Skinning

Ritually skinning sacrificial animals (and possibly stuffing the skin with straw or similar) was a recurring theme throughout the world. The skin or hide of the sacrificed animal contains the power of the offering; this is often expressed in shamanistic contexts. For example, among the prairie Indians, people would dress in the skin that symbolized the power they possessed or wished to possess (such as wolf or bear). A well-known mythological example is Heracles, who wore the skin of the Nemean lion after killing it. Compare Horn and Feather, which have a similar symbolic function—they express, for example, the power or spirituality of the bearer.

Skinning represents transformation, renewal—death and resurrection. (See also Mutilation, Sacrifice, and Scalping.) "Rituals of this kind generally signify a transformation from a worse to a better state." (CW 8, par. 148.) The background is surely the snake's ability to shed its skin, something that has always been associated with renewal.

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