Eugenia Roussou discusses the prominence of evil eye beliefs and practices in contemporary Greece. Traditionally Greek ideas about the evil eye are increasingly being fused with New Age conceptions resulting in new ideas, practices, and religious materialities.
MLA citation format:
Roussou, Eugenia.
"The Material Culture of the Evil Eye:
Merging Orthodoxy and New Age Spirituality in Greece."
Merging Orthodoxy and New Age Spirituality in Greece."
Web blog post. Material Religions. 20 May 2015. Web. [date of access]
As has been argued recently by
social scientists, the world today is going through a ‘spiritual revolution’
(Heelas and Woodhead 2005). As a result, especially in the western sociocultural
context, the authority of denominational religion is rapidly diminishing, and subjectivized
spirituality gradually takes over the field of contemporary religiosity (c.f.
Shimazono 1999; Knoblauch 2008). Even in Southern European countries, where
religious identity is almost exclusively linked to Christianity, the appearance
of alternative forms of spirituality that belong to the so-called ‘New Age’
movement (Heelas 1996; Hanegraaff 1996; Sutcliffe 2003; Wood 2007) is becoming
stronger. When it comes to Greece, in particular, these days New Age
spirituality claims a vivid position in the religious landscape of the country,
and the boundaries between Orthodox
Christianity, the official and predominant religion of Greece
(Alivizatos 1999: 25), and New Age spirituality appear not only softened but
almost collapsed. Denominational religion
and New Age spirituality are amalgamated
in people’s everyday practices, and Orthodox devotees are often open to
incorporating New Age ideologies in their lives.
One central sociocultural evidence of such mergence between Orthodox religion
and New Age spirituality can be observed through the material culture of
perhaps the most popular Greek belief, that of the evil eye.
The evil eye
is one of the most popular beliefs in Southern Europe and the Middle East (see,
among others, Reminick 1976; Galt 1982; Veikou 1998). It arises from the widely held
perception that certain people can transmit a form of negative energy, mainly through
visual contact, to others. Such contact results in distress and ill-health experienced
by the bodies of the afflicted, subsequently cured via a ritual healing by lay
specialists. In addition, people draw on a
panoply of evil eye material objects (matakia),
which are mainly used as prophylactic amulets against any form of evil. These matakia – literally ‘little eyes’ in Greek
– are the focus of the present paper. Drawing on extensive anthropological
fieldwork (2005-2009) that focused on the evil eye phenomenon on the island of
Crete and in northern Greece, I provide a brief account of how the evil eye
materiality depicts a change in contemporary Greek religiosity, when it comes
to the relationship between religion and spirituality in the Greek
sociocultural context.
Materiality is centrally
situated in the evil eye practice. As can be seen in the picture above, the
most typical evil eye material objects consist of blue glass with an eye
painted on them. Given that it is primarily the human eye that transmits a form
of electromagnetic waves which cause the evil eye, the popular prophylactic
items to ward off the evil eye act as a mirror to reflect the gaze away from
its recipients. The use of blue glass is not random either. The majority of
individuals who can transmit the evil eye to others are believed to be the ones
with blue eyes: the blue-coloured eyes are considered rarer among Greeks;
consequently, the blue eyes have noticeably more intensity and power and can
thus transmit the evil eye more easily. Furthermore, the reflective power of
the glass itself is meant to not simply block but also refract the negative
energy back to the universe, and, as a result, it is thought to be the best
material for evil eye amulets.
In addition to the more normative
blue-eyed glass objects I just described, the range of the evil eye materialities
has expanded considerably. In both Rethymno and Thessaloniki, the Cretan town
and the Northern-Greek city where I respectively conducted my fieldwork, evil
eye things were to be found in a plethora of shapes, colours, and designs. These
objects ranged from decorative items to jewellery, key chains to kompologia (worry beads), and mobile
amulets to religious icons. A renewed interest triggered by fashion in the last
decade has lifted matakia higher up
on the material ladder of popularity. Advertising has contributed greatly to
the trend of the evil eye objects. Popular magazines are full of evil eye
jewellery advertisements and online advertising of matakia is prominent. The Greek media have also played a
significant role in broadcasting globalizing influences, including New Age
trends, and in the creation and expansion of the evil eye trend. As a result,
Rethymniots and Thessalonikans, in the words of a shop owner in Thessaloniki,
‘keep requesting to buy those evil eye things they see on television and in
magazine ads: evil eye pendants, amulets and other similar things, such as feng shui objects and the like. So, we
order and bring them’. This fashionable re-introduction of the evil eye does
not only involve changes in the quality, quantity, form, and imaginative
variety of evil eye things. It also – and perhaps most importantly – has to do
with a change in terms of religiosity: the evil eye material culture currently represents
a Greek turn to a more open spiritual field, where Orthodoxy and New Age
spirituality are synthesized in practice through material creativity.
There are two specific kinds
of materialities whose presence prevail in Rethymno and Thessaloniki, and which
depict a change in contemporary Greek religiosity. On the one hand, there are
the religious matakia: the evil eye
objects that incorporate Orthodox symbols, but are often used as protective
amulets against any kind of negative energy. On the other hand, there are the
spiritual matakia: the objects that
are related to both the evil eye and New Age spirituality, which serve as
primary indicators of a new development in the spiritual life of Greeks, and
are considered spiritually powerful.
I was admittedly quite
surprised when I first discovered the ‘religious matakia’. From what I found out later through discussion with
people in Rethymno and Thessaloniki, they represented a new trend. Such matakia were considered no less
‘religious’ than crosses and religious icons. Shop owners had them placed next
to icons depicting Saints, the Holy Trinity, the Virgin and Jesus. The existence of religious matakia emerged out of the need to
reinvent the evil eye material culture, find a way to make it more popular for
Greeks and foreign tourists, and refresh the relationship between Orthodoxy and
the evil eye, by pushing it toward the direction of popular religion.
A male informant of mine in
Rethymno, who is the owner of a shop full of religious icons, evil eye amulets
and religious matakia, made a
noteworthy statement. I was standing opposite a stand full of religious evil
eye objects, observing a couple of them where the evil eye and Orthodoxy were
clearly merging: a big, round, blue evil eye bead was hanging from religious
icons of Jesus and the Virgin. The owner came to stand next to me and we
started discussing the meaning of those objects. A few seconds later he turned
to me and said: ‘Even if they [the evil eye and Orthodoxy] had not shared any
kind of relationship up to now, well, now they do’.
Figure 3: The stand of religious matakia in the Rethymniot shop. Rethymno, Crete, August 2005. Photo by author. |
By juxtaposing an evil eye
and a more traditional Greek religious symbol, a meaningful emergence, both in
physical and in ideological terms, arises. As my informant eloquently asserted,
the relationship they had carried before does not really matter any longer.
What counts is their present coexistence, and the way in which this interaction
is interpreted, negotiated and practised by people. Empowered by Christian symbolism and by the evil eye belief, these
objects help people experience the religious world through a material pathway,
offering ‘a striking example of how lay men and women successfully integrate
religious concerns, popular culture, and profit making’ (McDannell 1995: 269). At
the same time, these religious matakia
have also found a new practice, namely by being utilized as prophylactic items
against not just the evil eye but also against the channelling of (negative)
energy – a central concept in New Age spirituality (see Brown 1997). Along with
the new mergence through materiality between Orthodox and evil eye symbolism,
this fashionable version of religious matakia
represents a novel manner of handling an important change in the Greek ‘religioscape’
– that of the appearance and gradual popularity of New Age spirituality –
through a culturally familiar discourse and an emerging popular materiality.
When
it comes to the spiritual matakia, an amulet which combines a
blue-eye bead and a New Age symbol is hardly considered ‘spiritually
appropriate’ by the Church, priests and devoted Orthodox adherents. Yet, the
majority of my informants found such an object spiritually effective, since it
can offer protection against all sources of evil energy. As Anna, a
Thessalonikan informant told me: ‘I believe in God. But I also have a feng shui object that has an evil eye on
it with me all the time. It has two little angels that hold two hearts and a
small evil eye bead on it. So, not only do I get protected from the evil eye
and negative energy, but I can also attract love.’ Furthermore, according to a
New Age shop owner in Rethymno: ‘[my customers] buy evil eyes, but they also
ask constantly for healing objects, like crystals, New Age things, feng shui things, and objects that have
some kind of spiritual power.’ As a consequence, shop owners need to invent new
ways to attract attention; therefore, they bring to their shops evil eye
objects that deviate from the classic evil eye beads and matakia, but are instead infused with New Age symbolism.
Figure 4: Eastern spirituality meets the evil eye. Thessaloniki, Greece, March 2006. Photo by author. |
In North America, the New Age
movement is explicitly condemned by many Christians. For them, New Age is a ‘“pagan”
religion combining the egocentric follies of secular humanism and the evil
machinations of the devil’ (McDannell 1995: 264). As a consequence, crystals,
herbal medicines, tarot cards, and the rest of the New Age material culture ‘present
a serious religious rival to the biblical orientation of conservative
Christians’ (ibid.). Conservative Greek Orthodox Christians also condemn New
Age material culture. However, in general terms, people in my fieldsites who range
from religious disciples to atheists appear to be sympathetic towards the
material combination of New Age and evil eye ideologies. Many of my informants
buy these matakia so that they bring
positive energy to their house, which they have decorated according to the
rules of feng shui. Many times, they
place matakia and New Age objects
next to religious icons. They regard these matakia
as amulets that can protect them from the evil eye, from the devil, and from
all types of negative energy. The spiritual matakia
actually belong to a recently developed New Age cultural wave that has not been
inherently Greek but which, nevertheless, has become an integral part of a
changing Greek religioscape within which a popular belief and a newly developed
spiritual movement are materially synthesized in the course of people’s
everyday lives.
Figure 5: A feng shui ball used for protection against the evil eye. Thessaloniki, Greece, May 2006. Photo by author. |
To conclude, one might argue
that the vivid presence of evil eye objects in Rethymno and Thessaloniki points
to a Greek movement towards modernity and secularization. The involvement of
material objects in Rethymniots’ and Thessalonikans’ everyday practices of
religion and spirituality may serve as an indication that Greeks have begun to
express themselves through a more modern and secularly influenced material path
(c.f. McDannell 1995: 2). Yet, I assert that this is not the case. Rather, the
presence of matakia, especially the
spiritually amalgamated ones that combine evil eye, Orthodox, and New Age
symbols indicates a lack of distinction between the spiritual and the secular,
and between the sacred and the profane.
Ultimately, the materiality
of the evil eye is indicative of a change in contemporary Greece. Religious
icons, evil eye beads and New Age symbols co-habit material objects and spaces.
And this is not a co-habitation that lacks interaction. When a Jesus icon and
an eye-shaped glass bead are amalgamated into one single item, the signifieds
and the symbolisms they carry merge as well. Before these spiritually
synthesized objects had made a distinct appearance in the Greek market and
gained such popularity, Orthodox, evil eye and New Age symbolisms were very
hard to find in combination. People occasionally wore a golden crucifix and an
evil eye bead together, yet, these were two different objects, which could
easily and immediately be separated. Of course, the choice of putting a
religious and an evil eye symbol together is very important. It is a practice
that continues to date which is of great significance as far as the renewed
affinity between Orthodoxy, spirituality and the evil eye is concerned.
However, the interaction between evil eye, Christian, and New Age symbolisms
found in one single materiality has only emerged in very recent years. What I
have tried to show is how this
phenomenon constitutes a material representation of a spiritual mobility that
has been taking place in the context of contemporary Greek religiosity. This
mobility does not represent a Greek turn to secularization, but a movement
towards new spiritual itineraries that are not exclusively Orthodox.
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