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- AFRICAN RELIGION syncretism
-
- >blchapma@c00313-11pa.eos.ncsu.edu <Bekki Lyn says:
- tue, 23 Jun 1992 16:53:42
-
- >:Would you explain more about this? Go into detail, please.<
-
-
- Eshin-Fun answers:
-
-
- et idcirco vocatum est nomen eius Babel
- quia ibi confusum est labium universae terrae
- et inde dispersit eos Dominus super faciem cunctarum regionum
- [gen.11,v.9; biblia sacra vulgata]
-
- Therefore is the name of it called Babel
- because the Lord did there confound the language of all the earth:
- and from thence did the Lord scatter them abroad
- upon the face of all the earth.
-
-
- Many people seem to confuse the Voodoun of Haiti with that of
- Santeria from Cuba. There seems to be a general misconception that
- in fact "Voodoo" implies all of black african religion, and is
- synonymous with black magic, sorcery and witchcraft. It does not.
-
- Beside the fanatical practice of christian "religious politics"
- which have grossly misinterpreted african customs in comparison
- with their european traditions and morality, the cinematographic
- industry has also capitalized on the "aura" of fear and deception
- inherited by the ignorance and prejudices of the alleged civilized
- Muslim, and European mercenary that has enjoyed a good profit from
- their slave trade.
-
- While it seems likely that the Haitian vodun cult began to take
- definite form between 1750 and 1790 in Haiti, a full explanation
- of its origin cannot be given. The "Code Noir" of the French
- Catholic, prescribed baptism and instruction in the Catholic church
- for all slaves. it provided that assemblies of slaves for purposes
- other than Catholic worship were illegal, and masters would be
- punished for permitting such gatherings, as they could be
- interpreted as plots or revolts. However it was impossible to
- prevent all slave assemblages and secret reunions during the night
- occurred frequently. Evidence of what happened at these nocturnal
- conclaves is found in "L'Essai sur l'Esclavage et Observations sur
- l'Etat Present des Colonies" published by an anonymous author about
- 1750.
- [see also "Religious Rites of the Caribbean" by George E. Simpson
- (1970)]
-
- "The word Voodoo or Vaudoux is from the Creole French "Vaudoux",
- a negro sorcerer, probably originally a dialectic form of the
- French, Vaudois, a Waldensian. It is the name given to certain
- magical practices, by the french to superstitions and secret rites
- prevailing among negroes of the West Indies, and more particularly
- in the Republic of Haiti". [Encyclopedia Britannica 11th ed.]
-
- In the origin of the Voodoo Cult, Newbell Niles Puckett writes:
- "Most of the Negroes speak of conjuration as "hoodoo"- the Negro
- version of the familiar "voodoo or voudou" Some writers would
- derive the term from the followers of Peter Valdo, the Waldenses,
- or Vaudois (vaudois, a witch) of France-a sect later spreading into
- Hayti;(author's spelling)....being derived from vo (to inspire
- fear) of the Ewe-speaking peoples and signifying a god --one who
- inspires fear. Vodu is not the name of an especial deity, but
- applied by the natives to any god.
-
- ..this vodu cult, with its adoration of the snake god was carried
- to Hayti by slaves from Ardra and Whydah, where the faith still
- remains today. In 1724 the Dahomies invaded Ardra and subjugated
- it; three years later Whydah was conquered by the same foe. This
- period is beyond question that in Hayti first received the vodu of
- the Africans. Thousands of negroes from these serpent worshiping
- tribes were at this time sold into slavery.....They bore with them
- their cult of the snake. At the same period Ewe speaking slaves
- were taken to Louisiana. In 1809 because of war between France and
- Spain some of these Haytian planters with their slaves fled from
- Cuba, where they had sought refuge during the Haytian revolution,
- to New Orleans and made their residence there. Such were the
- principle sources of the voodoo religion in the U.S."
- ["the magic and folk beliefs of the southern negro": by
- N.N.Puckett]
-
- Shockingly, in the prodigious work; "Encyclopedia of Religion and
- Ethics" by James Hastings Voodoun is explained thus:
- [pg640 v.XII]
-
- "Voodoo is devil-worship and fetishism brought from the Gold Coast
- of Africa..
-
- Its chief sacrifice is a girl child, referred to by the initiates
- as "the goat without horns" When a child is not available, a white
- kid (goat) takes its place. Excepting at the great semi-annual
- festival when the `goat' is drugged, killed and eaten, black dogs,
- cocks and hens are cruelly sacrificed by being slashed so that
- their bowels fall out. There is a regular priesthood to intimidate
- and rob the devotees...."
-
- It is no wonder, that with this ignorant bias prejudice the term
- Voodoo has haunted our society with imagery of horror and disgust.
- Yet the French expose still, a different side.
-
- Their studies reveal that the term vo-du is drawn from the language
- of the Fons.
-
- "The word Voodoo itself is spelled sometimes as vo-dou or vo-du.
- The prefix "vo" means "introspection" and the suffix "du" means
- "into the unknown". Consequently, the rituals form the sum total
- of this introspection; that is, they are studied accomplishments
- that proceed from psychological information.
-
- The Voodoo rites, derived from the supernatural, proceed from the
- influence of the sun....
- the entire Voodoo cult turns is the revelation that the principle
- attribute of solar magic is the post or pole that supports the
- center of the roof of the structure known as the peristyle of the
- oum'phor, the Voodoo temple.
-
- The peristyle is the covered gallery of thatch or corrugated iron
- adjoining the holy of holies or oum'phor proper.
- This roof is supported by a wooden centerpost, called the
- poteaumitan which means to the initiates "solar support"..
- This post is an architectural representation of the chief Voodoo
- god Legba. The wood of the post represents Mercury, the offspring
- of the sun. Mercury is at the same time the staff of Legba. Upon
- this staff the two serpents of the oum'phor must normally mount so
- as to be harmonized or be reunited by Mercury. This poteaumitan is
- usually decorated with a spiral band of various colors symbolizing
- not only the colors of the rainbow but also of the serpent gods
- DAMBAHLAH and AIDA WEDO.
-
- Near this post is kept the symbol of the moon, the Voodoo goddess
- ERZULIE. This lunar symbol- a model boat- is suspended in the air
- from the ceiling to complete the significance of the planetary
- origin of the rites.
-
- In the practice of Voodoo magic, a lighted candle is often
- substituted for the post and the boat is represented by ritual
- water."
- [Secrets of Voodoo by Milo Rigaud]
-
- Other tribes beside the Fons that contributed to Voodo pantheon
- were the Nago, the Ibo, Congo, Dahomean, Senegalese, Haoussars,
- Capalaou, Mandinga, Mondongue, Angolese, Lybian, Etheopian and the
- Malagache.
-
- Though popularity has voted the "Divine Horsemen" by Maya Deren as
- a good source, we cannot ignore the clarity and succinct work of
- Milo Rigaud in his book "Secrets of Voodoo" a frenchman who lived
- in Haiti for thirty years. Mr Rigaud demonstrates that Voodoo, far
- from being a primitive cult, is a real religion with striking
- beauty and theological purpose.
-
- The Haitian Voodooist, Her-Ra-Ma-El points out in his book "The
- Daemons of the Voodoo Cult" that indisputably the sources of the
- african religion lie in the Ethiopian-Egyptian-Assyrian
- civilizations where from Voodoo has sunk its roots.
-
- The word >lois< which means >laws< in French. The lois (laws of
- creation)create the >Loas< (animistic spirits) in visible
- manifestations such as plants, animals and men, but chiefly
- ancestors, because Voodoo is essentially a cult of ancestor
- worship.
-
- The African, believing that the >manes< (souls) of the dead
- reascend to the heavens, identified them with the stars. For this
- reason Her-Ra-Ma-El states; "The beliefs about the soul and about
- death have naturally given rise to the Cult of the Dead, which in
- turn leads to the deification of human souls. Souls thus defined
- or as it were, canonized after death used to be called daemons by
- the ancient Greek."
-
- In the Voodoun cult however, the french language is mixed with the
- African (Creole), while in the Santeria it is purely of Yoruban
- tongue.
-
- A comparison of a prayer to Eleggua should convince us of this.
-
- Voodoun:
-
- Grande Ai-Zan, salue Legba! Great Ai-Zan salute Legba!
- A l'heu qu'il e Now silver breaks rock
- M'a pe mande coument nous I am asking how you are?
- ye?
- Salue' Legba Salute Legba.
- Ai-Zan vie, vie, Ai-Zan, old one, old one,
- Vie Legba Old Legba
- Creoles sonde mirori Legba Creoles, sound Legba's mirror.
- Legba vie', vie'. Legba, old one, old one,
- Creoles, sonde miroi Ati Bon Creoles, sound Ati Bon Legba's
- Legba! Mirror.
-
-
- Santeria:
-
- Iba'ra'go ago mo juba Homage to the relative of the Club.
- Give way, I pay homage
- Omode koni'ko sh'iba'go Child who teaches the doctrine of
- ago mo juba Elegba, Eshu paying homage homage to the club,
- l'ona. Make way, I pay homage to the Owner
- of Vital Force,
- Eshu is the one who owns the road.
-
- The purity of the Santeria practitioners of both the predominance
- of the Yoruba culture and the language make it easy for a Nigerian
- to understand and feel comfortable with Santeria than alien in
- Haiti.
-
- In Santeria the idea of divinity is not termed "loa" or identified
- as laws but rather is called Osha or Orisha or Santo or Dioses.
- The principles of Osha and Orisha are more in tune with ancient
- Egyptian theology though it does not dismiss ancestral worship. Yet
- the ancestors and the dead are kept quite distinctly apart from the
- gods. In fact substantiate two different cults.
-
- While many a oum'phor is splattered with coagulated blood the "ile"
- in which the Santero honors his/her gods is usually immaculately
- clean, (following egyptian tradition and "magickal balance")
- displaying sometimes gaudy soup tureens in a break front dining
- room cabinet, as the house of their god-otanes rather than govis
- where souls are sequestered, or tortured into submission.
-
- In short there is >no< comparison between Voodoun and Santeria
- other than their common African origin that can be easily
- syncretized.
-
- In the initiatory level the secret rites of initiation demand
- certain substances that are found wanting in the Voodoun rites thus
- a great gap is stretched between Voodounist and Santero/Santeras.
-
- The house or temple is usually called "ile" meaning ground,
- house,or "ile Osha" meaning house of god. There are no center posts
- nor elaborate veves which are designs on the floor made of a white
- powder not unlike the East Indian tradition drawn today. These
- designs called veves in Voodoo are made in a oum'phor, according
- to the rite, out of wheat flour, corn meal, Guinea flour (wood
- ashes), powdered leaves (patchouli) red brick powder, rice powder
- (face powder) and even gunpowder, powdered charcoal, bark or roots.
-
- In Santeria, following Yoruba tradition, usually made of powdered
- calx. This calx was derived in Africa from the natural limestone
- deposits which were a residue of limestone a rock formed by
- accumulation of organic remains of shells and coral consisting
- mainly of Calcium Carbonate (CaCo3) though also containing
- magnesium carbonate. It is commonly referred to as Chalk (calx) by
- both ancient and modern writers and it is the formation of the
- Cretaceous system composed for the most part of the minute shells
- of the Foraminifera.
-
- These signs are usually traced on the floor by the Santero for only
- special occasions, if seldom, and not at all as profusely found in
- a oum'phor.
-
- In ancient Babylon it was called "Usurtu" and in Cuba as in Africa
- it is called Efun" or "Fun" meaning "white". Whitewash, a common
- use for painting walls (whiting) is of this substance and along
- with lime they substituted the African calx which they mixed with
- powdered talcum, or powdered patchouli leaves for ritual effect.
-
- White is an extremely important color in the Lukumi. Gunpowder is
- seldom used if at all as it is an insult to certain gods and is
- reserved for the Palo preoccupations.
-
- Many Haitians have becomes Santeros, and they can. But Santeros
- cannot once they are initiated into Santo (Kariosha) become
- Voodooists. The same thing for Palo. Many people may have been
- "scratched" Palero/a and then been initiated, but according to the
- elders once you have been initiated Santo you cannot "scratch" into
- a Palo conviction. It is considered sacrilegious!
-
- Even in far away Brasil or Bahia the names of the gods are
- adulterated to the Portuguese language.
-
- Obatala becomes Oxala
- Shango, Xango and is identified with St John the Baptist and St
- Jerome
- Oshun and Oya become identified with St. Catherine and St. Barbara
- Ogun with St, George etc.
-
- In Brasil there seems to be four distinct movements, Candomble of
- Bahia and the northeast, Spiritism of Rio and the more advanced
- urban centers; Umbanda in the urban centers not influenced by Bahia
- and Quimbanda a form of black magic that is practiced clandestinely
- everywhere.
-
- Besides a list of recognizable Yoruba gods there also exists in the
- pantheon Preto Velho, Preta Velha (Old black man, Old black woman)
- who are really not gods but represent in the Umbandaist statues as
- an old but wise african spirit of an old man or woman who return
- to counsel human beings and intervene modestly in their affairs.
-
- They give them names like Pai Jose or Pai Miguel or any of a
- hundred african or Portuguese names. Yet Pure Candomble admits no
- pretos velhos.
-
- They also include Tupa. In Itubera, Senhor Valter's terrerio used
- this Indian name to designate the supreme spirit.
-
- Also an Insian chieftan of the Tupininkuin tribe of northern
- Brasil, called Tupinamba who is believed to return in spirit to
- guide Umbandists in Bahia. Brothers of Tupinamba include Itubaraja,
- Iara, and Ibara.
-
- Another indian chief, named >Ubiraja<, lamed in a hunting accident
- is known to have mounted mediums both in Long Beach, California and
- Valenca, Brasil. This Ubiraja once told the Long Beach terrerio
- that he had been dead for about four hundred years and that he
- regularly visited spiritist centers as far away as Morocco.
-
- Thus Voodoo is indigenous of Haiti, Santeria of Cubans and Macumba
- of Brazilians.
-
- One might presume that these African Religions are a small "cult"
- of sorts but this Old Religion is more of a phenomenal religious
- revival than it is not.
-
- More than 80 million African and New World peoples participate in
- or are closely familiar with this religion. The number is
- increasing at a very rapid pace rather than declining. Yet the
- claim that the gods, from a comparatively small religious faith,
- particularly one stemming from a non-literate tradition, flourishes
- in spite of the overwhelming dominance of such large global
- religions such as Islam and Christianity jars our expectations.
-
- In Brazil alone, the religious groupings have more than 30 million
- adherents, and are spreading rapidly to Uruguay and Argentina,
- where there are scarcely any African descendants. The same is true
- of Santeria cults in Cuba (see Barnet 1968;80).
-
- For instance 100,000 Umbanda congregations have emerged in Brazil's
- southernmost state settled largely by Polish, Italian, and German
- immigrants. This religion also moves along with Haitian and Cuban
- populations to New York, New Jersey, Florida, California,
- Pennsylvania, Indiana and Texas. (Brown, ch.4and M.Drewal, ch.9)
-
- Participation in Santeria, is believed to be stronger since the
- Cuban Revolution than Roman Catholicism and it is specially strong
- in North America, where it also serves as a support system for
- newcomers. (Hageman 1972:15) In fact, Miami police are briefed so
- as not to misinterpret some of the sacrificial rites of Cuban-
- American Devotees with those of perverted neurotic cultist fad
- (Wall Street Journal, oct 18 1984)
-
- Even now the issue of Santeria is harangued with animal rights from
- Hialeah to the Supreme Court and has the Conservative National
- Association of Evangelicals, joined with the liberal Americans
- United for Separation of Church and State and the usually
- isolationist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and the
- American Jewish Congress, along with a host of other mainstream
- taking sides with that of Santeria.
-
- I personally know of Santeria initiations taking place in Spain,
- Portugal and France as well as Hawaii and Puerto Rico.
-
- Finally, Caribbean and West African religious practices are
- spreading to a growing body of English speaking North Americans,
- and these new devotees hold ceremonies and have produced, after
- instruction by CUBAN adherents, a theological treatise on African
- Deities. (M.Drewal, ch.9).
-
- Santeria/Lukumi is not really "just" a Polytheistic religion. It
- is in fact a remarkable example of HENOTHEISM. Each individual has
- a "personal" god. Not one of his/her choosing, but rather one that
- has chosen you. Without the exclusion of others. In fact one can
- extend this observation by identifying Santeria/Lukumi as a
- KATHENOTHEISM since sometimes the worship of a god may be
- independent of the rest without denying the other's existence.
-
- A good example of this is seen on the midnight of the 16th of
- December which is the "eve" of the day of Babalu where regardless
- of the personal preference many Santeros/Santeras and lay people
- who are believers will dedicate that day to Babalu and hold special
- homage without including any other god in the festivities. The same
- example is found on Dec 3 midnight as December 4 is dedicated to
- Shango etc.
-
- In Santeria, the tradition is that when anyone is born, each is
- chosen by a god as "her/his ward. This is called the "god on the
- head, (ori). It is usually deciphered by a genuinely initiated
- elder through the oracles of either the "dilogun" which are shells
- or by Ifa which uses an "ekuele" or kola nuts. With the Christian
- influence it has been commonly called one's guardian angel. When
- an individual reaches a point to be initiated, this is the god to
- whom the person is initiated to and primarily serves.
-
- Once initiated, that individual has formed an alliance with the god
- on their head and through the ritual of the Ita on the fourth day
- of initiation a second god is realized, as well as a "familiar" god
- who may favor the individual in service sometimes more than the god
- one is originally consecrated to. Of course this "familiar" can be
- the god on your head or the secondary one but usually it is more
- commonly found in yet another entity that shares the same favor as
- the god of the head. There can be found to have more than one of
- these "familiars" in an Ita. This Ita will decide the limits of
- permission an individual has at her/his disposal to act in the gods
- behalf.
-
- For example, the Babalawo, (father of secrets) is nothing more than
- the "virgin" priest of Orunmila and cannot function as other
- initiates can. His sole occupation should be the reading of the
- kola nuts, or the ekuele (a divining chain) which in turn no other
- initiate can do. He has sole possession of the Ifa divining tray,
- but yet a Babalawo cannot initiate anybody, other than to Ifa.
-
- In fact he can't even
- divine the Ita such a special juxtaposition in an initiation.
-
- Usually a Babalawo is married to a Santera, as women cannot be
- Babalawos, he then can function his influence through her.
-
- Consequently as it may seem obvious, there has been a tremendous
- riff between Babalawos and Santeros for a long time.
-
- Perhaps the lack of information of the Lukumi religion may extend
- from the fact that it is a mystery religion., that is to say, its
- secrets are imparted only to the initiate, not the profane. Little
- of its secrets are divulged when allusion is made to them though
- sometimes the initiates will tend to mislead the readers so as to
- keep the purity unadulterated. The only way to learn these secrets
- is by merit and by actual practice to deter those pretenders that
- would prostitute a sacred thing for the sake of self
- aggrandizement.
-
- Consequently, when a person is initiated, there seems to be a
- unity, a natural link, where with certain knowledge one can
- acknowledge the other with a simple telephone call where a
- santero/santera can easily verify the authenticity of a celebrant.
-
- So you see Bekki, "There ARE more things in heaven and earth, than
- are deamt in our philosophy."
-
- Eshin-Fun