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The making of a sacred mountain. Meanings of nature and sacredness in Sápmi and northern Norway
Authors:Siv Ellen Kraft [Author Vitae]
Affiliation:Department of Religious Studies, University of Tromsø, Christian VII gate 12, Tromsø 9012, Norway
Abstract:A case study of sacred landscapes in the contemporary era, the article deals with a particular mountain and its rise to sacredness. Fuelled by plans of ski-slope development, the fate of Tromsdalstind caused a lively debate in local newspapers, as well as a report issued by the Sami Parliament. The report connected sacredness to Sami traditions in the past and to current laws on the protection of Sami cultural memories. This, then, was a case of sacredness constructed outside the context of organized religions and ongoing religious traditions, as well as a case of using secular laws as the primary basis for definitions of sacredness.Through this process, love for the mountain appears to have grown deeper and more religious, both for the Sami as well as for other northern Norwegians. Neither more nor less authentic than those of the past, these concepts of sacredness belong to the late modern world of law culture, nature romanticism, and to pan-indigenous spirituality as a “religion” in the making.
Keywords:Holy mountain   Sami   Indigenous   Sacred, Religion and geography
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