualls-Corbett; her dynamism pushes the boundaries of the individual
psyche in a positive way, and she is linked to Eros, to ecstasy, to liberation
from group convention, to being taken temporarily beyond yourself in a way that
even after broadens your experience of life.
She is connected to the goddess, but, importantly, she is not the
goddess herself. "We can amplify the meaning of the goddess and realize the
psychological implications of the image," Qualls-Corbett writes, "but... it can
never be fully integrated into consciousness. We cannot enter the realm of the
gods or identify with their power; that leads to insanity, to the overwhelming
of the human ego." On the psychological level, just as on the
level of ritual, the sacred prostitute works as the goddess's
mediatrix. She brings the ecstatic, liberating qualities of the goddess into the
material world, where we can integrate them into life.
For women, she provides a role model, an image of one initiated
into mysteries, who has achieved connection with the goddess of love.
Qualls-Corbett calls this achievement analogous to the process whereby a woman
frees herself from identification with the role of the father's daughter.
Afterward, Qualls-Corbett writes, "the woman is no longer bound by the
collective conscious attitude of the 'old king' father principle." One feels a
certain presence in such a woman's company, Qualls-Corbett writes, "a
combination of joy and wisdom. She is 'one-in-herself,' free of the confines of
convention; she lives life as she chooses."
For men, the archetype of the sacred prostitute provides a channel
through which sexuality can be positively integrated into life. Through her, sex
is offered to the Goddess; all that frightening, obsessive, testosterone-driven
instinct can be directed toward the divine female, who can take it, and who can
transform it. As Sallie Tisdale writes in Talk Dirty to Me, the work of the
sacred prostitute "has the potential to tease the true anxiety men feel about
women, the anxiety they hide in brutality or simply bravado, tease it up to the
surface to be transformed into something else - desire,
affection,
rest, wonder." Once safe, sexuality can become the art of love.
The sacred prostitute can be seen also as an aspect of a man's
anima, the internal feminine, muse and avatar of spirituality and gentle
eroticism. To connect with her energy modifies a man's image, of himself as well
as of women. The sacred prostitute within brings a man joy, laughter, beauty and
an openness to love and sexuality and connects him also to creative impulses on
all levels, pouring across boundaries to rejuvenate all of life.
The archetype of the sacred prostitute hasn't disappeared from the
world of men; Qualls-Corbett writes she occurs frequently in her patients'
dreams. But it's also clear she's far from top dog among Western society's
archetypes. Power, wealth and technology are what drive the world today; that's
what you'll find on the front page. Even pagans have qualms about worshipping
the goddess of love: What would the neighbors think? What would my mother think
- Levana wonders - if I reported to her the antics of the
Beltaine Aphrodite shrine? I would be lying if I said I didn't
care. Yet the sacred prostitute is powerfully attractive as an archetype.
The dancer in the temple, she who smiles; golden-limbed, smelling of honey,
generous with sexual pleasure shot through with spiritual ecstasy: Who can deny
her appeal? She holds us in her arms, takes us through dark places into light;
she leads us out of ourselves, into better, stronger versions of who we could
be.
Where is she in the world today? We're not the only ones looking
for her. Annie Sprinkle, whose work includes the luminous video Sluts and
Goddesses, and Carole Leigh, a.k.a. the Scarlot Harlot, interviewed in this
issue, spring quickly to mind. Despite, or perhaps in reaction to, the offensive
of the anti-pornographers of the Christian Right and the sex-negative feminist
wing, writers such as Pat Califia, Carol Queen, Susie Bright and
Sallie Tisdale have entered the hierodule's territory. Still, you can't
walk down to the corner with the price in your hand, as you could in Sumer, and
find the temple of the sacred whore.
You can find mundane prostitutes, though. The streetwalker and
call girl, and their more legal sex-industry sisters the exotic dancer and the
sexual masseuse, are the most numerous now of Inanna's children. To pretend
their jobs, especially that of the street hooker, are universally pretty and fun
would be a bad joke. Their work seems fraught with dangers: Porn stars get AIDS;
prostitutes, especially those with pimps, get strung out on drugs. Conversely,
addicts on the street often wind up hooking; few not alienated or desperate choose street prostitution as a livelihood, since in
our society it's considered one of the lowest forms of down and out.
Prostitution, especially on the street, can also be violent.
Is such danger and degradation necessarily the case? No. We see
from earlier civilizations that prostitution can be considered an art, that the
position of the whore can be raised as high or higher than that of the matron.
Assuming the acts of sex haven't changed since ancient Sumer, what does differ?
The attitude of society toward the whore, reflected in every facet of life, from
daily interaction, to the legal system, to spirituality. The scorn of society
adds considerably to the violence done to prostitutes, Tisdale writes; a
prostitute becomes a throwaway woman, and it's nearly impossible to get a
conviction for a man who rapes her. Furthermore, as Tisdale notes, "People who
believe sex work is by definition bad, because it must by definition be
exploitive, can rationalize extremely punishing behavior to save sex workers
from themselves."
"Doing sex work is damaging," people say. "Giving all those
blowjobs is damaging, it's degrading,"'" mimics Samantha Miller, head of the
prostitute's union COYOTE (for Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics), in Tisdale's
book. "'I think society's attitude toward blowjobs is what's degrading. Not the
actual act.'"
Even in our society, the debased face of prostitution is not the
only one, or even the most prevalent one. "'That really down-and-out,
do-anything-for money kind is about five percent'" of U.S. prostitution, Miller
says; she adds, "'I can't tell you how much bigger and how much more underground
prostitution is than anybody knows about or seems to have been willing to talk
about.'" Tisdale says of social worker Martha Stein, who studied a group of
prostitutes for four years, "Stein was surprised to find all her stereotypes
defused. She found happy, attractive, healthy, prosperous prostitutes, many of
whom worked part-time as whores and in their other lives were students or
housewives."
Working prostitutes acknowledge whoring can be a healing, generous
art. Tisdale quotes prostitute Jackie Daniels: "'I have people I've been seeing
for years.... It's very much like a therapist-patient or doctor-patient
relationship. We will probably always need doctors, we will always need
counselors, therapists, psychic healers and advisers in the same way that we
will always need prostitutes. These are sex experts, sexual healers.'" "'When
these people (customers) come to you, they're coming to you not only for sexual
release - which is often the easiest part - but with emotional needs as well,'"
Tisdale quotes another prostitute, Alex. "'Some are lonely. It's almost as
though they want a mommy for half an hour. It's weird because often I'm half
their age, and here they are like little babies suckling at my breast, getting
nurtured.... Men come to me who are just dying to be touched. Paying any kind of
attention to their body is so nice.'" Tisdale compares the role of the
prostitute to that of the nurse.
Even in this society, prostitutes feel the ministry of the sacred
whore. "'I really believe there are some people who truly, truly love the work,
a hundred percent of the time, and there's nothing they'd rather do,'" Alex
says. "'And then there's some people like me - sometimes I like it, sometimes I
don't.... Sometimes I love it and I have a great time and feel like I've done
something nice for another. I've been paid well for it and there's respect on
both sides. Sometimes it's like the best kind of work I've ever
done.'"
Part of reacknowledging the sacred whore is redeeming the office
of the mundane prostitute, acknowledging the important work she does for us all.
But can we truly bring back the sacred whore? Can we call her up out of myth,
past the veils of past time that obscure 2000 years? What would she do for
us?
It's worth trying, because we need her. We need her partly to
reduce our high-tech stress. In cultures that practiced occasional ritual
prostitution either as an initiation, as in Babylon, or in periodic festivals,
the license probably helped reduce societal tensions, Funk and Wagnalls says.
The more sexually permissive the culture, the lower the rate of crime, Anodea
Judith writes in Wheels of Life.
We need the sacred prostitute on a psychological level as well.
She is the guardian spirit of a certain kind of passion, a passion we need to
balance the dark engines of power that run rampant in our world. We need her
depth; as Qualls-Corbett writes, "Paper hearts and baby cupids hardly suffice;
they are symbols of a sentimental romanticism which merely fulfills ego
desires." The sacred prostitute holds between her thighs a source of vital
energy, as Qualls-Corbett writes:
"As older images (such as the sacred prostitute), ... symbolizing
the communion of sexuality and spirituality, become inaccessible to our
conscious understanding, so a source of vital energy escapes us.... Jung writes
that the loss of an archetype 'gives rise to that frightful discontent in our
culture.' Without the vital feminine to balance the collective patriarchal principle, there is a certain barrenness to
life. Creativity and personal development are stifled."
In individual psychological work, once the image of the sacred
whore was made conscious in patients' lives, Qualls-Corbett found a noticeable
change in attitude. Though fears came up, and relationships altered, patients'
rigid attachment to collective attitudes loosened, and they gained greater
creativity in their approach to life problems, finding new solutions. A sense of
humor, previously buried, often came to the fore. A new erotic,
exhilarating dimension appeared.
Our society as a whole could use to loosen up so. The sacred
prostitute is part of our heritage as humans, long buried now; if we resurrected
her, she could open for us a new path forward, a new choice springing green in a
barren landscape, a way of reconnecting with our bodies, our sexuality, our
creativity, and with ecstasy, a way we too could be reborn.
How many miles to Babylon?
Can I get there by candlelight?
Yes, and back again. (Nursery rhyme)