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{{Traditional African religion}} |
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The '''Dogon religion''' is the [[Traditional African religions|traditional religious]] beliefs of the [[Dogon people]] of [[Mali]]. The Dogon religion is an ancient religion, and according to scholar [[Shannon Dorey]], it "is the oldest known mythology in the world." Shannon went on to write that: "It existed in [[Africa]] long before humans migrated to other areas of the world. When [[Recent African origin of modern humans|humans left Africa]] for other continents, they took their religion with them. Fragments of the Dogon religion thus existed all over the world making the Dogon religion the "mitochondrial religion" of the world."<ref name="Dorey p. 1">[[Shannon Dorey|Dorey, Shannon]], ''The Nummo: The Truth About Human Origins'' : (Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd (2013), p. 1, {{ISBN|9780987681386}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=z0klBQAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false] (retrieved March 1, 2020)</ref> |
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The '''Dogon religion''' is the [[Traditional African religions|traditional religious]] or [[spirituality|spiritual]] beliefs of the [[Dogon people]] of [[Mali]]. Dogons who adhere to the Dogon religion believe in one Supreme [[Creator deity|Creator]] called [[Amma (deity)|Amma]] (or Ama<ref name="Isoll">[[Timothy Insoll|Insoll, Timothy]], ''Archaeology, Ritual, Religion'', [[Routledge]] (2004), p. 123–125, {{ISBN|9781134526444}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HZOCAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA123#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref>).<ref>Masolo (1994), pp. 70-71</ref><ref>[[Robert K. G. Temple|Temple, Robert]], [[The Sirius Mystery]], [[Random House]] (1999), p. 465, {{ISBN|9780099257448}} (retrieved March 3, 2020)[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=4RXGAzYx-2cC&q=+monotheistic#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> They also believe in ancestral spirits known as the [[Nommo]] also referred to as "Water Spirits".<ref>*Griaule, Marcel (1970, (original 1965)), ''Conversations With Ogotemmêli: an Introduction To Dogon Religious Ideas '', p. 97, {{ISBN|978-0-19-519821-8}}</ref> [[Veneration of the dead]] is an important element in their spiritual belief. They hold ritual [[Traditional African masks|mask]] dances immediately after the death of a person and sometimes long after they have passed on to the [[Afterlife|next life]].<ref>Davis, Shawn R., ''Dogon Funerals'' [in] ''African Art'', vol. 35, Issue 2, [[JSTOR]] (Organization), [[University of California]], Los Angeles. African Studies Center, African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles (2002), p. 68</ref> Twins, "the need for duality and the doubling of individual lives" (masculine and feminine principles) is a fundamental element in their belief system. Like other [[traditional African religions]], balance, and reverence for nature are also key elements.<ref>Griaule (1970), p. 198</ref> |
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According to [[Robert K. G. Temple|Robert Temple]], the "Dogon are [[Monotheism|monotheistic]]"<ref>[[Robert K. G. Temple|Temple, Robert]], [[The Sirius Mystery]], [[Random House]] (1999), p. 465, {{ISBN|9780099257448}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=4RXGAzYx-2cC&q=+monotheistic#v=onepage&q&f=false] (retrieved March 1, 2020)</ref> |
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The Dogon religion is an ancient religion or spiritual system.<ref>[[Pascal James Imperato|Imperato, Pascal James]], ''Dogon Cliff Dwellers: The Art of Mali's Moutain People'', L. Kahan Gallery/African Arts, (1978), p. 8</ref><ref name="Africa Quarterly"/><ref name="Dorey p. 1"/> [[Shannon Dorey]], the Canadian author and researcher on the Dogon, their religion and symbols—believes that, the Dogon religion "is the oldest known mythology in the world." She went on: "It existed in [[Africa]] long before humans migrated to other areas of the world. When [[Recent African origin of modern humans|humans left Africa]] for other continents, they took their religion with them. Fragments of the Dogon religion thus existed all over the world making the Dogon religion the "[[Mitochondrial Eve|mitochondrial]] religion" of the world."<ref name="Dorey p. 1">[[Shannon Dorey|Dorey, Shannon]], ''The Nummo: The Truth About Human Origins'' : (Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd (2013), p. 1, {{ISBN|9780987681386}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=z0klBQAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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The Dogon religion, [[cosmogony]], cosmology and [[astronomy]] have been subjects of intense study by [[ethnologists]] and [[anthropologists]] since the 1930s. One of the first Western writers to document Dogon's religious beliefs was the French ethnologist [[Marcel Griaule]]—who interviewed the [[hogon|Dogon high priest]] and elder [[Ogotommeli]] back in the early 1930s. In a thirty-three days interview, Ogotommeli disclosed to Griaule the Dogon's belief system resulting in his famous book ''Dieu D'eau'' or ''Conversations With Ogotemmeli'', originally published in 1948 as ''Dieu D'eau.'' That book by Griaule has been the go–to reference book for subsequent generations of ethnologists and anthropologists writing about Dogon religion, cosmogony, [[cosmology]], and astronomy.<ref name="Masolo, pp. 68—69">Masolo, D. A., ''African Philosophy in Search of Identity'' : ''African systems of thought'', (ed. [[International African Institute]]), [[Indiana University Press]] (1994), pp. 68—69, {{ISBN|9780253207753}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=CTzTvGHbXpgC&pg=PA68#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref>Andreozzi, Matteo; Massaro, Alma; [[Kim Stallwood|Stallwood, Kim]]; and Tonutti, Sabrina; ''Relations 1.2 - November 2013: Inside the Emotional Lives of Non-human Animals: Part II'', LED Edizioni Universitarie (2013), p. 14, {{ISBN|9788879166560}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MNZ7CAAAQBAJ&pg=PA14#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref name="Asante/><ref name="Griau p. ix">Griaule (1970), p. xiv</ref> |
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Dogon cosmology and astronomy are broad and complex. Like some of the other [[Sub-Saharan Africa|African]] groups in the [[Niger River|Upper Niger]], and other parts of [[Africa|the continent]], they have a huge repertoire of "system of signs" which are religious in nature. This, according to Griaule and his former student [[Germaine Dieterlen]], includes "their own systems of astronomy and calendrical measurements, methods of calculation and extensive anatomical and physiological knowledge, as well as a systematic [[pharmacopoeia]]".<ref name="Griau p. ix"/><ref>Santillana, Giorgio De; Dechend, Hertha von; ''Hamlet's Mill: An Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time'', [[David R. Godine, Publisher|David R. Godine Publisher]] (1977), p. 353, {{ISBN|9780879232153}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ql7ATHGee50C&pg=PA353#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref>Griaule, Marcel (1970, (original 1965)), ''Conversations With Ogotemmêli: an Introduction To Dogon Religious Ideas'', p. ix [in] Ogunmodede, Francis Ishola, ''African Philosophy Down the Ages: 10,000 BC to the Present'', Hope Publications (2004), {{ISBN|9789788080114}}</ref> For this reason, [[Dogon cosmology]] and [[Dogon astronomy|astronomy]] are beyond the scope of this article. This article merely gives an overview of Dogon religion and some aspects of [[Dogon creation myth|Dogon cosmogony]]. |
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==Beliefs== |
==Beliefs== |
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===Divinity=== |
===Divinity=== |
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In Dogon religion, there is a belief in a single [[Omnipotence|omnipotent]], [[Omnipotence|omniscient]] and [[Omnipresence|omnipresent]] [[Creator deity]] called [[Amma (deity)|Amma]].<ref>[[Rosalind Hackett|Hackett, Rosalind]], ''Art and Religion in Africa'', [[A & C Black|A&C Black]] 1(998), pp. 35-36, {{ISBN|9780826436559}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=yCJ71rRnzhgC&pg=PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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"Amma : Amma is the supreme creator god of the Dogon religion, whose efforts initiated the formation of the universe, the creation of matter, and the processes of biological reproduction."<ref name="Asante/> |
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The Dogon religion teaches that, it was through Amma's powers which brought forth the creation of the universe, [[Matter#In general relativity and cosmology|matter]], and the [[biological process|biological processes]] of [[reproduction]].<ref name="Asante>[[Molefi Kete Asante|Asante, Molefi Kete]]; Mazama, Ama; ''Encyclopedia of African Religion, Volume 1'', [[SAGE Publishing|SAGE]] (2009), pp. 40–41, {{ISBN|9781412936361}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=B667ATiedQkC&pg=PT40#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> With such a complex belief system, Amma, the [[Sky deity|Sky God]], is the head of the Dogon [[triumvirate]]; the others being the Water God – [[Nommo]]; and the Earth God – Lewe or Lebe.<ref name="Isoll"/> |
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"Dogon religion is complex, and is summarised by Van Beck (1988). The head of the Dogon triumvirate is Ama or Amma, the Sky God, the others being Nomo, the Water God, and Lewe or Lebe, the Earth God."<ref name="Isoll"/> |
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Amma is genderless, and maybe regarded as ''he'', ''she'', or ''it'', depending on which aspect of its principles one is trying to appease. The Deity symbolizes both the [[masculinity|masculine]] and [[Femininity|feminine]] principles. As such, it is genderless or being of dual gender, which invokes balance, duality and pairing of opposites. The cosmological concepts of balance, duality and opposites are found in all facets of Dogon spirituality and culture.<ref name="ASANT and Maz p. 249">Asante & Mazama (2009), p. 249</ref> This is "consistent with the male and female aspects of biological reproduction that Amma symbolizes."<ref name="ASANT and Maz p. 249"/> |
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"According to Dogon beliefs, Amma, who is a likely Dogon counterpart to the Egyptian god Amen, is made up of four attached clavicles (arcs) that together form an oval called "egg in a ball." This is the same term that is applied to the figure at the center of the nummo fish drawings."<ref name="Laird"/> ('''Note:''' [[John Anthony West]] was a proponent of the fringe Sphinx water erosion hypothesis. The creation is more a cosmic egg and chaoes than water). |
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===Divinity and humanity=== |
===Divinity and humanity=== |
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Religous sacrifice and rituals are directed to Amma. [[African art#Dogon|Carved figurines]] which act as "representations of the living" are also produced. These figurines are not a physical representation of the Divine, but merely serve as mediators or interceders between the living world and the Divine.<ref>[[Timothy Insoll|Insoll, Timothy]], (Editors: [[Susan E. Alcock|Alcock, Susan]]; [[Norman Yoffee|Yoffee, Norman]]); (Contributors: Alcock, Susan; [[Tom Dillehay|Dillehay, Tom]]; Yoffee, Norman; [[Stephen Shennan|Shennan, Stephen]]; Sinopoli, Carla;)), ''The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa'', [[Cambridge University Press]] (2003), p. 356, {{ISBN|9780521657020}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=frC8SAu9QxQC&pg=PA356#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref name="Isoll"/><ref name="Ezra p. 25"/> |
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"Sacrifices and rituals are primarily directed towards Ama, though carved figures are also produced by the Dogo, which are 'representations of the living' (ibid.:60). However, these too served as mediators with Ama–in helping to solve problems for instance. Divination is also a key feature of Dogon religion, as are masked dances."<ref name="Isoll"/> |
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===Death and afterlife=== |
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==Ancestral spirits== |
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{{see also|African art#Dogon}} |
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In the beginning of human existence, immortality was the norm according to Dogon's spiritual belief and cosmogony. Death was none–existent, and the concept of time was irrelevant.<ref name="Dorey (2013), p. 358">Dorey (2013), ''The Nummo: The Truth About Human Origins'', p. 358</ref> A grasp of [[African art#Dogon|Dogon's mask culture]] and their concept of ''nyama'' are important for a greater understanding Dogon's concept of death and the afterlife. King describes ''nyama'' in the following terms: |
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===Afterlife=== |
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:{{cquote|''During the 1960s, nommo was defined by black cultural scholars and [[African studies|Africanist]]s as the spiritual-physical energy of "the word" that conjures being through naming. It is the seed of word, water, and life in one that brings to the body its vital human force called the nyama. Nommo controls the nyama by naming and unnaming it—calling it forth. A "body" existence without the liberated life force of the nyama (what I call the "flesh") is worst than dead. It is dehumanized.''<ref>King, Debra Walker, ''Deep Talk: Reading African-American Literary Names'', [[University of Virginia Press]] (1998), p. 37, {{ISBN|9780813918525}}</ref>}} |
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The Dogon attributes the origins of masks to beings they refer to as ''Andoumboulou''. The first masks were made of fiber. Although women eventually acquired them, and later men, their function was not apparent to the Dogon until the ancestors started dying. The first ancestor to suffer death did so in the form of a [[snake]]. As common in other [[Traditional African religions|African beliefs]] and cosmogonies such as in the [[Serer creation myth|Serer myth]], a serpent death represents the process of transforming into spirit form. When people realzed the negative effects of the ''nyama'' released by death, the ancestors decided to carve a mask so that it serves as a support for the ''nyama''. The mask was carved in the form of a snake symbolizing the dead ancestor. That initial mask, called "imina na" in the [[Dogon language|Dongon languages]] ("great mask" or "mother of masks") is the style of mask used in the ''Sigi'' ceremony in order to commemorate this mythic event every sixty years.<ref name="Ezra"/> |
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==Priesthood== |
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Although the face of the mask is in snake form, it is never worn. Instead, the Dogon would display it in a stationary position or while carrying it. |
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==Festivals== |
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Every sixty years duing the Sigi ceremony, each Dogon village will make a new "great mask". Following the initial death which prompted the production of the "great mask", other deaths followed, and soon after, the Dogon had to seek other measures to deal with the released ''nyama''. |
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Initially, the Dogon erected alters for the ancestors while wood figures served as repository for the spiritual forces. As deaths increased, that became insufficient and masks were then made for ''dama'' rituals. The ''dama'' is a ritual where the souls of the dead are escorted out of the village and sent to the afterlife permanently. The Dogon have many rituals about death which are important elements of their mask culture.<ref name="Ezra"/> |
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A four set of masks called ''bede'', and a carved wooden mask called ''sirige'' are usually put on for the ''baga bundo''ritual—which is a type of dance held two days after the burial of a man who had particpated in a Sigi ceremony. After several years since the passing of the deceased, the ''dama'' ritual is performed. The ''dama'' last for six days. Its purpose is to raise the prestige and reputation of the deceased and that of his descendants. A lot of time and resources goes towards the preparation of the ''dama''. It is a very elaborate and costly ritual. During the ''dama'' ritual, the Mask Society performs in the village plaza, at the deceased's house and in the [[Hogon]]'s sacred fields.<ref name="Ezra"/> |
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==Cosmology & cosmogony== |
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The soul of the dead, which had been localized in the handle of his hoe and in a container of millet beer is then removed from the village—throwned into the bush. Where the ''dama'' ritual is performed for a deceased woman, it is not accompanied by mask dancing unless the deceased female was a ''yasigine''—the sole member of the Mask Society.<ref name="Ezra"/> |
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--- |
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"Dogon mythology was created in an oral culture and its symbolic language is connected through a spherical pattern with no beginning or end. The spherical pattern of the Dogon religion is different from what we are used today, as most written literature is presented in a linear fashion with a beginning and end. By using the globular structure in its creation, the Dogon religion provides us with a metaphor for immortality. The religion focuses on immortality because the key spiritual figures, the Nummo, were immortal. According to the Dogon, when they died and were reborn, the Nummo, were could remember their previous existence."<ref name="Dorey p. 1"/> |
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There are many different types of Dogon masks, some of which represent mammals, reptiles, birds, humans, objects, and abstract concepts. Masks "may be seen as a summary of the people, animal, and things that constitute the Dogon world, a visual accounting of the return to order in the universe following the disruption caused by death."<ref name="Ezra">Ezra, Kate, ''Art of the Dogon: Selections from the Lester Wunderman Collection'', [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] (1988), pp. 23–25, {{ISBN|9780810918740}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YdNhUppxc6kC&pg=PA23#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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Like many traditional African religions, the Abrahamic religious concept of [[heaven]] and [[hell]] does not exist in Dogon religion. Ancestor veneration is however an important element. [[Sculpture]]s and masks are normally made by Dogon [[blacksmith]]s, who also work [[iron]]. There are two types of smiths in Dogon society: the ''jemo'' who lives on the plains, and the ''iru'' who live on the plateau.<ref name="Ezra"/><ref>[[Denise Paulme|Paulme, Denise]] .''Organisation sociale des Dogon (Soudan français)'', F. Loviton (1940), pp. 182—88</ref><ref>[[Germaine Dieterlen|Dieterlen, Germaine]]; Ganay, Solange de, ''Le génie des eaux chez les Dogons.'' Issue 5 of Miscellanea Africana Lebaudy, {{ISSN|1775-3236}}, P. Geuthner (1942), pp. 6-8</ref> |
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"Amma : Amma is the supreme creator god of the Dogon religion, whose efforts initiated the formation of the universe, the creation of matter, and the processes of biological reproduction. The notion of a creator god named ''Amma'' or ''Amen'' is one that is not unique to the Dogon, but can also be found in the religious traditions of other West African and North African groups. It may be reflected in the word ''Amazigh'', a name that is applied collectively to the hunter cultural groups who preceeded the first dynasty in Egypt. Like other important Dogon cosmological keywords, the word ''Amma'' carries with it more than one level of meaning in the Dogon language. From one perspective, it can refer to the ''hidden god'' of the Dogon, and yet, from another perspective, it can mean "to grasph, to hold firm, or to establish." Among the Dogon, Amma is thought of as the god who holds the world firmly between her or his two hands, and to speak the name ''Amma'' is to entreat her or him to continue to honld it. <=> Although commonly referred to as a male, Amma is considered to symbolize both the male and female principles as genderless or as being of dual gender. This dual aspect of Amma's character is consistent with the broader cosmological principles of ''duality'' and ''the pairing of opposites'' that are expressed symbolically in all facets of Dogon religion and culture. It is also consistent with the male and female aspects of biological reproduction that Amma symbolizes. <=>The Dogon religion is characterized as an esoteric tradition, one that involves both public and private aspects. Although Amma could be said to embody great creative potential, she or he is in fact considered by the knowledgeable Dogon priests to be small–so small as to be effectively hidden from view–although this detail of Amma's character is generally not spoken of in public among the Dogon. This perceived smallness of Amma is consonant with the instrumental role that she or he is said to play in the mythological process of the formation of matter and of biological reproduction. <=> Perhaps the first important creation of the Dogon god Amma was the unformed universe, a body that is said to have held all of the potential seeds or signs of future existence. The Dogon refer to this body as ''Amma's Egg'' and characterizes it as a conical, somewhat quadrangular structurewith a rounded point, filled with unrealized potentiality–its corners prefigure the four future cardinal points of the universe to come."<ref name="Asante/> |
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As with other [[West Africa]]n ethnic groups, blacksmiths' mastery of earth, air, and fire, and their expertise in making iron tools—which the Dogon people depend on for farming—accords them a priviledged position within Dogon society. Both the ''jemo'' and ''iru'' serve as [[Intercession|intermediaries]] and peacemakers between other Dogons, between the living and the ancestors, and between mankind and Amma, especially on rituals surrounding [[Rainmaking (ritual)|rainmaking]]. The respect accorded to blacksmiths derives from their role in the creation myth, in which the first blacksmith is said to have descended from the [[Empyrean |Empyrean Heaven]] in order to bring mankind fire, iron, and seeds for cultivation.<ref name="Ezra p. 25">Ezra, Kate, ''Art of the Dogon: Selections from the Lester Wunderman Collection'', p. 25,</ref><ref>Griaule, Marcel, ''Masques Dogons'', Volume 33, Institut d'Ethnologie (1938), pp. 48—51</ref> |
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"According to Dogon myth, some undefined impulse caused this egg to open, allowing it to release a whirlwind that sprun silently and scattered in contents in all directions, ultimately forming all of the spiraling galaxies of star and planets. The Dogon compare these bodies to pellets of clay flung out in space. It is by a somewha more complicated process that the sun and the moon were formed, one that the Dogon equate with the art of pottery. Consequently, the Dogon priest compare the sun to a pot of clay that has been raised to a higher heat. <=> Amma is also credited by the Dogon with having created life on Earth. According to the Dogon, myth, there is a principle of ''twin births'' in the universe. However, it is said that Amma's first attempt at intercourse with the earth failed, ultimately producing only a single creature–the jackal. This failed is seen by the Dogon as a breach of order in the universe, and therefore the ''jackal'' came to be associated with the concept of ''disorder'' and ''the difficulties of Amma.'' Later, having overcome the difficulty, Amma's divine seed successfully entered and fertilized the womb of the earth and eventually produced the perfect twin pair, the ''Nummo.'"<ref name="Asante>[[Molefi Kete Asante|Asante, Molefi Kete]]; Mazama, Ama; ''Encyclopedia of African Religion, Volume 1'', [[SAGE Publishing|SAGE]] (2009), pp. 40–41, {{ISBN|9781412936361}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=B667ATiedQkC&pg=PT40#v=onepage&q&f=false] (retrieved March 1, 2020)</ref> |
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As with their rites associated with [[Reproduction|procreation]] during [[life]], the image of humanity developing in its [[placenta]] is also present in their [[funeral]] rites. When a person dies, their mouth is covered with a muzzle. This ritual symbolizes the wattles of fish. The dead's head is covered with a white band circling the top of his skull. This symbolizes the top of the fish's head. As they send the deceased to the next life, women and girls perform ritual dances mimicking a fish—with their arms and hands streched out in front of them—symbolizing the swimming of fish. These movements are very suppley done. "The assimilations go on because a dead person who continues to preserve his spirtual elements (that is, his basic elements) until the afterlife is said to be like "a fish of heaven."<ref name="Bonnefoy"/> |
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"Dogon religion is complex, and is summarised by Van Beck (1988). The head of the Dogon triumvirate is Ama or Amma, the Sky God, the others being Nomo, the Water God, and Lewe or Lebe, the Earth God. Sacrifices and rituals are primarily directed towards Ama, though carved figures are also produced by the Dogo, which are 'representations of the living' (ibid.:60). However, these too served as mediators with Ama–in helping to solve problems for instance. Divination is also a key feature of Dogon religion, as are masked dances. <=> Dogon myth was initially revealed to Marcel Griaule (1965) by a Dogon elder, Ogotemmeli, and subsequently, following Griaule's death, further Dogon myth and knowledge was collected by his colleague Germaine Dieterlen (Griaule and Dieterlen 1965). The essence of these myths is recounted, for example, by De Heusch (1985:156-159) who describes them as dominated by an 'agricultural code', being a 'mythology devised by and for farmers. God created the world in the form of a minute seed animated by vibrations, and the sacrifices of a "water god" proceeded to permit its bursting forth (ibid.:159). The fundamentals of Dogon myth as revealed to Graule and his successors can be seen almost as an interpretative chain running through and underpinning much subsequent scholarship on the Dogon, with myth being seen as the primary structuring agent of Dogon thought, belief, and also, for our purposes, material culture and world–vivw. In fact, to quote Clifford (1983:123), Griaule saw Dogon culture as a 'kind of lived mythology'. <=> Hence the countryside is described as being 'organized as far as possible in accordance with the principle that the world developed in the form of a spiral' (Griaule and Dieterlen 1998: 94), meaning that, theoretically, the central point of development is formed by three ritual fields themselves assigned to the three mythical ancestors. The village is described as laid out either in a square like the first plot of land cultivated by humans, or in an oval with an opening at one end and thus symbolic of the 'world egg broken open by the swelling of the germinating cells' )ibid.: 96). Villages should also be built in pairs, linked in turn with concepts of 'twinness'. Regardless of the oval or square village plan just described, a body analogy also simultaneously underlies the village form for it is also conceived of a person lying north-south, with the smithy the head, shrines the feet, family houses the chest, and menstrual huts the hands. Whilst the house itself represents, 'a man lying on his right hand side and procreating' (ibid.: 97), his penis materially manifest as the entry via a narrow passage leading into the workroom in which the water jars and grinding stones are kept. The agricultural essence of the myth could also be further interpreted here in the metaphorical status of the liquid by-product of corn-crushing being seen as analogous with semen (ibid.)-a liquid whic is in turn poured on the ancestral shrine. In other words, almost the whole package of Dogon material culture conceptualisation has been linked with myth. But the mythic penetration goes further for it is serve, in Griaule's view, according to Van Beck (1991:140), 'as a blueprint for all facets of socienty, from the way to cultivate a field and build a house to weaving, pottery making, drumming, and smithing'."<ref name="Isoll">[[Timothy Insoll|Insoll, Timothy]], ''Archaeology, Ritual, Religion'', [[Routledge]] (2004), p. 123–125, {{ISBN|9781134526444}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HZOCAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA123#v=onepage&q&f=false] (retrieved March 1, 2020)</ref> |
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==Ancestral spirits== |
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"Like many ancient religions, the Dogon tradition include both public and private aspects. The details of Dogon cosmology present themselves first through a body of exoteric myths (fireside stories known to most Dogon tribe members) that describe in a general way the efforts of the god Amma to create the sun, the Earth, the moon, and the spiraling galaxies of stars and planets. These story lines run parallel to a more detailed set of esoteric myths (those known primarily to the Dogon priests) that lay out the hierachy of a complex cosmological system in an intricate system of symbols, signs, drawings, and keywords. The innermost details of this system are carefully sheltered from public view and are revealed only to potential initiates of the religion-candidates who have been carefully screened by the Dogon priests. Above all else, the salient quality sought in a potential initiate to the Dogon religion is that he or she demonstrates an abiding curiousity about the religion itself, a quality that is most often expressed by the persistent asking of questions. In truth, the Dogon priests are obliged by tradition to faithfully answer any orderly question posed by an initiate. Over time, this priestly obligation became the cornerstone of an instructional dynamic in which knowledge would be divulged to an initiate only after the candidate asked the appropriate question. In this way, for learning to progress between a student and a priest, it became the implied job of the student to ask the next question."<ref>Scranton, Laird, p. 12 [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3lwoDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT12#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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{{main|Nommo}} |
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The '''Nommo''' are [[Veneration of the dead|ancestral spirits]] (sometimes referred to as deities) venerated by the Dogon. The word Nommos is derived from the [[Dogon language]] meaning "to make one drink." The Nommos are usually described as amphibious, [[hermaphrodite|hermaphroditic]], fish-like creatures. Folk art depictions of the Nommos show creatures with [[humanoid]] upper torsos, legs/feet, and a fish-like lower torso and tail. The Nommos are also referred to as “Masters of the Water”, “the Monitors”, and "The Teachers”. According to Dogon cosmogony, in primodial time, the Nommo "could not live entirely on land and on their arrival they made a reservoir of water and dived into it."<ref>[[Vivianne Crowley|Crowley, Vivianne]]; Crowley, Christopher; [[Carlton Publishing Group|Carlton Books, Limited]] (2002), p. 195, {{ISBN|9781858689876}}</ref> |
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==Priesthood== |
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"According to Dogon beliefs, Amma, who is a likely Dogon counterpart to the Egyptian god Amen, is made up of four attached clavicles (arcs) that together form an oval called "egg in a ball." This is the same term that is applied to the figure at the center of the nummo fish drawings."<ref name="Laird"/> ('''Note:''' [[John Anthony West]] was a proponent of the fringe Sphinx water erosion hypothesis. The creation is more a cosmic egg and chaoes than water). |
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{{main|Hogon}} |
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The Dogon's spiritual leader is called [[hogon]]. |
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According to Dogon cosmogony, there were four pairs of twins, four females and four males. They were ancestors of humans. Of these, Griaule M. (1970, p. 223) refer to the seventh as "The Master of Speech"—alluding to its "masculine" characteristics. In the Dogon tradition, the seventh ancestor's gift to humankind included weaving, music, dress and language.<ref>Griaule, M., ''Conversations with Ogotemmêli'' (1970, p. 223) [in] Tally, Justine, ''Toni Morrison's 'Beloved': Origins'', [[Routledge]] (2008), p. 122, {{ISBN|9781134361311}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BPp-AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA122#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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"Creation from Water : The theme of creation from water is one that is central to both Dogon and Egyptian mythology. This aspect of creation is defined in both the egyption hieroglyphic language as Dogon cosmology by the sound "nu." The phonetic valueb "nu" forms the root of the Dogon word ''nummo'', which the Dogon define as the perfect twin pair that emergies at the time of creation; the Dogon priests affirm that the word nummo specifically refers to water (see ''Conversation with Ogotemmeli''). An ideographic reading of the egyptican word ''nu'' reflects this same symbolism. Budge defines the word nu as meaning "mass of water that existed in primeval times" and "deified primeval waters whence everything came." In broad terms, we can say that Egyptian hieroglyphic words affirm that the term ''nu'' refers to primeval waters of creation and that Dogon cosmology reaffirms that the concept relates to the formation of the universe and of matter."<ref name="Laird">Scranton, Laird , (cont. [[John Anthony West]]), ''Sacred Symbols of the Dogon: The Key to Advanced Science in the Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs'', [[Simon & Schuster|Simon and Schuster]] (2007), pp. 151-2, {{ISBN|9781594777530}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3lwoDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT151] (retrieved March 1, 2020)</ref> ('''Note:''' [[John Anthony West]] was a proponent of the fringe Sphinx water erosion hypothesis. The creation is more a cosmic egg and chaoes than water). |
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Dorey posits that, [[She (pronoun)|the pronoun "she"]] (not [[He (pronoun)|"he"]]), and the "Mistress of Speech", not "the Master of Speech" should have been used by Griaule.<ref name="Sha Dor she not he"/> She went on to write: |
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:''Seventh ancestor and seventh Nummo, born in the second "word" or second experiment". The Mistress of Speech was immortal and androgynous, but primarily female, and was seen as the perfect combination of Nummo and human. The DNA of the Mistress of Speech was the hope for the world. The Mistress of Speech was associated with weaving. On the Nummo's world, the seventh ancestor could only mate with the second ancestor, who was connected with the evil genetic material and the jackal. The good (seventh ancestor) was combined with the bad (second ancestor) so that the good genetic material would balance out the bad.''<ref name="Sha Dor she not he">Dorey, Shannon, ''The Master of Speech: Dogon Mythology Reveals Genetic Engineering of Humans'', Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2013), p. 3, {{ISBN|9780987681379}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=eukiBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA3#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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The Nommos' DNA or Word was infused with the Earth animals to create humans. Since the Mistress of Speech had the perfect DNA or Word, she was the hope for the world. Her twenty-two atticulations, suggesting a form of speech, were important aspects of Dogon religion. Her twenty-two articulations are suppose to represent her twenty-two body parts and "the evolutionary changes that would occur in humans as a result of her death and resurrection." For this reason, each candidate for Dogon priesthood must undergo twenty-two trances, or "attacks" called ''soy'' (quaking spells) in Dogon. Each of these trances corresponds to the Mistress of Speech's body, "Word" or DNA. The word ''soy'' also mean seven in Dogon, and thus refer to the "Sevent Ancestor", who was the Mistress of Speech.<ref name="Day of the Fish by Dorey">Dorey, Shannon, ''Day of the Fish: The First Religion'' (Volume 3 of Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2012), p. 91, {{ISBN|9780987681362}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qXMvBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA91#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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The twenty-two [[Sunlight|rays]] of the [[sun]] are also associated with the Mistress of Speech's twenty-two articulations thereby connecting them to the genetic makeup of the Nommo. The [[Sun]] is the symbol of the Nommo and the Nommo spaceship in which human creation and regeneration is said to have taken place.<ref name="Day of the Fish by Dorey"/> According to [[Ogotommeli]]'s narrations, "there were no male priests allowed to service in the ancient religion built around the Supreme Being Amma".<ref name="Africa Quarterly">Andian Council for Africa, Indian Centre for Africa; ''Africa Quarterly, Volumes 45-46'', Indian Centre for Africa (2006), p. 51</ref> |
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==Festivals== |
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The Dogon are known for their masks and dance festivals—which are spiritual in nature although sometimes made for tourists. Their [[African dance|dances]] and [[Masquerade ceremony|masquerades]] attracts a large number of tourists to Dogon country. However some Dogons are wary of the over-commercialization of their spiritual art form.<ref>Bruijn, Mirjam de; & Dijk, Rijk van; ''The Social Life of Connectivity in Africa'', [[Palgrave Macmillan]] (2012), pp. 250, 264, {{ISBN|9781137278012}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ag4wLii-_1wC&pg=PA250#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> There are many Dogon festivals some of which are listed below. All these festivals occurs within precise temporal cycles and are occasions for young Dogon men to complete their [[Rite of passage|initiation rites]] and receive knowledge from their father, grandfather, or head of family (''ginna bana'').<ref name=Adjaye"/> |
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#'''Bulo''' : Like the [[Xooy]] divination ceremony of the [[Serer people]] of [[Senegambia region|Senegambia]], the Bulo is a [[New Year]] festival celebrated between May and June in Dogon country. It is an [[Agrarian system|agrarian]] festival marking the beginning of the [[Wet season|rainy season]] and [[millet]] cultivation. Unlike the Xooy however—which is presided over the the [[Saltigue]] (the Serer priestly class), the Bulo festival is characterized by masked dances and overflowing canaries of millet beer. <ref>Dogon Country, ''Festivals'' [http://www.dogoncountry.com/about-pays-dogon/festivals/] (retrieved March 13, 2020)</ref>The Bulo festival signals the start of the [[sowing]] season. It takes place during the [[Summer solstice|estival solstice]].<ref name=Adjaye"/><ref name="Petit"/> |
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#'''Sigi''' : The Sigi (or Sigui) festival pays homage to Dogon's primordial time, and it's a way of atonement and transmitting secret and ancient knowledge to the younger generation. It is mainly about communicating the revelation of speech to men, a ceremony of atonement and initiation, and a way of demanding pardon for the death of an ancestor after the folly and forgetfulness of some young men. It is a long procession that starts and ends in the village of [[Youga Dogorou]]. The Sigi festival is one of the most well known and anticipated Dogon festivals, and perhaps the most important of all the Dogon rituals. The Sigi occurs once every sixty years in the Dogon calendar—determined by the position of the star [[Sirius]] in the [[night sky]]. A person may only live to witness one Sigi festival, or two if they are lucky to live long enough. The 60-year interval is so precise it has baffled some scholars such as anthropologist and filmmaker [[Jean Rouch]]—many of [[Jean Rouch#Main films|whose works]] are about the subject. The 60-years interval also corresponds to the life span of the mystic Dogon ancestor. Every five days, the Dogon would tie a knot on a rope. This constitutes the Dogon week. In so doing, they are able to celebrate the Sigi with such precision. The last 4 Sigi celebrations occurred in 1787, 1847, 1907, and 1967. The next one will be in the year 2027 (as of 2020).<ref name=Adjaye">Adjaye, Joseph K., ''Time in the Black Experience'' (Issue 167 of Contributions in Afro-American and African studies, {{ISSN|0069-9624}}), [[Greenwood Publishing Group]] (1994), p. 92, {{ISBN|9780313291180}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=PQMlpbxkp_MC&pg=PA92#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref>Velton, Ross, ''Mali: The Bradt Safari Guide'', [[Bradt Travel Guides]] (2009), p. 192, {{ISBN|9781841622187}} (retrieved March 13, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=t8xB7ZG2KOEC&pg=PA192#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref name="Bonnefoy">Editor: Bonnefoy, Yves; (translated by: Doniger, Wendy ; compiled by: Bonnefoy, Yves), ''American, African, and Old European Mythologies'', University of Chicago Press (1993), p. 124, {{ISBN|9780226064574}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GYjc5POwJjAC&pg=PA124#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref><ref group=note>Guiness World Records gave 2032 as the next Sigui ceremony. This is an error. Guiness World Records based this on the year the last Sigui festival ended (1973) rather than the year it began (1967). All other sources give 2027 as the next Sigui / Sigi ceremony. See Guinness World Records, ''Sigui'' : "Longest religious ceremony." [https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/longest-religious-ceremony/] (retrieved March 13, 2020)</ref> The Sigi ritual and rituals of its sort which occurs within precise temporal cycles are a way of transmitting knowledge among the Dogon.<ref name=Adjaye"/><ref name="Guiness World Records"/> "Many Dogon rituals use the image of humanity in formation in the placenta of the regeneration universe." The night before the sixtieth anniversary celebration, the male participants enter a bush in an isolated cave and go into [[fasting]]—abstaining from food and drink. In the morning of the ceremony, they shave their heads—symbolizing rebirth, an act which endevours to assimilate them to newborn children. They then put on the Sigi costume and dressed to look like [[fish]]. A white cap that represents the head of a [[catfish]] is put on. A wide pair of black trousers gathered at the ankles with its tail bifurcated is also put on. The colour [[black]] symbolizes the waters of the [[womb]]. On their chests, they wear some type of crossbelt adonned with [[cowries]] which symbolizes the fish's eggs. On their right hands, they hold a crooked staff. This staff, symbolizes the sexual organ of [[Nommo]]—the mythical ancestor of [[human]]s. Along with the staff, the also hold a half [[calabash]] that they will use to drink the Sigi beer. This imagery symbolizes "Amma's womb" in which the gestation of the universe took place according to Dogon cosmogony.<ref name="Bonnefoy"/> The Sigi runs for several years. The last one ran from 1967 to 1973. The Sigi has been entered in the [[Guinness World Records]] as the "Longest religious ceremony."<ref name="Guiness World Records">[[Guinness World Records]], ''Sigui'' : "Longest religious ceremony."[https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/longest-religious-ceremony/] (retrieved March 13, 2020)</ref> |
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#'''Dama''' : The Dama ceremony marks the end of bereavement.<ref name="Petit">Petit, Véronique, ''Population Studies and Development from Theory to Fieldwork'', [[Springer Publishing|Springer]] (2017), p. 33, {{ISBN|9783319617749}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qjE8DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA33#v=onepage&q&f=false]</ref> |
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#'''Bado''' : The Bado festival is a festival of the elders which occurs in spring.<ref name=Adjaye"/> |
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#'''Bago''' : The Bago festival which is a [[Harvest festival|festival of harvest]] takes place during [[Autumn|fall]].<ref name=Adjaye"/> |
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#'''Gogo''' : A winter festival.<ref name=Adjaye"/> |
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==Notes== |
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---- |
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{{reflist|group=note}} |
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The Dogon creation myth is somewhat similar to the [[Serer creation myth]] in sofar as the dual principles of Amma and [[Roog]] (the [[Serer people|Serer]] supreme deity)—with the feminine principle of the Divine taking precedence during the initial creation, but the Divine using its masculine principle to bring order after the creation—thus their creator gods maybe regarded as androgynous gods with both feminine and masculine principles; the importance of balance in their mythology and culture; the prominence of the jackal during creation; a mythical creation based a [[World egg|cosmic egg]] and the [[Chaos (cosmogony)|principles of chaos]]; the failed first creation due to the jackal's desecration of the first placenta, and the animal being considered by both societies as a disordered animal yet respected due to its link with their respective supreme deities; and a wind–like motion or rotational movement of their respective deities around the [[Axis mundi|axis of the world]] during the creation of [[Astronomical object|celestial objects]].<ref>Heusch, p. 163</ref><ref name="Asante/><ref name="Dorey p. 1"/><ref>[[Henry Gravrand|Gravrand, Henry]], ''La Civilisation Sereer - "Pangool"'', vol. 2. Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines du Senegal (1990), pp. 194–5, 199-203 {{ISBN|2-7236-1055-1}}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==Bibliography== |
==Bibliography== |
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*[[Shannon Dorey|Dorey, Shannon]], ''The Nummo: The Truth About Human Origins'' : (Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd (2013), |
*[[Shannon Dorey|Dorey, Shannon]], ''The Nummo: The Truth About Human Origins'' : (Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd (2013), pp. 1, 358, {{ISBN|9780987681386}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=z0klBQAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*[[Molefi Kete Asante|Asante, Molefi Kete]]; Mazama, Ama; ''Encyclopedia of African Religion, Volume 1'', [[SAGE Publishing|SAGE]] (2009), pp. 40–41, {{ISBN|9781412936361}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=B667ATiedQkC&pg=PT40#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
*[[Molefi Kete Asante|Asante, Molefi Kete]]; Mazama, Ama; ''Encyclopedia of African Religion, Volume 1'', [[SAGE Publishing|SAGE]] (2009), pp. 40–41, 213, 249, 268, {{ISBN|9781412936361}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=B667ATiedQkC&pg=PT40#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*[[Timothy Insoll|Insoll, Timothy]], ''Archaeology, Ritual, Religion'', [[Routledge]] (2004), p. 123–125, {{ISBN|9781134526444}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HZOCAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA123#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
*[[Timothy Insoll|Insoll, Timothy]], ''Archaeology, Ritual, Religion'', [[Routledge]] (2004), p. 123–125, {{ISBN|9781134526444}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=HZOCAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA123#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*[[Marcel Griaule|Griaule, |
*[[Marcel Griaule|Griaule, Marcel]], ''Conversations with Ogotemmêli: An Introduction to Dogon Religious Ideas'' (contribution: [[Germaine Dieterlen|Dieterlen, Germaine]], [[International African Institute]]), International African Institute (1965), {{ISBN|9780195198218}} (Originally published in 1948 as ''Dieu d'Eau'') |
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*[[Luc de Heusch|Heusch, Luc de]], ''Sacrifice in Africa: A Structuralist Approach'', (trans. Linda O'Brien, Alice Morton), [[Manchester University Press]] (1985), {{ISBN|9780719017162}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=yDa9AAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
*[[Luc de Heusch|Heusch, Luc de]], ''Sacrifice in Africa: A Structuralist Approach'', (trans. Linda O'Brien, Alice Morton), [[Manchester University Press]] (1985), {{ISBN|9780719017162}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=yDa9AAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*[[Robert K. G. Temple|Temple, Robert]], [[The Sirius Mystery]], [[Random House]] (1999), p. 465, {{ISBN|9780099257448}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=4RXGAzYx-2cC&q=+monotheistic#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
*[[Robert K. G. Temple|Temple, Robert]], ''[[The Sirius Mystery]]'', [[Random House]] (1999), p. 465, {{ISBN|9780099257448}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=4RXGAzYx-2cC&q=+monotheistic#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Scranton, Laird , (cont. [[John Anthony West]]), ''Sacred Symbols of the Dogon: The Key to Advanced Science in the Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs'', [[Simon & Schuster|Simon and Schuster]] (2007), pp. 151-2, {{ISBN|9781594777530}} [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3lwoDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT151] |
*Scranton, Laird , (cont. [[John Anthony West]]), ''Sacred Symbols of the Dogon: The Key to Advanced Science in the Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs'', [[Simon & Schuster|Simon and Schuster]] (2007), pp. 151-2, {{ISBN|9781594777530}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3lwoDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT151] |
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*[[Henry Gravrand|Gravrand, Henry]], ''La Civilisation Sereer - "[[Pangool]]"'', vol. 2. Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines du Senegal (1990), pp. 194–5, 199-203 {{ISBN|2-7236-1055-1}} |
*[[Henry Gravrand|Gravrand, Henry]], ''La Civilisation Sereer - "[[Pangool]]"'', vol. 2. Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines du Senegal (1990), pp. 194–5, 199-203 {{ISBN|2-7236-1055-1}} |
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*Calame-Griaule, Geneviève, ''Words and the Dogon World'', Institute for the Study of Human Issues (1986), p. 301, {{ISBN|9780915980956}} |
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*Curry, Patrick, ''Divination: Perspectives for a New Millennium'', [[Routledge]] (2016), p. 30, {{ISBN|9781317149026}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_wEpDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA30#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Peck, Philip M., '"Recasting Divination Research'" [in] [[John Pemberton (anthropologist)|John Pemberton III]] (ed.), ''Insight and Artistry in African Divination (Washington, DC and London: [[Smithsonian Institution Press]] (2002), pp. 25-33 |
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*[[Pascal James Imperato|Imperato, Pascal James]], ''Dogon Cliff Dwellers: The Art of Mali's Moutain People'', L. Kahan Gallery/African Arts, (1978), p. 8 |
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*Ezra, Kate, ''Art of the Dogon: Selections from the Lester Wunderman Collection'', [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] (1988), pp. 23–25, {{ISBN|9780810918740}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=YdNhUppxc6kC&pg=PA23#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Dorey, Shannon, ''Day of the Fish: The First Religion'' (Volume 3 of Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2012), p. 91, {{ISBN|9780987681362}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qXMvBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA91#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Tally, Justine, ''Toni Morrison's 'Beloved': Origins'', [[Routledge]] (2008), p. 122, {{ISBN|9781134361311}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BPp-AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA122#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Petit, Véronique, ''Population Studies and Development from Theory to Fieldwork'', [[Springer Publishing|Springer]] (2017), p. 33, {{ISBN|9783319617749}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qjE8DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA33#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Bruijn, Mirjam de; & Dijk, Rijk van; ''The Social Life of Connectivity in Africa'', [[Palgrave Macmillan]] (2012), pp. 250, 264, {{ISBN|9781137278012}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ag4wLii-_1wC&pg=PA250#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Adjaye, Joseph K., ''Time in the Black Experience'' (Issue 167 of Contributions in Afro-American and African studies, {{ISSN|0069-9624}}), [[Greenwood Publishing Group]] (1994), p. 92, {{ISBN|9780313291180}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=PQMlpbxkp_MC&pg=PA92#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Indian Council for Africa, Indian Centre for Africa; ''Africa Quarterly, Volumes 45-46'', Indian Centre for Africa (2006), p. 51 |
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*Griaule, Marcel (1970, (original 1965)), ''Conversations With Ogotemmêli: an Introduction To Dogon Religious Ideas '', p. 97, {{ISBN|978-0-19-519821-8}} |
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*Santillana, Giorgio De; Dechend, Hertha von; ''Hamlet's Mill: An Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time'', [[David R. Godine, Publisher|David R. Godine Publisher]] (1977), p. 353, {{ISBN|9780879232153}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ql7ATHGee50C&pg=PA353#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Ogunmodede, Francis Ishola, ''African Philosophy Down the Ages: 10,000 BC to the Present'', Hope Publications (2004), {{ISBN|9789788080114}} |
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*[[Rosalind Hackett|Hackett, Rosalind]], ''Art and Religion in Africa'', [[A & C Black|A&C Black]] 1(998), pp. 35-36, {{ISBN|9780826436559}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=yCJ71rRnzhgC&pg=PA35#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Davis, Shawn R., ''Dogon Funerals'' [in] African Art, vol. 35, Issue 2, [[JSTOR]] (Organization), [[University of California]], Los Angeles. African Studies Center, African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles (2002), p. 68 |
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*Andian Council for Africa, Indian Centre for Africa; ''Africa Quarterly, Volumes 45-46'', Indian Centre for Africa (2006), p. 51 |
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*Masolo, D. A., ''African Philosophy in Search of Identity'' : ''African systems of thought'', (ed. [[International African Institute]]), [[Indiana University Press]] (1994), pp. 68—71, {{ISBN|9780253207753}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=CTzTvGHbXpgC&pg=PA68#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Andreozzi, Matteo; Massaro, Alma; [[Kim Stallwood|Stallwood, Kim]]; and Tonutti, Sabrina; ''Relations 1.2 - November 2013: Inside the Emotional Lives of Non-human Animals: Part II'', LED Edizioni Universitarie (2013), p. 14, {{ISBN|9788879166560}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MNZ7CAAAQBAJ&pg=PA14#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*[[Timothy Insoll|Insoll, Timothy]], (Editors: [[Susan E. Alcock|Alcock, Susan]]; [[Norman Yoffee|Yoffee, Norman]]); (Contributors: Alcock, Susan; [[Tom Dillehay|Dillehay, Tom]]; Yoffee, Norman; [[Stephen Shennan|Shennan, Stephen]]; Sinopoli, Carla;)), ''The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa'', [[Cambridge University Press]] (2003), p. 356, {{ISBN|9780521657020}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=frC8SAu9QxQC&pg=PA356#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*[[Guinness World Records]], ''Sigui'' : "Longest religious ceremony."[https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/longest-religious-ceremony/] (retrieved March 13, 2020) |
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*King, Debra Walker, ''Deep Talk: Reading African-American Literary Names'', [[University of Virginia Press]] (1998), p. 37, {{ISBN|9780813918525}} |
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*[[Denise Paulme|Paulme, Denise]] .''Organisation sociale des Dogon (Soudan français)'', F. Loviton (1940), pp. 182—88 |
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*[[Germaine Dieterlen|Dieterlen, Germaine]]; Ganay, Solange de, ''Le génie des eaux chez les Dogons.'' Issue 5 of Miscellanea Africana Lebaudy, {{ISSN|1775-3236}}, P. Geuthner (1942), pp. 6-8 |
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*Griaule, Marcel, ''Masques Dogons'', Volume 33, Institut d'Ethnologie (1938), pp. 48—51 |
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*Editor: Bonnefoy, Yves; (translated by: Doniger, Wendy ; compiled by: Bonnefoy, Yves), ''American, African, and Old European Mythologies'', University of Chicago Press (1993), p. 124, {{ISBN|9780226064574}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GYjc5POwJjAC&pg=PA124#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*Velton, Ross, ''Mali: The Bradt Safari Guide'', [[Bradt Travel Guides]] (2009), p. 192, {{ISBN|9781841622187}} (retrieved March 13, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=t8xB7ZG2KOEC&pg=PA192#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
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*[[Vivianne Crowley|Crowley, Vivianne]]; Crowley, Christopher; [[Carlton Publishing Group|Carlton Books, Limited]] (2002), p. 195, {{ISBN|9781858689876}} |
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*Dorey, Shannon, ''The Master of Speech: Dogon Mythology Reveals Genetic Engineering of Humans'', Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2013), p. 3, {{ISBN|9780987681379}} (retrieved March 3, 2020) [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=eukiBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA3#v=onepage&q&f=false] |
Latest revision as of 23:27, 13 March 2020
Part of a series on |
Traditional African religions |
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The Dogon religion is the traditional religious or spiritual beliefs of the Dogon people of Mali. Dogons who adhere to the Dogon religion believe in one Supreme Creator called Amma (or Ama[1]).[2][3] They also believe in ancestral spirits known as the Nommo also referred to as "Water Spirits".[4] Veneration of the dead is an important element in their spiritual belief. They hold ritual mask dances immediately after the death of a person and sometimes long after they have passed on to the next life.[5] Twins, "the need for duality and the doubling of individual lives" (masculine and feminine principles) is a fundamental element in their belief system. Like other traditional African religions, balance, and reverence for nature are also key elements.[6]
The Dogon religion is an ancient religion or spiritual system.[7][8][9] Shannon Dorey, the Canadian author and researcher on the Dogon, their religion and symbols—believes that, the Dogon religion "is the oldest known mythology in the world." She went on: "It existed in Africa long before humans migrated to other areas of the world. When humans left Africa for other continents, they took their religion with them. Fragments of the Dogon religion thus existed all over the world making the Dogon religion the "mitochondrial religion" of the world."[9]
The Dogon religion, cosmogony, cosmology and astronomy have been subjects of intense study by ethnologists and anthropologists since the 1930s. One of the first Western writers to document Dogon's religious beliefs was the French ethnologist Marcel Griaule—who interviewed the Dogon high priest and elder Ogotommeli back in the early 1930s. In a thirty-three days interview, Ogotommeli disclosed to Griaule the Dogon's belief system resulting in his famous book Dieu D'eau or Conversations With Ogotemmeli, originally published in 1948 as Dieu D'eau. That book by Griaule has been the go–to reference book for subsequent generations of ethnologists and anthropologists writing about Dogon religion, cosmogony, cosmology, and astronomy.[10][11][12][13]
Dogon cosmology and astronomy are broad and complex. Like some of the other African groups in the Upper Niger, and other parts of the continent, they have a huge repertoire of "system of signs" which are religious in nature. This, according to Griaule and his former student Germaine Dieterlen, includes "their own systems of astronomy and calendrical measurements, methods of calculation and extensive anatomical and physiological knowledge, as well as a systematic pharmacopoeia".[13][14][15] For this reason, Dogon cosmology and astronomy are beyond the scope of this article. This article merely gives an overview of Dogon religion and some aspects of Dogon cosmogony.
Beliefs
[edit]Divinity
[edit]In Dogon religion, there is a belief in a single omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent Creator deity called Amma.[16]
The Dogon religion teaches that, it was through Amma's powers which brought forth the creation of the universe, matter, and the biological processes of reproduction.[12] With such a complex belief system, Amma, the Sky God, is the head of the Dogon triumvirate; the others being the Water God – Nommo; and the Earth God – Lewe or Lebe.[1]
Amma is genderless, and maybe regarded as he, she, or it, depending on which aspect of its principles one is trying to appease. The Deity symbolizes both the masculine and feminine principles. As such, it is genderless or being of dual gender, which invokes balance, duality and pairing of opposites. The cosmological concepts of balance, duality and opposites are found in all facets of Dogon spirituality and culture.[17] This is "consistent with the male and female aspects of biological reproduction that Amma symbolizes."[17]
Divinity and humanity
[edit]Religous sacrifice and rituals are directed to Amma. Carved figurines which act as "representations of the living" are also produced. These figurines are not a physical representation of the Divine, but merely serve as mediators or interceders between the living world and the Divine.[18][1][19]
Death and afterlife
[edit]In the beginning of human existence, immortality was the norm according to Dogon's spiritual belief and cosmogony. Death was none–existent, and the concept of time was irrelevant.[20] A grasp of Dogon's mask culture and their concept of nyama are important for a greater understanding Dogon's concept of death and the afterlife. King describes nyama in the following terms:
“ | During the 1960s, nommo was defined by black cultural scholars and Africanists as the spiritual-physical energy of "the word" that conjures being through naming. It is the seed of word, water, and life in one that brings to the body its vital human force called the nyama. Nommo controls the nyama by naming and unnaming it—calling it forth. A "body" existence without the liberated life force of the nyama (what I call the "flesh") is worst than dead. It is dehumanized.[21] | ” |
The Dogon attributes the origins of masks to beings they refer to as Andoumboulou. The first masks were made of fiber. Although women eventually acquired them, and later men, their function was not apparent to the Dogon until the ancestors started dying. The first ancestor to suffer death did so in the form of a snake. As common in other African beliefs and cosmogonies such as in the Serer myth, a serpent death represents the process of transforming into spirit form. When people realzed the negative effects of the nyama released by death, the ancestors decided to carve a mask so that it serves as a support for the nyama. The mask was carved in the form of a snake symbolizing the dead ancestor. That initial mask, called "imina na" in the Dongon languages ("great mask" or "mother of masks") is the style of mask used in the Sigi ceremony in order to commemorate this mythic event every sixty years.[22]
Although the face of the mask is in snake form, it is never worn. Instead, the Dogon would display it in a stationary position or while carrying it. Every sixty years duing the Sigi ceremony, each Dogon village will make a new "great mask". Following the initial death which prompted the production of the "great mask", other deaths followed, and soon after, the Dogon had to seek other measures to deal with the released nyama. Initially, the Dogon erected alters for the ancestors while wood figures served as repository for the spiritual forces. As deaths increased, that became insufficient and masks were then made for dama rituals. The dama is a ritual where the souls of the dead are escorted out of the village and sent to the afterlife permanently. The Dogon have many rituals about death which are important elements of their mask culture.[22]
A four set of masks called bede, and a carved wooden mask called sirige are usually put on for the baga bundoritual—which is a type of dance held two days after the burial of a man who had particpated in a Sigi ceremony. After several years since the passing of the deceased, the dama ritual is performed. The dama last for six days. Its purpose is to raise the prestige and reputation of the deceased and that of his descendants. A lot of time and resources goes towards the preparation of the dama. It is a very elaborate and costly ritual. During the dama ritual, the Mask Society performs in the village plaza, at the deceased's house and in the Hogon's sacred fields.[22]
The soul of the dead, which had been localized in the handle of his hoe and in a container of millet beer is then removed from the village—throwned into the bush. Where the dama ritual is performed for a deceased woman, it is not accompanied by mask dancing unless the deceased female was a yasigine—the sole member of the Mask Society.[22]
There are many different types of Dogon masks, some of which represent mammals, reptiles, birds, humans, objects, and abstract concepts. Masks "may be seen as a summary of the people, animal, and things that constitute the Dogon world, a visual accounting of the return to order in the universe following the disruption caused by death."[22]
Like many traditional African religions, the Abrahamic religious concept of heaven and hell does not exist in Dogon religion. Ancestor veneration is however an important element. Sculptures and masks are normally made by Dogon blacksmiths, who also work iron. There are two types of smiths in Dogon society: the jemo who lives on the plains, and the iru who live on the plateau.[22][23][24]
As with other West African ethnic groups, blacksmiths' mastery of earth, air, and fire, and their expertise in making iron tools—which the Dogon people depend on for farming—accords them a priviledged position within Dogon society. Both the jemo and iru serve as intermediaries and peacemakers between other Dogons, between the living and the ancestors, and between mankind and Amma, especially on rituals surrounding rainmaking. The respect accorded to blacksmiths derives from their role in the creation myth, in which the first blacksmith is said to have descended from the Empyrean Heaven in order to bring mankind fire, iron, and seeds for cultivation.[19][25]
As with their rites associated with procreation during life, the image of humanity developing in its placenta is also present in their funeral rites. When a person dies, their mouth is covered with a muzzle. This ritual symbolizes the wattles of fish. The dead's head is covered with a white band circling the top of his skull. This symbolizes the top of the fish's head. As they send the deceased to the next life, women and girls perform ritual dances mimicking a fish—with their arms and hands streched out in front of them—symbolizing the swimming of fish. These movements are very suppley done. "The assimilations go on because a dead person who continues to preserve his spirtual elements (that is, his basic elements) until the afterlife is said to be like "a fish of heaven."[26]
Ancestral spirits
[edit]The Nommo are ancestral spirits (sometimes referred to as deities) venerated by the Dogon. The word Nommos is derived from the Dogon language meaning "to make one drink." The Nommos are usually described as amphibious, hermaphroditic, fish-like creatures. Folk art depictions of the Nommos show creatures with humanoid upper torsos, legs/feet, and a fish-like lower torso and tail. The Nommos are also referred to as “Masters of the Water”, “the Monitors”, and "The Teachers”. According to Dogon cosmogony, in primodial time, the Nommo "could not live entirely on land and on their arrival they made a reservoir of water and dived into it."[27]
Priesthood
[edit]The Dogon's spiritual leader is called hogon.
According to Dogon cosmogony, there were four pairs of twins, four females and four males. They were ancestors of humans. Of these, Griaule M. (1970, p. 223) refer to the seventh as "The Master of Speech"—alluding to its "masculine" characteristics. In the Dogon tradition, the seventh ancestor's gift to humankind included weaving, music, dress and language.[28]
Dorey posits that, the pronoun "she" (not "he"), and the "Mistress of Speech", not "the Master of Speech" should have been used by Griaule.[29] She went on to write:
- Seventh ancestor and seventh Nummo, born in the second "word" or second experiment". The Mistress of Speech was immortal and androgynous, but primarily female, and was seen as the perfect combination of Nummo and human. The DNA of the Mistress of Speech was the hope for the world. The Mistress of Speech was associated with weaving. On the Nummo's world, the seventh ancestor could only mate with the second ancestor, who was connected with the evil genetic material and the jackal. The good (seventh ancestor) was combined with the bad (second ancestor) so that the good genetic material would balance out the bad.[29]
The Nommos' DNA or Word was infused with the Earth animals to create humans. Since the Mistress of Speech had the perfect DNA or Word, she was the hope for the world. Her twenty-two atticulations, suggesting a form of speech, were important aspects of Dogon religion. Her twenty-two articulations are suppose to represent her twenty-two body parts and "the evolutionary changes that would occur in humans as a result of her death and resurrection." For this reason, each candidate for Dogon priesthood must undergo twenty-two trances, or "attacks" called soy (quaking spells) in Dogon. Each of these trances corresponds to the Mistress of Speech's body, "Word" or DNA. The word soy also mean seven in Dogon, and thus refer to the "Sevent Ancestor", who was the Mistress of Speech.[30]
The twenty-two rays of the sun are also associated with the Mistress of Speech's twenty-two articulations thereby connecting them to the genetic makeup of the Nommo. The Sun is the symbol of the Nommo and the Nommo spaceship in which human creation and regeneration is said to have taken place.[30] According to Ogotommeli's narrations, "there were no male priests allowed to service in the ancient religion built around the Supreme Being Amma".[8]
Festivals
[edit]The Dogon are known for their masks and dance festivals—which are spiritual in nature although sometimes made for tourists. Their dances and masquerades attracts a large number of tourists to Dogon country. However some Dogons are wary of the over-commercialization of their spiritual art form.[31] There are many Dogon festivals some of which are listed below. All these festivals occurs within precise temporal cycles and are occasions for young Dogon men to complete their initiation rites and receive knowledge from their father, grandfather, or head of family (ginna bana).[32]
- Bulo : Like the Xooy divination ceremony of the Serer people of Senegambia, the Bulo is a New Year festival celebrated between May and June in Dogon country. It is an agrarian festival marking the beginning of the rainy season and millet cultivation. Unlike the Xooy however—which is presided over the the Saltigue (the Serer priestly class), the Bulo festival is characterized by masked dances and overflowing canaries of millet beer. [33]The Bulo festival signals the start of the sowing season. It takes place during the estival solstice.[32][34]
- Sigi : The Sigi (or Sigui) festival pays homage to Dogon's primordial time, and it's a way of atonement and transmitting secret and ancient knowledge to the younger generation. It is mainly about communicating the revelation of speech to men, a ceremony of atonement and initiation, and a way of demanding pardon for the death of an ancestor after the folly and forgetfulness of some young men. It is a long procession that starts and ends in the village of Youga Dogorou. The Sigi festival is one of the most well known and anticipated Dogon festivals, and perhaps the most important of all the Dogon rituals. The Sigi occurs once every sixty years in the Dogon calendar—determined by the position of the star Sirius in the night sky. A person may only live to witness one Sigi festival, or two if they are lucky to live long enough. The 60-year interval is so precise it has baffled some scholars such as anthropologist and filmmaker Jean Rouch—many of whose works are about the subject. The 60-years interval also corresponds to the life span of the mystic Dogon ancestor. Every five days, the Dogon would tie a knot on a rope. This constitutes the Dogon week. In so doing, they are able to celebrate the Sigi with such precision. The last 4 Sigi celebrations occurred in 1787, 1847, 1907, and 1967. The next one will be in the year 2027 (as of 2020).[32][35][26][note 1] The Sigi ritual and rituals of its sort which occurs within precise temporal cycles are a way of transmitting knowledge among the Dogon.[32][36] "Many Dogon rituals use the image of humanity in formation in the placenta of the regeneration universe." The night before the sixtieth anniversary celebration, the male participants enter a bush in an isolated cave and go into fasting—abstaining from food and drink. In the morning of the ceremony, they shave their heads—symbolizing rebirth, an act which endevours to assimilate them to newborn children. They then put on the Sigi costume and dressed to look like fish. A white cap that represents the head of a catfish is put on. A wide pair of black trousers gathered at the ankles with its tail bifurcated is also put on. The colour black symbolizes the waters of the womb. On their chests, they wear some type of crossbelt adonned with cowries which symbolizes the fish's eggs. On their right hands, they hold a crooked staff. This staff, symbolizes the sexual organ of Nommo—the mythical ancestor of humans. Along with the staff, the also hold a half calabash that they will use to drink the Sigi beer. This imagery symbolizes "Amma's womb" in which the gestation of the universe took place according to Dogon cosmogony.[26] The Sigi runs for several years. The last one ran from 1967 to 1973. The Sigi has been entered in the Guinness World Records as the "Longest religious ceremony."[36]
- Dama : The Dama ceremony marks the end of bereavement.[34]
- Bado : The Bado festival is a festival of the elders which occurs in spring.[32]
- Bago : The Bago festival which is a festival of harvest takes place during fall.[32]
- Gogo : A winter festival.[32]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Guiness World Records gave 2032 as the next Sigui ceremony. This is an error. Guiness World Records based this on the year the last Sigui festival ended (1973) rather than the year it began (1967). All other sources give 2027 as the next Sigui / Sigi ceremony. See Guinness World Records, Sigui : "Longest religious ceremony." [1] (retrieved March 13, 2020)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Insoll, Timothy, Archaeology, Ritual, Religion, Routledge (2004), p. 123–125, ISBN 9781134526444 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [2]
- ^ Masolo (1994), pp. 70-71
- ^ Temple, Robert, The Sirius Mystery, Random House (1999), p. 465, ISBN 9780099257448 (retrieved March 3, 2020)[3]
- ^ *Griaule, Marcel (1970, (original 1965)), Conversations With Ogotemmêli: an Introduction To Dogon Religious Ideas , p. 97, ISBN 978-0-19-519821-8
- ^ Davis, Shawn R., Dogon Funerals [in] African Art, vol. 35, Issue 2, JSTOR (Organization), University of California, Los Angeles. African Studies Center, African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles (2002), p. 68
- ^ Griaule (1970), p. 198
- ^ Imperato, Pascal James, Dogon Cliff Dwellers: The Art of Mali's Moutain People, L. Kahan Gallery/African Arts, (1978), p. 8
- ^ a b Andian Council for Africa, Indian Centre for Africa; Africa Quarterly, Volumes 45-46, Indian Centre for Africa (2006), p. 51
- ^ a b Dorey, Shannon, The Nummo: The Truth About Human Origins : (Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd (2013), p. 1, ISBN 9780987681386 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [4]
- ^ Masolo, D. A., African Philosophy in Search of Identity : African systems of thought, (ed. International African Institute), Indiana University Press (1994), pp. 68—69, ISBN 9780253207753 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [5]
- ^ Andreozzi, Matteo; Massaro, Alma; Stallwood, Kim; and Tonutti, Sabrina; Relations 1.2 - November 2013: Inside the Emotional Lives of Non-human Animals: Part II, LED Edizioni Universitarie (2013), p. 14, ISBN 9788879166560 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [6]
- ^ a b Asante, Molefi Kete; Mazama, Ama; Encyclopedia of African Religion, Volume 1, SAGE (2009), pp. 40–41, ISBN 9781412936361 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [7]
- ^ a b Griaule (1970), p. xiv
- ^ Santillana, Giorgio De; Dechend, Hertha von; Hamlet's Mill: An Essay on Myth and the Frame of Time, David R. Godine Publisher (1977), p. 353, ISBN 9780879232153 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [8]
- ^ Griaule, Marcel (1970, (original 1965)), Conversations With Ogotemmêli: an Introduction To Dogon Religious Ideas, p. ix [in] Ogunmodede, Francis Ishola, African Philosophy Down the Ages: 10,000 BC to the Present, Hope Publications (2004), ISBN 9789788080114
- ^ Hackett, Rosalind, Art and Religion in Africa, A&C Black 1(998), pp. 35-36, ISBN 9780826436559 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [9]
- ^ a b Asante & Mazama (2009), p. 249
- ^ Insoll, Timothy, (Editors: Alcock, Susan; Yoffee, Norman); (Contributors: Alcock, Susan; Dillehay, Tom; Yoffee, Norman; Shennan, Stephen; Sinopoli, Carla;)), The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa, Cambridge University Press (2003), p. 356, ISBN 9780521657020 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [10]
- ^ a b Ezra, Kate, Art of the Dogon: Selections from the Lester Wunderman Collection, p. 25,
- ^ Dorey (2013), The Nummo: The Truth About Human Origins, p. 358
- ^ King, Debra Walker, Deep Talk: Reading African-American Literary Names, University of Virginia Press (1998), p. 37, ISBN 9780813918525
- ^ a b c d e f Ezra, Kate, Art of the Dogon: Selections from the Lester Wunderman Collection, Metropolitan Museum of Art (1988), pp. 23–25, ISBN 9780810918740 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [11]
- ^ Paulme, Denise .Organisation sociale des Dogon (Soudan français), F. Loviton (1940), pp. 182—88
- ^ Dieterlen, Germaine; Ganay, Solange de, Le génie des eaux chez les Dogons. Issue 5 of Miscellanea Africana Lebaudy, ISSN 1775-3236, P. Geuthner (1942), pp. 6-8
- ^ Griaule, Marcel, Masques Dogons, Volume 33, Institut d'Ethnologie (1938), pp. 48—51
- ^ a b c Editor: Bonnefoy, Yves; (translated by: Doniger, Wendy ; compiled by: Bonnefoy, Yves), American, African, and Old European Mythologies, University of Chicago Press (1993), p. 124, ISBN 9780226064574 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [12]
- ^ Crowley, Vivianne; Crowley, Christopher; Carlton Books, Limited (2002), p. 195, ISBN 9781858689876
- ^ Griaule, M., Conversations with Ogotemmêli (1970, p. 223) [in] Tally, Justine, Toni Morrison's 'Beloved': Origins, Routledge (2008), p. 122, ISBN 9781134361311 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [13]
- ^ a b Dorey, Shannon, The Master of Speech: Dogon Mythology Reveals Genetic Engineering of Humans, Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2013), p. 3, ISBN 9780987681379 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [14]
- ^ a b Dorey, Shannon, Day of the Fish: The First Religion (Volume 3 of Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2012), p. 91, ISBN 9780987681362 [15]
- ^ Bruijn, Mirjam de; & Dijk, Rijk van; The Social Life of Connectivity in Africa, Palgrave Macmillan (2012), pp. 250, 264, ISBN 9781137278012 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [16]
- ^ a b c d e f g Adjaye, Joseph K., Time in the Black Experience (Issue 167 of Contributions in Afro-American and African studies, ISSN 0069-9624), Greenwood Publishing Group (1994), p. 92, ISBN 9780313291180 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [17]
- ^ Dogon Country, Festivals [18] (retrieved March 13, 2020)
- ^ a b Petit, Véronique, Population Studies and Development from Theory to Fieldwork, Springer (2017), p. 33, ISBN 9783319617749 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [19]
- ^ Velton, Ross, Mali: The Bradt Safari Guide, Bradt Travel Guides (2009), p. 192, ISBN 9781841622187 (retrieved March 13, 2020) [20]
- ^ a b Guinness World Records, Sigui : "Longest religious ceremony."[21] (retrieved March 13, 2020)
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- Asante, Molefi Kete; Mazama, Ama; Encyclopedia of African Religion, Volume 1, SAGE (2009), pp. 40–41, 213, 249, 268, ISBN 9781412936361 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [23]
- Insoll, Timothy, Archaeology, Ritual, Religion, Routledge (2004), p. 123–125, ISBN 9781134526444 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [24]
- Griaule, Marcel, Conversations with Ogotemmêli: An Introduction to Dogon Religious Ideas (contribution: Dieterlen, Germaine, International African Institute), International African Institute (1965), ISBN 9780195198218 (Originally published in 1948 as Dieu d'Eau)
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- Ezra, Kate, Art of the Dogon: Selections from the Lester Wunderman Collection, Metropolitan Museum of Art (1988), pp. 23–25, ISBN 9780810918740 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [29]
- Dorey, Shannon, Day of the Fish: The First Religion (Volume 3 of Dogon Religion), Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2012), p. 91, ISBN 9780987681362 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [30]
- Tally, Justine, Toni Morrison's 'Beloved': Origins, Routledge (2008), p. 122, ISBN 9781134361311 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [31]
- Petit, Véronique, Population Studies and Development from Theory to Fieldwork, Springer (2017), p. 33, ISBN 9783319617749 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [32]
- Bruijn, Mirjam de; & Dijk, Rijk van; The Social Life of Connectivity in Africa, Palgrave Macmillan (2012), pp. 250, 264, ISBN 9781137278012 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [33]
- Adjaye, Joseph K., Time in the Black Experience (Issue 167 of Contributions in Afro-American and African studies, ISSN 0069-9624), Greenwood Publishing Group (1994), p. 92, ISBN 9780313291180 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [34]
- Indian Council for Africa, Indian Centre for Africa; Africa Quarterly, Volumes 45-46, Indian Centre for Africa (2006), p. 51
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- Insoll, Timothy, (Editors: Alcock, Susan; Yoffee, Norman); (Contributors: Alcock, Susan; Dillehay, Tom; Yoffee, Norman; Shennan, Stephen; Sinopoli, Carla;)), The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa, Cambridge University Press (2003), p. 356, ISBN 9780521657020 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [39]
- Guinness World Records, Sigui : "Longest religious ceremony."[40] (retrieved March 13, 2020)
- King, Debra Walker, Deep Talk: Reading African-American Literary Names, University of Virginia Press (1998), p. 37, ISBN 9780813918525
- Paulme, Denise .Organisation sociale des Dogon (Soudan français), F. Loviton (1940), pp. 182—88
- Dieterlen, Germaine; Ganay, Solange de, Le génie des eaux chez les Dogons. Issue 5 of Miscellanea Africana Lebaudy, ISSN 1775-3236, P. Geuthner (1942), pp. 6-8
- Griaule, Marcel, Masques Dogons, Volume 33, Institut d'Ethnologie (1938), pp. 48—51
- Editor: Bonnefoy, Yves; (translated by: Doniger, Wendy ; compiled by: Bonnefoy, Yves), American, African, and Old European Mythologies, University of Chicago Press (1993), p. 124, ISBN 9780226064574 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [41]
- Velton, Ross, Mali: The Bradt Safari Guide, Bradt Travel Guides (2009), p. 192, ISBN 9781841622187 (retrieved March 13, 2020) [42]
- Crowley, Vivianne; Crowley, Christopher; Carlton Books, Limited (2002), p. 195, ISBN 9781858689876
- Dorey, Shannon, The Master of Speech: Dogon Mythology Reveals Genetic Engineering of Humans, Elemental Expressions Ltd. (2013), p. 3, ISBN 9780987681379 (retrieved March 3, 2020) [43]