West African Vodún: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Religion practiced by the Aja, Ewe, and Fon people}} |
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{{alternateuses}} |
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{{About|the West African religion||Voodoo (disambiguation){{!}}Voodoo}} |
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see also [[cottage cheese]] |
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[[File:Autel-vaudou-Togoville-2017.jpg|thumb|right|A Vodun shrine in [[Togoville]], Togo in 2017]] |
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'''Vodún''' or '''vodúnsínsen''' is an [[African traditional religions|African traditional religion]] practiced by the [[Aja people|Aja]], [[Ewe people|Ewe]], and [[Fon people|Fon]] peoples of [[Benin]], [[Togo]], [[Ghana]], and [[Nigeria]]. Practitioners are commonly called ''vodúnsɛntó'' or ''Vodúnisants''. |
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Vodún teaches the existence of a supreme creator divinity, under whom are lesser spirits called ''vodúns''. Many of these deities are associated with specific areas, but others are venerated widely throughout West Africa; some have been absorbed from other religions, including [[Christianity]] and [[Hinduism]]. The ''vodún'' are believed to physically manifest in shrines and there are provided with offerings, typically including [[animal sacrifice]]s. There are several all-male secret societies, including [[Oro Festival|Oró]] and [[Egúngún]], into which individuals receive initiation. Various forms of [[divination]] are used to gain information from the ''vodún'', the most prominent of which is [[Ifá|Fá]], itself governed by a society of initiates. |
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The term '''Voodoo''' ('''Vodun''' in [[Benin]]; also '''Vodou''' or other phonetically equivalent spellings in [[Haiti]]; '''Vudu''' in the Dominican Republic) is applied to the branches of a [[West Africa]]n ancestor-based [[Theism|'''Theist''']]-[[Animism|'''Animist''']] religious tradition. Its primary roots are among the Fon-Ewe peoples of West Africa, in the country now known as [[Benin]] (formerly the Kingdom of [[Dahomey]]), where Vodun is today the national religion of more than 7 million people. The word ''vodun'' is the Fon-Ewe word for ''[[spirit]]''. |
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Amid the [[Atlantic slave trade]] of the 16th to the 19th century, ''vodúnsɛntó'' were among the enslaved Africans transported to the Americas. There, their traditional religions influenced the development of new religions such as [[Haitian Vodou]], [[Louisiana Voodoo]], and Brazilian [[Candomblé Jejé]]. Since the 1990s, there have been growing efforts to encourage foreign tourists to visit West Africa and receive initiation into Vodún. |
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In addition to the [[Fon (people)|Fon]] or [[Dahomey]]an tradition which has remained in Africa, there are related traditions that put down roots in the [[New World]] during the days of the transatlantic African [[slavery|slave]] trade. Voodoo or vodun is probably the most ancient religion in the world, directly derived from [[Prehistory|Prehistoric]] belief systems. This "primitivism" generates exceptional interest in the [[Paleoanthropology|Paleoanthropological]] field. |
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Many ''vodúnsɛntó'' practice their traditional religion alongside Christianity, for instance by interpreting [[Jesus Christ]] as a ''vodún''. Although primarily found in West Africa, since the late 20th century the religion has also spread abroad and is practised by people of varied ethnicities and nationalities. |
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Besides Benin, African Vodun and its descendent practices may be found in the [[Dominican Republic]], [[Puerto Rico]], [[Cuba]], [[Brazil]], [[Ghana]], [[Haiti]] and [[Togo]]. |
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==Definition== |
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The more or less "pure" Fon tradition in [[Cuba]] is known as ''La Regla Arara''. |
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[[File:Vodoun priest fetishes and asen Benin Jan 2018.jpg|thumb|right|A Vodun priest in Benin photographed in 2018]] |
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Vodún is a religion.{{sfnm|1a1=Forte|1y=2010a|1p=184|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=6}} The [[Anthropology|anthropologist]] Timothy R. Landry noted that, although the term ''Vodún'' is commonly used, a more accurate name for the religion was ''vodúnsínsen'', meaning "spirit worship".{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=ix}} The spelling ''Vodún'' is commonly used to distinguish the West African religion from [[Haitian Vodou|the Haitian religion more usually spelled ''Vodou'']];{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=ix}} this in turn is often used to differentiate it from [[Louisiana Voodoo|Louisiana ''Voodoo'']].{{sfnm|1a1=Long|1y=2002|1p=87|2a1=Fandrich|2y=2007|2pp=779, 780}} An alternative spelling sometimes used for the West African religion is ''Vodu''.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=1}} |
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In [[Brazil]], the Fon tradition among former slaves has given rise to the tradition known as Jeje Vodun. |
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The religion's adherents are referred to as ''vodúnsɛntó'' or, in the [[French language]], ''Vodúnisants''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=ix}} |
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Vodún is "the predominant religious system" of southern Benin, Togo, and parts of southeast Ghana.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=2}} The anthropologist Judy Rosenthal noted that "Fon and Ewe forms of Vodu worship are virtually the same".{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=19}} |
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==The African Origins== |
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It is part of the same network of religions that include [[Yoruba religion]] as well as African diasporic traditions like Haitian Vodou, Cuban [[Santería]], and Brazilian [[Candomblé]].{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=5}} As a result of centuries of interaction between Fon and Yoruba peoples, Landry noted that Vodún and Yoruba religion were "at times, indistinguishable or at least, blurry".{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=54}} |
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Vodún is a fragmented religion divided into "independent small cult units" devoted to particular spirits.{{sfn|Forte|2010a|p=189}} |
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As stated before, Vodun is a [[Theism|Theist]] and [[magic|magical]] form of [[Animism]] that developed among [[West Africa]]n [[tribe]]s predating [[History|Historical]] times. The cultural area of the Fon, Gun, Mina and Ewe peoples share common [[Metaphysics|Metaphysical]] conceptions around a dual [[Cosmology|Cosmological]] divine principle: the [[God]]-Creator (whose name can vary but we'll define as Mawu) and the God(s)-Actor(s) or Vodun(s), sons of the Creator. The God-Creator is the [[Cosmogony|Cosmogonical]] principle, who doesn't mess with the mundane, and the Vodun(s) are the God(s)-Actor(s) who actually govern on terrenal issues. It's quite interesting to notice the similarities between this archaic conception and the much late opposition God-Pantocrator / God-Politeuma found in most modern Monotheistic religions. |
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As a tradition, Vodún is not doctrinal,{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=3}} with no orthodoxy,{{sfn|Forte|2010a|p=189}} and no central text.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=3}} It is amorphous and flexible,{{sfnm|1a1=Rush|1y=2017|1p=5|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2pp=2, 103-104}} changing and adapting in different situations,{{sfnm|1a1=Rush|1y=2017|1p=5|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2pp=103-104}} and emphasising efficacy over dogma.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=53}} It is open to ongoing revision,{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=3}} being eclectic and absorbing elements from many cultural backgrounds,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=5}} including from other parts of Africa but also from Europe, Asia, and the Americas.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=4}} West African religions commonly absorb elements from elsewhere regardless of their origin;{{sfn|Landry|2015|p=174}} in West Africa, many individuals draw upon African traditional religions, Christianity, and Islam simultaneously to deal with life's issues.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=125}} In West Africa, ''vodúnsɛntó'' sometimes abandon their religion for forms of Christianity like [[Evangelical Protestantism]],{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1pp=172, 182|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=127}} although there are also Christians who convert to Vodún.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1pp=179, 183|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2pp=140-141}} A common approach is for people to practice Christianity while also engaging in Vodún rituals,{{sfnm|1a1=Rosenthal|1y=1998|1p=20|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=132}} although there are also ''vodúnsɛntó'' who reject Christianity, deeming it incompatible with their tradition.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=20}} |
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==Beliefs== |
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The [[Pantheon]] of Voduns is quite large and complex. There are seven direct sons of Mawu, interethnic and related to natural phenomena or historical or mythical individuals, and dozens of ethnic Voduns, defenders of a certain clan or tribe. Plus the modern Voduns, mostly coming from Ghana. |
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In Vodún, belief is centred around efficacy rather than Christian notions of [[faith]].{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=169}} |
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===Theology=== |
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Totalitarian regimes in [[West Africa]] tried to supress Vodun as well as other forms of religiosity, but today they are flourishing again and Vodun is practised by over 30 million people in the area. For anyone interested in Vodun or [[Anthropology]], a visit to the Vodun museums and markets in Ouidah or Cotonou, [[Benin]], or Lome, [[Togo]], is a compulsory and fascinating experience. |
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[[File:Voodoo-Altar.jpg|thumb|right|A Vodun altar in Abomey, Benin in 2008]] |
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Vodún teaches the existence of a single divine creator being.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=2}} Below this entity are an uncountable number of spirits who govern different aspects of nature and society.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=2}} |
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The term ''vodún'' comes from the [[Gbe languages|Gbé languages]] of the [[Niger–Congo languages|Niger-Congo language family]].{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=4-5}} It translates as "spirit", "god", "divinity", or "presence".{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=5}} Among Fon-speaking Yoruba communities, the Fon term ''vodún'' is regarded as being synonymous with the Yoruba language term ''òrìs̩à''.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=53}} |
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The [[art history|art historian]] [[Suzanne Blier|Suzanne Preston Blier]] called these "mysterious forces or powers that govern the world and the lives of those who reside within it".{{sfn|Blier|1995a|p=4}} The religion is continually open to the incorporation of new spirit deities, while those that are already venerated may change and take on new aspects.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1p=181|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=138}} Some Vodún practitioners for instance refer to [[Jesus Christ]] as the ''vodún'' of the Christians.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=53}} |
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==New World Traditions== |
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A common belief is that the ''vodún'' came originally from the sea.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=2}} The spirits are thought to dwell in ''Kútmómɛ'' ("land of the dead"), an invisible world parallel to that of humanity.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=61}} |
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===Haitian Vodou=== |
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The ''vodún'' spirits have their own individual likes and dislikes;{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=3}} each also has particular songs, dances, and prayers directed to them.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=3}} These spirits are deemed to manifest within the natural world.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=61}} |
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When kings introduced new deities to the Fon people, it was often believed that these enhanced the king's power.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=11}} |
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The cult of each ''vodún'' has its own particular beliefs and practices.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=139}} It may also have its own restrictions on membership, with some groups only willing to initiate family members.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=181}} People may venerate multiple ''vodún'', sometimes also attending services at a Christian church.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=44}} |
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West African or Beninese Vodun is similar to Haitian Vodou in its emphasis on the ancestors, however each family of spirits has its own specialized clergy that is often hereditary. Spirits include [[Mami Wata]], who are goddesses of waters; Legba, who is virile and young in contrast to the old man form he takes in Haiti; Gu, ruling iron and smithcraft; Sakpata, who rules diseases; and many other spirits distinct in their own way to West Africa. [[New World]] Voodoo and its derivatives is a razor sharp case of religious [[syncretism]] between the ancient religion imported together with [[West Africa]]n [[slavery|slaves]], the [[Christian]] beliefs of their masters and local religions. |
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Lɛgbà is the spirit of the crossroads who opens up communication between humanity and the spirit world.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=97}} Sakpatá is the ''vodún'' of earth and smallpox,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=37}} but over time has come to be associated with new diseases like [[HIV/AIDS]].{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=175}} The Dàn spirits are all serpents;{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=174}} Dàn is a serpent ''vodún'' associated with riches and cool breezes.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=53}} Xɛbyosò or Hɛvioso is the spirit of thunder.{{sfnm|1a1=Blier|1y=1995a|1p=2|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=53}} Gŭ is the spirit of metal and blacksmithing,{{sfnm|1a1=Blier|1y=1995a|1p=2|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=55}} and in more recent decades has come to be associated with metal vehicles like cars, trains, and planes.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1p=181|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=138}} Gbădu is the wife of Fá.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=49}} Tron is the spirit of the [[kola nut]];{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=178}} he was recently introduced to the Vodún pantheon via Ewe speakers from Ghana and Togo.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=105}} |
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Called '''Sèvis Gine''' or "African Service" in [[Haiti]], a [[Creole|Creolized]] form of Vodou. Haitian Vodou also has strong elements from the [[Ibo]] and [[Kongo]] peoples of Central Africa and the [[Yoruba]] of [[Nigeria]], though many different peoples or "nations" of Africa have representation in the liturgy of the Sèvis Gine, as do the [[Taíno]] [[American Indian|Indians]], the original peoples of the island now known as [[Hispaniola]]. |
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[[File:20170319-2017 A630465 (33680835826).jpg|thumb|left|The Temple of the Pythons in Ouidah, centre of Dangbé's worship.]] |
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[[Haitian Creole]] forms of Vodou exist in Haiti (where it is native), the Dominican Republic, parts of Cuba, the United States, and other places that Haitian immigrants dispersed to over the years. It is similar to other African-diasporic religions such as Lukumi or Regla de Ocha (also known as [[Santería]]) in Cuba, [[Candomblé]] and [[Umbanda]] in Brazil, all religions that evolved among descendants of transplanted Africans in the Americas. |
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Some Beninese acknowledge that certain Yoruba ''orisa'' are more powerful than certain ''vodún''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=11}} |
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====History==== |
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Also part of the Vodun worldview is the ''azizǎ'', a type of forest spirit.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=65}} |
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The majority of the Africans who were brought as [[slavery|slaves]] to Haiti were from the Guinea Coast of West Africa, and their descendants are the primary practitioners of Vodou (those Africans brought to the southern US were primarily from the Kongo kingdom). The survival of the belief system in the [[New World]] is remarkable, although the traditions have changed with time. One of the largest differences however between African and Haitian Vodou is that the transplanted Africans of Haiti were obliged to disguise their [[Loa|lwa]] (sometimes spelled loa) or spirits as [[Roman Catholic]] [[saint]]s, a process called [[syncretism]]. |
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Prayers to the ''vodún'' usually include requests for financial wealth.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=34-35}} |
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Most experts speculate that this was done in an attempt to hide their "[[paganism|pagan]]" religion from their masters who had forbidden them to practice it. To say that Haitian Vodou is simply a mix of West African religions with a veneer of Roman Catholicism would not be entirely correct. This would be ignoring numerous influences from the native [[Taíno]] Indians, as well as the evolutionary process that Vodou has undergone shaped by the volatile ferment of Haitian history. It would also be ignoring the large influence of [[European]] paganism in Roman Catholicism and its pantheon of saints. |
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Practitioners seek to gain well-being by focusing on the health and remembrance of their families.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=4}} There may be restrictions on who can venerate the deity; practitioners believe that women must be kept apart from Gbădu's presence, for if they get near her they may be struck barren or die.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=49}} Devotion to a particular deity may be marked in different ways; devotees of the smallpox spirit Sakpatá for instance scar their bodies to resemble smallpox scars.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=175}} |
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Patterns of Vodun worship follow various dialects, spirits, practices, songs, and rituals. The [[Creator deity|divine Creator]], called variously [[Mawu|Mawu or Mahu]], is a female being. She is an elder woman, and usually a mother who is gentle and forgiving. She is also seen as the god who owns all other gods and even if there is no temple made in her name, the people continue to pray to her, especially in times of distress. In one tradition, she bore seven children. Sakpata: Vodun of the Earth, Xêvioso (or Xêbioso): Vodun of Thunder, also associated with divine justice,<ref>Ojo, J.O. (1999). Understanding West African Traditional Religion. S.O. Popoola Printers. p. 63. {{ISBN|978-978-33674-2-5}}. Retrieved 16 March 2019.</ref> Agbe: Vodun of the Sea, Gû: Vodun of Iron and War, Agê: Vodun of Agriculture and Forests, Jo: Vodun of Air, and Lêgba: Vodun of the Unpredictable.<ref>{{cite book|author=Anthony B. Pinn|title=Varieties of African American Religious Experience: Toward a Comparative Black Theology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3m43DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA7|publisher=Fortress Press|isbn=978-1506403366|page=7|date=2017-10-15|access-date=2018-03-21|archive-date=2022-05-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220516053211/https://books.google.com/books?id=3m43DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA7|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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Vodou as we know it in Haiti and the Haitian diaspora today is the result of the pressures of many different cultures and ethnicities of people being uprooted from Africa and imported to Hispanola during the African slave trade. Under slavery, African culture and religion was suppressed, lineages were fragmented, and people pooled their religious knowledge and out of this fragmentation became culturally unified. In addition to combining the spirits of many different African and Indian nations, pieces of Roman Catholic liturgy have been incorporated to replace lost prayers or elements; in addition images of Catholic saints are used to represent various spirits or "mistè" ("mysteries", actually the preferred term in Haiti), and many saints themselves are honored in Vodou in their own right. This syncretism allows Vodou to encompass the African, the [[Native American|Indian]], and the European ancestors in a whole and complete way. It is truly a "[[Creole|Kreyòl]]" religion. |
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The Creator embodies a dual [[Cosmogony|cosmogonic]] principle of which Mawu the moon and Lisa the sun are respectively the female and male aspects, often portrayed as the twin children of the Creator.<ref>{{cite book|author=Anthony B. Pinn|title=Varieties of African American Religious Experience: Toward a Comparative Black Theology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3m43DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA5|publisher=Fortress Press|isbn=978-1506403366|page=5|date=2017-10-15|access-date=2018-03-21|archive-date=2022-05-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220516053211/https://books.google.com/books?id=3m43DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA5|url-status=live}}</ref> In other stories, Mawu-Lisa is depicted as a single hermaphroditic person capable of impregnating herself, with two faces rather than being twins.<ref>Herskovits, Melville J. and Frances S. "Dahomean Narrative: A Cross-Cultural Analysis." Northwestern University Press (1958), p 125.</ref> In other branches, the Creator and other ''vodus'' are known by different names, such as Sakpo-Disa (Mawu), Aholu (Sakpata), and Anidoho (Da), Gorovodu.<ref>Eric J. Montgomery and Christian N. Vannier. "Ethnography of a Vodu Shrine in Togo: Of Spirit, Slave, and Sea." Brill(2017), pg. 127</ref> |
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The most historically important Vodou ceremony in Haitian history was the Bwa Kayiman or [[Bois Caïman]] ceremony of [[August]] [[1791]] that began the [[Haitian Revolution]], in which the spirit [[Ezili Dantor]] possessed a priestess and received a [[Creole Pig|black pig]] as an offering, and all those present pledged themselves to the fight for freedom. This ceremony ultimately resulted in the liberation of the Haitian people from their [[France|French]] colonizers/exploiters in 1804, and the establishment of the first black people's [[republic]] in the history of the world. |
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===The soul=== |
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Haitian Vodou grew in the [[United States]] to a significant degree beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s with the waves of Haitian immigrants fleeing the [[François Duvalier|Duvalier]] regime, taking root in Miami, New York City, Chicago, and other major cities. |
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Among the Fon, a common belief is that the head is the seat of a person's soul.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=175}} The head is thus of symbolic importance in Vodún.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=175}} |
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====Beliefs==== |
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Also see [[Haiti festivals]] the Haitian Vodouisants believe, in accordance with widespread African tradition, that there is one [[God]] who is the creator of all, referred to as "Bondye" (from the French "Bon Dieu" or "Good God", distinguished from the god of the whites in a dramatic speech by the [[houngan]] [[Boukman]] at Bwa Kayiman, but is often considered the same God the Roman Catholic Church talks about). Bondyè is distant from his/her/its creation though, and so it is the spirits or the "mysteries", "saints", or "[[angel]]s" that the Vodouisant turns to for help, as well as to the [[Ancestor-worship|ancestors]]. The Vodouisant worships God, and serves the spirits, who are treated with honor and respect as elder members of a household might be. There are said to be twenty-one nations or "nanchons" of spirits, also sometimes called "lwa-yo". Some of the more important nations of lwa are the Rada, the Nago, and the Kongo. The spirits also come in "families" that all share a surname, like [[Ogou]], or [[Erzulie|Ezili]], or [[Azaka]] or [[Ghede]]. For instance, "Ezili" is a family, [[Ezili Dantor]] and [[Ezili Freda]] are two individual spirits in that family. The Ogou family are soldiers, the Ezili govern the feminine spheres of life, the Azaka govern agriculture, the Ghede govern the sphere of death and fertility. In Dominican Vodou, there is also an Agua Dulce or "Sweet Waters" family, which encompasses all [[Native American|Amerindian]] spirits. There are literally hundreds of lwa. Well known individual lwa include [[Damballah|Danbala]] Wedo, Papa [[Legba]] Atibon, and [[Agwe]] Tawoyo. |
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Some Vodún traditions specifically venerate spirits of deceased humans. The Mama Tchamba tradition for instances honours slaves from the north who are believed to have become ancestors of contemporary Ewe people.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=23}} Similarly, the Gorovodu tradition also venerates enslaved northerners, who are described as being from the Hausa, Kaybe, Mossi, and Tchamba ethnicities.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=44}} |
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In Haitian Vodou, spirits are divided according to their nature in roughly two categories, whether they are hot or cool. Cool spirits fall under the Rada category, and hot spirits fall under the Petwo category. Rada spirits are familial and mostly come from Africa, Petwo spirits are mostly native to Haiti and are more demanding and require more attention to detail than the Rada, but both can be dangerous if angry or upset. Neither is "good" or "evil" in relation to the other. |
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===Acɛ=== |
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Everyone is said to have spirits, and each person is considered to have a special relationship with one particular spirit who is said to "own their head", however each person may have many lwa, and the one that owns their head, or the "met tet", may or may not be the most active spirit in a person's life in Haitian belief. |
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An important concept in Vodún is ''acɛ'', a notion also shared by Yoruba religion and various African diasporic religions influenced by them.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=56}} |
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In serving the spirits, the Vodouisant seeks to achieve harmony with their own individual nature and the world around them, manifested as personal power and resourcefulness in dealing with life. Part of this harmony is membership in and maintaining relationships within the context of family and community. A Vodou house or society is organized on the metaphor of an extended family, and initiates are the "children" of their initiators, with the sense of hierarchy and mutual obligation that implies. |
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Landry defined ''acɛ'' as "divine power".{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=112}} |
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It is the ''acɛ'' of an object that is deemed to provide it with its power and efficacy.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=56}} |
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==Practice== |
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Most Vodouisants are not [[Initiation|initiated]], referred to as being "bosal"; it is not a requirement to be an initiate in order to serve one's spirits. There are clergy in Haitian Vodou whose responsibility it is to preserve the rituals and songs and maintain the relationship between the spirits and the community as a whole (though some of this is the responsibility of the whole community as well). They are entrusted with leading the service of all of the spirits of their lineage. [[Priest]]s are referred to as "Houngans" and priestesses as "Manbos". Below the houngans and manbos are the hounsis, who are initiates who act as assistants during ceremonies and who are dedicated to their own personal mysteries. One doesn't serve just any lwa but only the ones they "have" according to one's destiny or nature. Which spirits a person "has" may be revealed at a ceremony, in a reading, or in dreams. However all Vodouisants also serve the spirits of their own blood ancestors, and this important aspect of Vodou practice is often glossed over or minimized in importance by commentators who do not understand the significance of it. The ancestor cult is in fact the basis of Vodou religion, and many lwa like [[Agasou]] (formerly a king of Dahomey) for example are in fact ancestors who are said to have been raised up to divinity. |
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[[File:Vodun temple wall.jpg|thumb|right|A Vodun temple in Grand-Popo, Benin, in 2018]] |
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====Liturgy and Practice==== |
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The anthropologist Dana Rush noted that Vodun "permeates virtually all aspects of life for its participants".{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=2}} As a tradition, it prioritises action and getting things done.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=3}} Rosenthal found that, among members of the Gorovodu tradition, people stated that they followed the religion because it helped to heal their children when the latter fell sick.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=41}} Financial transactions play an important role, with both the ''vodún'' and their priests typically expecting payment for their services.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=160}} |
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After a day or two of preparation setting up altars, ritually preparing and cooking fowl and other foods, etc., a Haitian Vodou service begins with a series of Catholic prayers and songs in French, then a litany in Kreyòl and African "langaj" that goes through all the European and African saints and lwa honored by the house, and then a series of verses for all the main spirits of the house. This is called the "Priyè Gine" or the African Prayer. After more introductory songs, beginning with saluting the spirit of the drums named Hounto, the songs for all the individual spirits are sung, starting with the Legba family through all the Rada spirits, then there is a break and the Petwo part of the service begins, which ends with the songs for the Gede family. As the songs are sung spirits will come to visit those present by taking possession of individuals and speaking and acting through them. Each spirit is saluted and greeted by the initiates present and will give readings, advice and cures to those who approach them for help. Many hours later in the wee hours of the morning, the last song is sung, guests leave, and all the exhausted hounsis and houngans and manbos can go to sleep. |
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Landry described the religion as being "deeply esoteric".{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=62}} |
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On the individual's household level, a Vodouisant or "sèvitè"/"serviteur" may have one or more tables set out for their ancestors and the spirit or spirits that they serve with pictures or statues of the spirits, perfumes, foods, and other things favored by their spirits. The most basic set up is just a white candle and a clear glass of water and perhaps flowers. On a particular spirit's day, one lights a candle and says an [[Our Father]] and [[Hail Mary]], salutes Papa Legba and asks him to open the gate, and then one salutes and speaks to the particular spirit like an elder family member. Ancestors are approached directly, without the mediating of Papa Legba, since they are said to be "in the blood". |
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A male priest may be referred to with the Fon word ''hùngán''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=160}} These practitioners may advertise their ritual services using radio, television, billboard adverts, and the internet.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=118}} There are individuals who claim the title of the "supreme child of Vodún in Benin", however there are competing claimants to the title and it is little recognised outside Ouidah.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=173}} |
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[[File:Vodoun d'Abomey.jpg|thumb|left|A priest in Abomey caring for a shrine]] |
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====Values and Ethics==== |
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The forest is a major symbol in Vodún.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=53}} |
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The cultural values that Vodou embraces center around ideas of honor and respect - to God, to the spirits, to the family and sosyete, and to oneself. There is a plural idea of proper and improper, in the sense that what is appropriate to someone with [[Damballah|Dambala]] Wedo as their head may be different from someone with [[Ogou Feray]] as their head, for example.. one spirit is very cool and the other one is very hot. Coolness overall is valued, and so is the ability and inclination to protect oneself and one's own if necessary. Love and support within the family of the Vodou sosyete seems to be the most important consideration. Generosity in giving to the community and to the poor is also an important value. One's blessings come through the community and there is the idea that one should be willing to give back to it in turn. Since Vodou has such a community orientation, there are no "solitaries" in Vodou, only people separated geographically from their elders and house. A person without a relationship of some kind with elders will not be practicing Vodou as it is understood in Haiti and among Haitians. |
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Vodun practitioners believe that many natural materials contain supernatural powers, including leaves, meteorites, kaolin, soil from the crossroads, the feathers of African grey parrots, turtle shells, and dried chameleons.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=63}} Landry stated that a connection to the natural environment was "a dominant theme" in the religion.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=63}} The forest in particular is important in Vodun cosmology, and learning the power of the forest and of particular leaves that can be found there is a recurring theme among practitioners.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=64}} Leaves, according to Landry, are "building blocks for the spirits' power and material presence on earth".{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=63}} Leaves will often be immersed in water to create ''vodùnsin'' (vodun water), which is used to wash both new shrines and new initiates.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=67}} |
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===Shrines=== |
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The Haitian Vodou religion is an ecstatic rather than a fertility based tradition and does not discriminate against [[Gay|gay]] men and [[Lesbian|lesbian]] women or other [[queer]] people in any way. In fact there are hounfos or temples in Haiti whose clergy are entirely gay males or lesbians, etc. In Haitian Vodou the sexual orientation or gender identity and expression of a practitioner is of no concern in a ritual setting. It is seen as just the way God made a person. The spirits help each person to simply be the person that they are. |
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[[File:Vodu Voodoo.jpg|thumb|right|A Vodun shrine in Tegbi, in the Volta region of Ghana, in 2021]] |
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====Orthodoxy and Diversity==== |
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The spirit temple is often referred to as the ''vodúnxɔ'' or the ''hunxɔ''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=60}} This may be located inside a practitioner's home, in a publicly accessible communal area, or hidden in a part of the forest accessible only to initiates.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=55}} Its location impacts who uses it; some are used only be a household, others by a village, and certain shrines attract international pilgrims.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=63}} |
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There is a diversity of practice in Vodou across the country of Haiti and the Haitian diaspora. For instance in the north of Haiti the sèvis tèt ("head washing") or kanzwe may be the only initiation, as it is in the Dominican Republic and Cuba, whereas in Port-au-Prince and the south they practice the kanzo rites with three grades of initiation – kanzo senp, si pwen, and asogwe – and the latter is the most familiar mode of practice outside of Haiti. Some lineages combine both, as Manbo Katherine Dunham reports from her personal experience in her book ''Island Possessed''. |
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For adherents, these shrines are deemed to be physical incarnations of the spirits,{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2016|1p=55|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=98}} and not simply images or representations of them.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=57}} Rosenthal called these shrines "god-objects".{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=43}} A wooden carved statue is referred to as a ''bòcyɔ''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=40}} |
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While the overall tendency in Vodou is very conservative in accord with its African roots, there is no singular, definitive form, only what is right in a particular house or lineage. Small details of service and the spirits served will vary from house to house, and information in books or on the internet therefore may seem contradictory. There is no central authority or "[[pope]]" in Haitian Vodou since "every manbo and houngan is the head of their own house", as a popular saying in Haiti goes. Another consideration in terms of Haitian diversity are the many sects besides the Sèvi Gine in Haiti such as the Makaya, Rara, and other secret societies, each of which has its own distinct pantheon of spirits. |
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Particular objects are selected for use in building a shrine based on intrinsic qualities they are believed to possess.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=56}} |
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====Survivals in the Southern US==== |
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The constituent parts of the shrine are dependent on the identity of the spirit being enshrined there. Fá for instance is enshrined in 16 palm nuts, while Xɛbyosò's shrines require ''sò kpɛn'' ("thunderstones') believed to have been created where lightning struck the earth.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=98, 101}} Gbǎdù, as the "mother of creation," often requires that her shrines incorporate a vagina, either of a deceased family matriarch or of an animal, along with camwood, charcoal, kaolin, and mud.{{sfn|Landry|2016|pp=57-58}} Lɛgbà, meanwhile, is represented by mounds of soil,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=101}} typically covering leaves and other objects buried within it.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=53}} There may also be some experimentation in the ingredients used in constructing the shrine, as practitioners hope to make the manifested spirit as efficacious as possible.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=62}} |
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[[File:Vodun shrine in Grand Popo Benin.jpg|thumb|left|A shrine to Lɛgbà]] |
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A common saying is that Haiti is 80% Roman Catholic and 100% Vodou. In the southern United States, it has also influenced the system of [[folklore|folk]] magic and [[folk religion]] known as [[hoodoo]] which derives primarily from [[Congo]] and [[Angola]]n magical practices from Central Africa. The best survivals of possibly Haitian-influenced religion in the southern US, however, are most likely to be found within the African-American Spiritual Churches of [[New Orleans]], a Christian sect founded by Mother [[Leafy Anderson]] in the early 20th century which incorporates Catholic iconography, ecstatic worship derived from Pentacostal forms, and [[spiritualism]]. A hallmark of the New Orleans Spiritual Churches is the honoring of the Native American spirit named [[Black Hawk]]. |
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Plant material is often used in building shrines,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=64}} with specific leaves being important in the process.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=67}} Offerings may be given to a tree from which material is harvested.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=59}} Shrines may also include material from endangered species, including leopard hides, bird eggs, parrot feathers, insects, and elephant ivory.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=98}} Various foreign initiates, while trying to leave West Africa, have found material intended for their shrines confiscated at airport customs.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=99}} |
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====Myths and Misconceptions==== |
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In a ritual that typically incorporates divination, sacrifices, and leaf baths for both the objects and the practitioner, the spirit is installed within these shrines.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=98}} It is the objects added, and the rituals performed while adding them, that are deemed to give the spirit its earthly power.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=55}} |
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Public relations-wise, Vodou has come to be associated in the popular mind with such phenomena as "[[zombie|zombies]]" and "voodoo dolls". While there is ethnobotanical evidence relating to "zombie" creation, it is a minor phenomenon within rural Haitian culture and not a part of the Vodou religion as such. Such things fall under the auspices of the "bokor" or sorcerer rather than the priest of the Lwa Gine. |
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An animal will usually be sacrificed to ensure the spirit manifests within the shrine;{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2016|1p=63|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=61}} it is believed that the animal charges the spirit's acɛ, which gives the shrine life.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=61}} For shrines to Lɛgbà, for instance, a rooster force-fed red palm oil will often by buried alive at the spot where the shrine is to be built.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=61}} |
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The practice of sticking pins in "voodoo dolls" has been used as a method of cursing an individual by some followers of what has come to be called "[[New Orleans Voodoo]]", which is a local variant of [[hoodoo]]. This practice is not unique to New Orleans "voodoo" however and has as much basis in European-based magical devices such as the "poppet" as the nkisi or bocio of West and Central Africa. In fact it has more basis in European traditions, as the nkisi or bocio figures used in Africa are in fact power objects, what in Haiti would be referred to as ''pwen'', rather than magical surrogates for an intended target of sorcery whether for boon or for bane. Such "voodoo" dolls are not a feature of Haitian religion, although dolls intended for tourists may be found in the Iron Market in Port au Prince. The practice became closely associated with the Vodou religions in the public mind through the vehicle of [[horror movie]]s. |
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When praying at a shrine, it is customary for a worshipper to leave a gift of money for the spirits.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=33}} There are often also pots around it in which offerings may be placed.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=53}} Wooden stakes may be impaled into the floor around the shrine as part of an individual's petition.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=52}} |
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In this material form, the spirits must be maintained, fed, and cared for.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=60}} |
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There is a practice in Haiti of nailing crude poppets with a discarded shoe on trees near the cemetery to act as messengers to the otherworld, which is very different in function from how poppets are portrayed as being used by "voodoo worshippers" in popular media and imagination, ie. for purposes of sympathetic magic towards another person. Another use of dolls in authentic Vodou practice is the incorporation of plastic doll babies in altars and objects used to represent or honor the spirits, or in ''pwen'', which recalls the aforementioned use of bocio and nkisi figures in Africa. One Haitian artist particularly known for his unusual sacred constructions using doll parts is Pierrot Barra of Port au Prince. |
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Offerings and prayers will be directed towards the shrine as a means of revitalising its power.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=56}} At many shrines, years of dried blood and palm oil have left a [[patina]] across the shrine and offering vessels.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=53}} Some have been maintained for hundreds of years.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=61}} Shrines may also be adorned and embellished with new objects gifted by devotees.{{sfn|Landry|2016|pp=63-64}} Shrines of Yalódè for instance may be adorned in brass bracelets, and those of Xɛbyosò with carved wooden axes.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=63}} Although these objects are not seen as part of the spirit's material body itself, they are thought to carry the deity's divine essence.{{sfn|Landry|2016|p=64}} |
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===Oró and Egúngún=== |
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The Oró and Egúngún groups are all-male secret societies.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=83}} In Beninese society, these groups command respect through fear.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=84}} In contemporary Benin, it is common for a young man to be initiated into both societies on the same day.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=84}} |
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A culture of secrecy surrounds the Egúngún society.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=116}} |
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== External links == |
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Once initiated, a man will be expected to have his own Egúngún mask made;{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=117}} these masks are viewed as embodiments of the ancestors.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=94}} Some people also make these masks, but do not consecrate or use them, for sale on the international art market, but other members of the society disapprove of this practice.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=95}} |
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*[http://www.pyramidofyeweh.org The West African Spirituality, Mystic and Religion] |
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* [http://www.dmoz.org/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/African/Diasporic/Vodou,_Vodun,_Voodoo/ Open Directory Project Vodou, Vodun, Voodoo category] |
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*[http://www.bj.refer.org/benin_ct/tur/vodoun/vodoun.htm Animisme au Bénin] |
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*[http://www.afrikaworld.net/afrel/zinzindohoue.htm TRADITIONAL RELIGION IN AFRICA:THE VODUN PHENOMENON IN BENIN] |
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*[http://www.geocities.com/chadofborg/breatheyesmemoryvaudou.html Haitian Religion, Ritual, and Tradition in Edwige Danticat's Breath, Eyes, Memory] |
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* [http://www.VodouShaman.com Vodou and Shamanism, Articles] |
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* [http://webs.ono.com/usr007/bextrema/vudu/ -In Spanish, Vudu Congo y Magia Negra- An introduction to traditional Vodun and myth-debunking] |
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* [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/089281134X/ref=pd_pym_ka/103-3544604-2853467 Vodou Shaman, book, Haitian Vodou] |
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[[Category:Vodun]] |
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[[Category:Haiti]][[Category:Afro-American religion]] |
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===Possession=== |
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[[da:Voodoo]] |
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Possession is part of most Vodún cults.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=173}} Rosenthal noted, from her ethnographic research in Togo, that females were more often possessed than males.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=43}} Her research also found children as young as 10 being possessed, although most were over 15.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=43}} In some ''vodún'' groups, priests will rarely go into [[possession trance]] as they are responsible for overseeing the broader ceremony.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=43}} |
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[[de:Voodoo]] |
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[[es:Vudú]] |
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The possessed person is often referred to as the ''vodún'' itself.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=48}} Once the person has received the spirit, they will often be dressed in attire suitable for that possessing entity.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|pp=7, 47}} The possessed will address other attendees, offering them advice on illnesses, conduct, and making promises.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=50}} When a person is possessed, they may be cared for by another individual.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=43}} Those possessed often enjoy the prestige of having hosted their deities.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=42}} |
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[[it:Vodun]] |
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[[nl:Voodoo]] |
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===Offerings and animal sacrifice=== |
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[[ja:ブードゥー教]] |
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[[File:Voodoo Ceremony in Abomey.jpg|thumb|right|An animal sacrifice at a shrine in Abomey, Benin in 2004]] |
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[[pl:Voodoo]] |
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[[pt:Vodu]] |
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Vodun involves animal sacrifices to both ancestors and other spirits,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=61}} a practice called ''vɔ'' in Fon.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=53}} Animal species commonly used for sacrifice include birds, dogs, cats, goats, rams, and bulls.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=49}} There is ample evidence that in parts of West Africa, [[human sacrifice]] was also performed prior to European colonisation, such as in the [[Dahomey]] kingdom during the [[Annual Customs of Dahomey]].{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=176}} |
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[[ru:Вуду]] |
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[[sv:Voodoo]] |
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Typically, a message to the spirits will be spoken into the animal's ear and its throat will then be cut.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=54}} The shrine itself will be covered in the victim's blood.{{sfnm|1a1=Rosenthal|1y=1998|1p=43|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2pp=54, 61}} This is done to feed the spirit by nourishing its ''acɛ''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=55, 61}} Practitioners believe that this act maintains the relationship between humans and the spirits.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=61}} The meat will be cooked and consumed by the attendees,{{sfnm|1a1=Rosenthal|1y=1998|1p=43|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2pp=55, 61}} something believed to bestow blessing from the ''vodún'' for the person eating it.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=50}} The individual who killed the animal will often take ritual precautions to pacify their victim and discourage their spirit from taking vengeance upon them.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|pp=43, 52}} |
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[[zh:伏都教]] |
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Among followers in the United States, where butchery skills are far rarer, it is less common for practitioners to eat the meat.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=62}} Also present in the U.S. are practitioners who have rejected the role of animal sacrifice in Vodun, deeming it barbaric.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1pp=190-191|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=62}} |
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===Initiation=== |
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[[File:Skulls at Akodessawa Fetish Market 2016.jpg|thumb|right|Animal heads and other body parts, sold for ritual uses, at the Akodessawa Market in Lomé, Togo in 2015]] |
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Initiation bestows a person with the power of a ''vodún''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=11}} It results in long-term obligations to the spirits that a person has received; that person is expected to honour their spirits with praise, to feed them, and to supply them with money, while in turn the spirit offers benefits to the initiate, giving them promises of protection, abundance, long-life, and a large family.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=98}} |
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The typical age of a person being initiated varies between spirit cults; in some cases children are preferred.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=176}} |
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The process of initiation can last from a few months to a few years.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=3}} It differs among spirit cults; in Benin, Fá initiation usually takes less than a week, whereas initiations into the cults of other ''vodún'' may take several weeks or months.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=143}} Initiation is expensive;{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=32}} especially high sums are generally charged for foreigners seeking initiation or training.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=9, 32}} |
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Practitioners believe that some spirits embody powers that are too intense for non-initiates.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=11}} |
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Being initiated is described as "to find the spirit's depths".{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=7}} Animal sacrifice is a typical feature of initiation.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=61}} |
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Trainees will often be expected to learn many different types of leaves and respective qualities.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=65}} |
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===Divination=== |
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Divination plays an important role in Vodún.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=139}} Different ''vodún'' groups often utilise different divinatory methods; the priestesses of Mamíwátá for instance employ [[scrying|mirror gazing]], while the priests of Tron use [[kola nut]] divination.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=139}} |
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Across Vodún's practitioners, Fá is often deemed the best form of divination.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1p=181|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=139}} Its initiates claim that it is the only system that has sufficient ''acɛ'' to be consistently accurate.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1p=181|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=139}} This is a system adopted from the Yoruba.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=57, 154}} Fá diviners typically believe that the priests of other spirits do not have the right to read the sacred signs of Fá.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=11}} A consultation with an initiate is termed a ''fákínan''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=47}} |
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In Vodun, a diviner is called a ''bokónó''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=43}} A successful diviner is expected to provide solutions to their client's problem, for instance selling them charms, spiritual baths, or ceremonies to alleviate their issue.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=44}} The fee charged will often vary depending on the client, with the diviner charging a reduced rate for family members and a more expensive rate to either tourists or to middle and upper-class Beninese.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=44}} |
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Diviners will often recommend that their client seeks initiation.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=46}} |
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===Healing and ''bǒ''=== |
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[[File:Musée Vodou collection Arbogast Strasbourg mai 2014-23.jpg|thumb|right|A Ewe ''bǒciɔ'' made in the latter half of the 20th century, on display in [[Strasbourg]].]] |
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Healing is a central element of Vodún.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=125}} |
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The Fon term ''bǒ'' can be translated into English as "charm"; many Francophone Beninese refer to them as ''gris gris''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=107}} These are amulets made from zoological and botanical material that is then activated using secret incantations,{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=107-108}} the latter called ''bǒgbé'' ("bǒ's language").{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=111}} Families or individuals often keep their recipes for creating ''bǒ'' a closely guarded secret;{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=108}} there is a widespread belief that if someone else discovers the precise ingredients they will have power over its maker.{{sfn|Blier|1995a|pp=20-21}} ''Bǒ'' are often sold;{{sfnm|1a1=Blier|1y=1995a|1p=21|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=108}} tourists for instance often buy them to aid in attracting love, wealth, or protection while travelling.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=110}} |
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''Bǒ'' designed for specific functions may have particular names; a ''zǐn bǒ'' is alleged to offer invisibility while a ''fifó bǒ'' provides the power of translocation.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=108}} |
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Anthropomorphic figurines produced especially in the Fon and Ayizo area of southern Benin are commonly called ''bǒciɔ'' ("bǒ cadaver").{{sfn|Blier|1995a|p=2}} These ''bǒciɔ'' are often kept within a shrine or house—sometimes concealed in the rafters or under a bed—although in some places have also been situated outside, in public spaces.{{sfn|Blier|1995a|pp=16-17}} Although ''bǒciɔ'' are not intended as representations of ''vodún'',{{sfn|Blier|1995a|p=5}} early European travellers who encountered these objects labelled them "[[Idolatry|idols]]" and "[[Fetishism|fetishes]]".{{sfn|Blier|1995a|p=7}} |
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===''Azě''=== |
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Another belief in Vodún is in ''azě'', a universal and invisible power,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=114}} and one which many practitioners regard as the most powerful spiritual force available.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=105}} In English, ''azě'' has sometimes been translated as "[[witchcraft]]".{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=105}} Several ''vodún'', such as Kɛnnɛsi, Mǐnɔna, and Gbădu, are thought to draw their power from ''azě''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=114}} |
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Many practitioners draw a distinction between ''azě wiwi'', the destructive and harmful side of this power, and ''azě wèwé'', its protective and benevolent side.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=106}} People who claim to use this power call themselves ''azětɔ'' and typically insist that they employ ''azě wèwé'' to protect their families from ''azě wiwi''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=106-107}} In Vodún lore, becoming an ''azětɔ'' comes at a cost, for the ''azě'' gives the practitioner a propensity for illness and shortens their life.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=107}} |
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According to Vodún belief, ''azěto wiwi'' are capable of transforming into animals and flying.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=108}} To become an ''azěto wiwi'', an individual must use ''azě'' to kill someone, commonly a relative.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=107}} In the tradition, practitioners of ''azě wiwi'' send their soul out at night, where they gather with other practitioners to plot how they will devour other people's souls, ultimately killing them.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=125}} Owls, black cats, and vultures are all regarded as dangerous agents of ''azě''.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=114}} Many people fear that their success will attract the envy of malevolent ''azětɔ'' within their family or neighbourhood.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=114}} The identity of the ''azěto wiwi'', many practitioners believe, can be ascertained through divination.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=179}} |
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Landry found that everyone he encountered in Benin believed in ''azě'' to various degrees,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=127}} whereas many non-Africans arriving for initiation were more sceptical of its existence.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1pp=176-178|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2pp=132-133}} |
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==History== |
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===Pre-colonial history=== |
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[[File:Gbe languages.png|thumb|right|Area of Vodún practice encompassing Ewe and Fon populations]] |
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Landry noted that prior to European colonialism, Vodún was not identified as "a monolithic religion" but was "a social system made of countless spirit and ancestor cults that existed without religious boundaries."{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=5}} Many of these cults were closely interwoven with political structures, sometimes representing something akin to [[state religion]]s.{{sfn|Forte|2010a|p=184}} |
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From the early 16th century, waves of Adja and related peoples migrated eastward, establishing close ties with each other and forming the basis for the emergent Fon people.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=9}} The Fon made contact with Portuguese sailors in the 16th century and subsequently also the French, British, Dutch, and Danish in the 17th and 18th centuries.{{sfn|Rush|2017|p=9}} |
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The 17th century saw the rise of the Dahomey state in this area of West Africa.{{sfn|Blier|1995a|p=5}} This generated religious change; early in the 17th century, Dahomey's king [[Agaja]] conquered the Xwedá kingdom (in what is now southern Benin) and the Xwedá's serpent ''vodún'' came to be widely adopted by the Fon.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=174}} |
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From ''circa'' 1727 to 1823, Dahomey was a [[vassal state]] of [[Oyo Empire|Oyo]], the Yoruba-led kingdom to the east, with this period seeing considerable religious exchange between the two.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=57}} Fon peoples adopted the Fá, Oró, and Egúngún cults from the Yoruba.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=57}} Fá was for instance present among the Fon by the reign of Dahomey's fifth ruler, [[Tegbesu]] (r.1732-74) and by the reign of [[Gezo]] (r.1818-58) had become well established in the Dahomean royal palace.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=57}} |
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As a result of the [[Atlantic slave trade]], practitioners of Vodún were enslaved and transported to the Americas, where their practices influenced those of developing African diasporic traditions.{{sfn|Landry|2015|p=186}} Coupled with [[Kongo religion|the religion]] of the [[Kongo people]] from Central Africa, the Vodún religion of the Fon became one of the two main influences on Haitian Vodou.{{sfn|Bellegarde-Smith|Michel|2006|p=xix}} Like the name {{lang|ht|Vodou}} itself, many of the terms used in this creolised Haitian religion derive from the Fon language;{{sfnm|1a1=Blier|1y=1995b|1p=86|2a1=Cosentino|2y=1995|2pp=29-30}} including the names of many deities, which in Haiti are called {{lang|ht|lwa}}.{{sfn|Métraux|1972|p=28}} In Brazil, the dominant African diasporic religion became Candomblé and this was divided into various traditions called ''nacoes'' ("nations"). Of these ''nacoes'', the Jeje tradition uses terms borrowed from Ewe and Fon languages,{{sfnm|1a1=Wafer|1y=1991|1p=5|2a1=Álvarez López|2a2=Edfeldt|2y=2007|2p=161}} for instance referring to its spirit deities as ''vodun''.{{sfn|Capone|2010|p=268}} |
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===Colonialism and Christianity=== |
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[[File:Danses de féticheuses (Dahomey) (7).jpg|thumb|right|A ritual dance in Dahomey photographed in the 1920s]] |
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In 1890, France invaded Dahomey and dethroned its king, [[Béhanzin]].{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=17}} In 1894, it became a French protectorate under a puppet king, [[Agoli-agbo]], but in 1900 the French ousted him and abolished the Kingdom of Dahomey.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=17}} To the west, the area that became Togo became [[Togoland|a German protectorate]] in 1884. Germany maintained control until 1919 when, following their defeat in the [[First World War]], the eastern portion became part of the [[Gold Coast (British colony)|British Gold Coast]] and the western part became [[French Togoland|French territory]].{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=18}} |
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Christian missionaries were active in this part of West Africa from the 18th century. A German [[Presbyterianism|Presbyterian]] mission had established in the [[Gold Coast (region)|Gold Coast]] in 1737 before spreading their efforts into the [[Slave Coast of West Africa|Slave Coast]] in the 19th century. These Presbyterians attempted to break adherence to Vodún in the southern and plateau regions.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=20}} The 19th century also saw conversion efforts launched by Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Methodist missionaries.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=20}} |
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Although proving less of an influence than Christianity, [[Islam]] also impacted Vodún, reflected in the occasional use of Islamic script in the construction of Vodún charms.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1p=198|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=179}} |
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===Post-colonial history=== |
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In 1960, Dahomey became an independent state,{{sfnm|1a1=Forte|1y=2010a|1p=177|2a1=Rush|2y=2017|2p=10|3a1=Landry|3y=2019|3p=17}} as did Togo.{{sfn|Rosenthal|1998|p=17}} |
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In 1972, [[Mathieu Kérékou]] seized power of Dahomey in [[1972 Dahomeyan coup d'état|a military coup]] and subsequently transformed it into a [[Marxism-Leninism|Marxist-Leninist]] state, the [[People's Republic of Benin]].{{sfnm|1a1=Forte|1y=2010a|1p=177|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2pp=17-18}} Kérékou believed that Vodún wasted time, money, and resources that were better spent on economic development.{{sfnm|1a1=Forte|1y=2010a|1pp=177-178|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=55}} In 1973 he banned Vodún ceremonies during the rainy season, with further measures to suppress the religion following throughout the 1970s.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=17-18}} Under Kérékou's rule, Vodun priests had to perform new initiations in secret, and the duration of the initiatory process was often shortened from a period of years to one of months, weeks, or days.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=55}} |
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In 1989, Benin transitioned to democratic governance.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=18}} After becoming prime minister in 1991, [[Nicéphore Soglo]] lifted many anti-Vodún laws.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=18}} The Beninese government planned "Ouidah '92: The First International Festival of Vodun Arts and Cultures," which took place in 1993;{{sfnm|1a1=Forte|1y=2010a|1p=175|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=18}} among the special guests invited were [[Pierre Verger]] and [[Mama Lola]], reflecting attempts to build links across the African diaspora.{{sfn|Forte|2010a|p=184}} It also established 10 January as "National Vodún Day."{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=18}} From the 1990s, the Beninese government increasingly made a concerted effort to encourage Vodún-themed tourism, hoping that many foreigners would come seeking initiation.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=3, 13}} |
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By the late 1960s, some American [[Black nationalism|black nationalists]] were travelling to West Africa to gain initiation into Vodún or Yoruba religion.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=3}} By the late 1980s, some white middle-class Americans began arriving for the same reason.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=3}} |
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Some initiates of Haitian Vodou or Santería still go to West Africa for initiation as they believe that it is there that the "real secrets" or "true spiritual power" can be found;{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=10}} the majority of arrivals seek initiation into Fá.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=173}} West Africans have also taken the religion to the U.S., where it has interacted and blended with diasporic religions like Vodou and Santería.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2016|1p=55|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=158}} Many West African practitioners have seen the international promotion of Vodún as a means of healing the world and countering hate and violence,{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=159}} as well as a means of promoting their own ritual abilities to an international audience, which will potentially attract new clients.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=120}} |
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==Demographics== |
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[[File:Vodun altar in Heve, Grand-Popo, Benin.jpg|thumb|right|A Vodun altar in Grand-Popo, Benin photographed in 2018]] |
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About 17% of the population of Benin, some 1.6 million people, follow Vodun. (This does not count other traditional religions in Benin.) In addition, many of the 41.5% of the population that refer to themselves as "Christian" practice a syncretized religion, not dissimilar from Haitian Vodou or Brazilian [[Candomblé]]; indeed, many of them are descended from freed Brazilian slaves who settled on the coast near Ouidah.<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite web |url=https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/benin/ |title=CIA Fact Book: Benin |publisher=Cia.gov |access-date=2014-08-10 |archive-date=2021-06-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210618100316/https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/benin/ |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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In [[Togo]], about half the population practices indigenous religions, of which Vodun is by far the largest, with some 2.5 million followers; there may be another million Vodunists among the Ewe of Ghana, as a 13% of the total Ghana population of 20 million are Ewe and 38% of Ghanaians practice traditional religion. According to census data, about 14 million people practice traditional religion in Nigeria, most of whom are Yoruba practicing [[Ifá]], but no specific breakdown is available.<ref name="autogenerated1"/> |
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Although initially present only among West Africans, Vodún is not followed by people of many races, ethnicities, nationalities, and classes.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=166}} Foreigners who come for initiation are predominantly from the United States;{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=119}} many of them have already explored African diasporic traditions like Haitian Vodou, Santería, or Candomblé, or alternatively Western esoteric religions such as [[Wicca]].{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=132}} Many of the spiritual tourists who arrived in West Africa had little or no Fon or French, nor an understanding of the region's cultural and social norms.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=14}} Some of these foreigners seek initiation so that they can initiate others as a source of revenue.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=91-92}} |
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==Reception and influence== |
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[[File:Vodun Voodoo Shrine - Abomey - Benin - 03.jpg|thumb|right|A shrine in Abomey, Benin]] |
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In the view of some foreign observers, Vodún is [[Satanism]] and demon worship.{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=50}} Although seeing its deities as malevolent demons, many West African Christians still regard Vodún as being effective and powerful.{{sfnm|1a1=Landry|1y=2015|1p=175|2a1=Landry|2y=2019|2p=131}} |
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Some Beninese regard Christianity as "less worrisome and less expensive" than Vodún;{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=47}} many individuals converted to Christianity to deal with bewitchment, believing that Jesus could heal and protect them for free, whereas any ''vodún'' offering to counter witches would extract a substantial price.{{sfn|Landry|2019|pp=129-130}} |
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==References== |
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===Citations=== |
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{{Reflist|25em}} |
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===Sources=== |
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{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Álvarez López |first1=Laura |last2=Edfeldt |first2=Chatarina |chapter=The Role of Language in the Construction of Gender and Ethnic-Religious Identities in Brazilian-Candomblé Communities |title=Language and Religious Identity: Women in Discourse |editor=Allyson Jule |year=2007 |pages=149–171 |location=Oxford |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn= 978-0230517295 }} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Bellegarde-Smith |first1=Patrick |last2=Michel |first2=Claudine |chapter=Introduction |editor-last1=Bellegarde-Smith |editor-first1=Patrick |editor-last2=Michel |editor-first2=Claudine |title=Haitian Vodou: Spirit, Myth and Reality |publisher=Indiana University Press |location=Bloomington and Indianapolis |year=2006 |pages=xvii–xxvii |isbn=978-0-253-21853-7}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Blier |first=Suzanne Preston |title=African Vodun: Art, Psychology, and Power |location=Chicago and London |publisher=University of Chicago Press |year=1995a |isbn=978-0226058603}} |
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* {{cite book |last = Blier |first = Suzanne Preston | editor-first = Cosentino | editor-last = Donald J. | title = Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou | publisher = Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History | year = 1995b | pages = 61–87 | chapter = Vodun: West African Roots of Vodou | isbn = 0-930741-47-1 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Capone |first=Stefania |year=2010 |title=Searching for Africa in Brazil: Power and Tradition in Candomblé |translator=Lucy Lyall Grant |location=Durham and London |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=978-0-8223-4636-4 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Cosentino |first=Donald J. |editor-first=Cosentino |editor-last=Donald J. |title=Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou |publisher=Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History |year=1995 |pages=25–55 |chapter=Imagine Heaven |isbn=0-930741-47-1 }} |
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* {{cite journal | last1 = Fandrich | first1 = Ina J. |title=Yorùbá Influences on Haitian Vodou and New Orleans Voodoo | journal = Journal of Black Studies | volume = 37 | issue = 5 | pages = 775–791 | year = 2007 | jstor = 40034365 | doi=10.1177/0021934705280410 | s2cid = 144192532 }} |
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* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Forte |first=Jung Ran |year=2010a |contribution=Vodun Ancestry, Diaspora Homecoming, and the Ambiguities of Transnational Belongings in the Republic of Benin |title=Global Circuits of Blackness: Interrogating the African Diaspora |editor1=Percy C. Hintzen |editor2=Jean Muteba Rahier |editor3=Felipe Smith |publisher=University of Illinois Press |location= |pages=174–200 |isbn=978-0252077531}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Landry |first=Timothy R. |year=2015 |title=Vodún, Globalisation, and the Creative Layering of Belief in Southern Benin |journal=Journal of Religion in Africa |volume=45 |issue=2 |pages=170–199 }} |
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* {{Cite journal|last=Landry|first=Timothy R.|year=2016|title=Incarnating Spirits, Composing Shrines, and Cooking Divine Power in Vodún|journal=Material Religion|volume=12|pages=50–73|doi=10.1080/17432200.2015.1120086|s2cid=148063421}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Landry |first=Timothy R. |year=2019 |title=Vodún: Secrecy and the Search for Divine Power |location=Philadelphia |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |series=Contemporary Ethnography |isbn=978-0812250749 }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Long |first=Carolyn Morrow |title=Perceptions of New Orleans Voodoo: Sin, Fraud, Entertainment, and Religion |journal=Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions |volume=6 |issue=1 |year=2002 |pages=86–101 |doi=10.1525/nr.2002.6.1.86 |jstor=10.1525/nr.2002.6.1.86 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Métraux |first=Alfred |title=Voodoo in Haiti |year=1972 |orig-year=1959 |translator=Hugo Charteris |location=New York |publisher=Schocken Books }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Rosenthal |first=Judy |title=Possession, Ecstasy and Law in Ewe Voodoo |year=1998 |location=Charlottesville and London |publisher=University of Virginia Press |isbn=978-0813918044}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Rush |first=Diana |year=2017 |origyear=2013 |title=Vodun in Coastal Bénin: Unfinished, Open-Ended, Global |location=Nashville |publisher=Vanderbilt University Press |series=Critical Investigations of the African Diaspora |isbn=978-0826519085 }} |
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* {{cite book |first=Jim |last=Wafer |title=The Taste of Blood: Spirit Possession in Brazilian Candomblé |year=1991 |location=[[Philadelphia]] |publisher=[[University of Pennsylvania Press]] |isbn=978-0-8122-1341-6 }} |
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{{refend}} |
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==Further reading== |
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{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Aronson |first=Lisa |year=2007 |title=Ewe Ceramics as the Visualisation of Vodun |journal=African Arts |volume=40 |issue=1 |pages=80–85}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Bay |first=Edna |year=2008 |title=Asen, Ancestors, and Vodun: Tracing Change in African Art |location=Urbana |publisher=University of Illinois Press}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Falen |first=Douglas J. |year=2007 |title=Good and Bad Witches: The Transformation of Witchcraft in Bénin |journal=West Africa Review |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=1–27}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Falen |first=Douglas J. |year=2018 |title=African Science: Witchcraft, Vodun, and Healing in Southern Benin |publisher=University of Wisconsin Press |isbn=978-0299318901}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Forte |first=Jung Ran |year=2010 |title=Black Gods, White Bodies: Westerners' Initiations in Contemporary Benin |journal=Transforming Anthropology |volume=18 |issue=2 |pages=129–145}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Meyer |first=Birgit |year=1999 |title=Translating the Devil: Religion and Modernity among the Ewe in Ghana |location=Edinburgh |publisher=Edinburgh University Press }} |
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* {{cite book |last1=Montgomery |first1=Eric |last2=Vannier |first2=Christian |year=2017 |title=An Ethnography of a Vodu Shrine in Southern Togo: Of Spirit, Slave and Sea |series=Studies of Religion in Africa |location=Leiden |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-34108-1 }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Strandsberg |first=Camilla |year=2000 |title=Kérékou, God of the Ancestors: Religion and the Conception of Political Power in Benin |journal=African Affairs |volume=99 |issue=396 |pages=395–414}} |
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{{refend}} |
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==External links== |
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{{Commons category|West African Vodun}} |
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* [http://www.afrikaworld.net/afrel/zinzindohoue.htm Traditional Religion in Africa:The Vodun Phenomenon in Benin] |
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* [https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1666721 Voodoo and West Africa's Spiritual Life] |
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{{Portal bar|Traditional African religion}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:West African Vodun| ]] |
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[[Category:Kingdom of Dahomey]] |
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[[Category:Religion in Benin]] |
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[[Category:Religion in Ghana]] |
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[[Category:Religion in Nigeria]] |
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[[Category:Religion in Togo]] |
Latest revision as of 23:29, 22 December 2024
Vodún or vodúnsínsen is an African traditional religion practiced by the Aja, Ewe, and Fon peoples of Benin, Togo, Ghana, and Nigeria. Practitioners are commonly called vodúnsɛntó or Vodúnisants.
Vodún teaches the existence of a supreme creator divinity, under whom are lesser spirits called vodúns. Many of these deities are associated with specific areas, but others are venerated widely throughout West Africa; some have been absorbed from other religions, including Christianity and Hinduism. The vodún are believed to physically manifest in shrines and there are provided with offerings, typically including animal sacrifices. There are several all-male secret societies, including Oró and Egúngún, into which individuals receive initiation. Various forms of divination are used to gain information from the vodún, the most prominent of which is Fá, itself governed by a society of initiates.
Amid the Atlantic slave trade of the 16th to the 19th century, vodúnsɛntó were among the enslaved Africans transported to the Americas. There, their traditional religions influenced the development of new religions such as Haitian Vodou, Louisiana Voodoo, and Brazilian Candomblé Jejé. Since the 1990s, there have been growing efforts to encourage foreign tourists to visit West Africa and receive initiation into Vodún.
Many vodúnsɛntó practice their traditional religion alongside Christianity, for instance by interpreting Jesus Christ as a vodún. Although primarily found in West Africa, since the late 20th century the religion has also spread abroad and is practised by people of varied ethnicities and nationalities.
Definition
[edit]Vodún is a religion.[1] The anthropologist Timothy R. Landry noted that, although the term Vodún is commonly used, a more accurate name for the religion was vodúnsínsen, meaning "spirit worship".[2] The spelling Vodún is commonly used to distinguish the West African religion from the Haitian religion more usually spelled Vodou;[2] this in turn is often used to differentiate it from Louisiana Voodoo.[3] An alternative spelling sometimes used for the West African religion is Vodu.[4] The religion's adherents are referred to as vodúnsɛntó or, in the French language, Vodúnisants.[2]
Vodún is "the predominant religious system" of southern Benin, Togo, and parts of southeast Ghana.[5] The anthropologist Judy Rosenthal noted that "Fon and Ewe forms of Vodu worship are virtually the same".[6] It is part of the same network of religions that include Yoruba religion as well as African diasporic traditions like Haitian Vodou, Cuban Santería, and Brazilian Candomblé.[7] As a result of centuries of interaction between Fon and Yoruba peoples, Landry noted that Vodún and Yoruba religion were "at times, indistinguishable or at least, blurry".[8]
Vodún is a fragmented religion divided into "independent small cult units" devoted to particular spirits.[9] As a tradition, Vodún is not doctrinal,[10] with no orthodoxy,[9] and no central text.[10] It is amorphous and flexible,[11] changing and adapting in different situations,[12] and emphasising efficacy over dogma.[13] It is open to ongoing revision,[10] being eclectic and absorbing elements from many cultural backgrounds,[7] including from other parts of Africa but also from Europe, Asia, and the Americas.[14] West African religions commonly absorb elements from elsewhere regardless of their origin;[15] in West Africa, many individuals draw upon African traditional religions, Christianity, and Islam simultaneously to deal with life's issues.[16] In West Africa, vodúnsɛntó sometimes abandon their religion for forms of Christianity like Evangelical Protestantism,[17] although there are also Christians who convert to Vodún.[18] A common approach is for people to practice Christianity while also engaging in Vodún rituals,[19] although there are also vodúnsɛntó who reject Christianity, deeming it incompatible with their tradition.[20]
Beliefs
[edit]In Vodún, belief is centred around efficacy rather than Christian notions of faith.[21]
Theology
[edit]Vodún teaches the existence of a single divine creator being.[5] Below this entity are an uncountable number of spirits who govern different aspects of nature and society.[5] The term vodún comes from the Gbé languages of the Niger-Congo language family.[22] It translates as "spirit", "god", "divinity", or "presence".[7] Among Fon-speaking Yoruba communities, the Fon term vodún is regarded as being synonymous with the Yoruba language term òrìs̩à.[13]
The art historian Suzanne Preston Blier called these "mysterious forces or powers that govern the world and the lives of those who reside within it".[23] The religion is continually open to the incorporation of new spirit deities, while those that are already venerated may change and take on new aspects.[24] Some Vodún practitioners for instance refer to Jesus Christ as the vodún of the Christians.[13]
A common belief is that the vodún came originally from the sea.[25] The spirits are thought to dwell in Kútmómɛ ("land of the dead"), an invisible world parallel to that of humanity.[26] The vodún spirits have their own individual likes and dislikes;[10] each also has particular songs, dances, and prayers directed to them.[10] These spirits are deemed to manifest within the natural world.[27] When kings introduced new deities to the Fon people, it was often believed that these enhanced the king's power.[28]
The cult of each vodún has its own particular beliefs and practices.[29] It may also have its own restrictions on membership, with some groups only willing to initiate family members.[30] People may venerate multiple vodún, sometimes also attending services at a Christian church.[31]
Lɛgbà is the spirit of the crossroads who opens up communication between humanity and the spirit world.[32] Sakpatá is the vodún of earth and smallpox,[33] but over time has come to be associated with new diseases like HIV/AIDS.[34] The Dàn spirits are all serpents;[35] Dàn is a serpent vodún associated with riches and cool breezes.[36] Xɛbyosò or Hɛvioso is the spirit of thunder.[37] Gŭ is the spirit of metal and blacksmithing,[38] and in more recent decades has come to be associated with metal vehicles like cars, trains, and planes.[24] Gbădu is the wife of Fá.[39] Tron is the spirit of the kola nut;[40] he was recently introduced to the Vodún pantheon via Ewe speakers from Ghana and Togo.[41]
Some Beninese acknowledge that certain Yoruba orisa are more powerful than certain vodún.[42]
Also part of the Vodun worldview is the azizǎ, a type of forest spirit.[43]
Prayers to the vodún usually include requests for financial wealth.[44] Practitioners seek to gain well-being by focusing on the health and remembrance of their families.[45] There may be restrictions on who can venerate the deity; practitioners believe that women must be kept apart from Gbădu's presence, for if they get near her they may be struck barren or die.[39] Devotion to a particular deity may be marked in different ways; devotees of the smallpox spirit Sakpatá for instance scar their bodies to resemble smallpox scars.[34]
Patterns of Vodun worship follow various dialects, spirits, practices, songs, and rituals. The divine Creator, called variously Mawu or Mahu, is a female being. She is an elder woman, and usually a mother who is gentle and forgiving. She is also seen as the god who owns all other gods and even if there is no temple made in her name, the people continue to pray to her, especially in times of distress. In one tradition, she bore seven children. Sakpata: Vodun of the Earth, Xêvioso (or Xêbioso): Vodun of Thunder, also associated with divine justice,[46] Agbe: Vodun of the Sea, Gû: Vodun of Iron and War, Agê: Vodun of Agriculture and Forests, Jo: Vodun of Air, and Lêgba: Vodun of the Unpredictable.[47]
The Creator embodies a dual cosmogonic principle of which Mawu the moon and Lisa the sun are respectively the female and male aspects, often portrayed as the twin children of the Creator.[48] In other stories, Mawu-Lisa is depicted as a single hermaphroditic person capable of impregnating herself, with two faces rather than being twins.[49] In other branches, the Creator and other vodus are known by different names, such as Sakpo-Disa (Mawu), Aholu (Sakpata), and Anidoho (Da), Gorovodu.[50]
The soul
[edit]Among the Fon, a common belief is that the head is the seat of a person's soul.[34] The head is thus of symbolic importance in Vodún.[34]
Some Vodún traditions specifically venerate spirits of deceased humans. The Mama Tchamba tradition for instances honours slaves from the north who are believed to have become ancestors of contemporary Ewe people.[51] Similarly, the Gorovodu tradition also venerates enslaved northerners, who are described as being from the Hausa, Kaybe, Mossi, and Tchamba ethnicities.[31]
Acɛ
[edit]An important concept in Vodún is acɛ, a notion also shared by Yoruba religion and various African diasporic religions influenced by them.[52] Landry defined acɛ as "divine power".[53] It is the acɛ of an object that is deemed to provide it with its power and efficacy.[52]
Practice
[edit]The anthropologist Dana Rush noted that Vodun "permeates virtually all aspects of life for its participants".[5] As a tradition, it prioritises action and getting things done.[10] Rosenthal found that, among members of the Gorovodu tradition, people stated that they followed the religion because it helped to heal their children when the latter fell sick.[54] Financial transactions play an important role, with both the vodún and their priests typically expecting payment for their services.[55]
Landry described the religion as being "deeply esoteric".[56] A male priest may be referred to with the Fon word hùngán.[55] These practitioners may advertise their ritual services using radio, television, billboard adverts, and the internet.[57] There are individuals who claim the title of the "supreme child of Vodún in Benin", however there are competing claimants to the title and it is little recognised outside Ouidah.[58]
The forest is a major symbol in Vodún.[13] Vodun practitioners believe that many natural materials contain supernatural powers, including leaves, meteorites, kaolin, soil from the crossroads, the feathers of African grey parrots, turtle shells, and dried chameleons.[59] Landry stated that a connection to the natural environment was "a dominant theme" in the religion.[59] The forest in particular is important in Vodun cosmology, and learning the power of the forest and of particular leaves that can be found there is a recurring theme among practitioners.[60] Leaves, according to Landry, are "building blocks for the spirits' power and material presence on earth".[59] Leaves will often be immersed in water to create vodùnsin (vodun water), which is used to wash both new shrines and new initiates.[61]
Shrines
[edit]The spirit temple is often referred to as the vodúnxɔ or the hunxɔ.[62] This may be located inside a practitioner's home, in a publicly accessible communal area, or hidden in a part of the forest accessible only to initiates.[63] Its location impacts who uses it; some are used only be a household, others by a village, and certain shrines attract international pilgrims.[64]
For adherents, these shrines are deemed to be physical incarnations of the spirits,[65] and not simply images or representations of them.[66] Rosenthal called these shrines "god-objects".[67] A wooden carved statue is referred to as a bòcyɔ.[68]
Particular objects are selected for use in building a shrine based on intrinsic qualities they are believed to possess.[52] The constituent parts of the shrine are dependent on the identity of the spirit being enshrined there. Fá for instance is enshrined in 16 palm nuts, while Xɛbyosò's shrines require sò kpɛn ("thunderstones') believed to have been created where lightning struck the earth.[69] Gbǎdù, as the "mother of creation," often requires that her shrines incorporate a vagina, either of a deceased family matriarch or of an animal, along with camwood, charcoal, kaolin, and mud.[70] Lɛgbà, meanwhile, is represented by mounds of soil,[71] typically covering leaves and other objects buried within it.[36] There may also be some experimentation in the ingredients used in constructing the shrine, as practitioners hope to make the manifested spirit as efficacious as possible.[56]
Plant material is often used in building shrines,[60] with specific leaves being important in the process.[61] Offerings may be given to a tree from which material is harvested.[72] Shrines may also include material from endangered species, including leopard hides, bird eggs, parrot feathers, insects, and elephant ivory.[73] Various foreign initiates, while trying to leave West Africa, have found material intended for their shrines confiscated at airport customs.[74]
In a ritual that typically incorporates divination, sacrifices, and leaf baths for both the objects and the practitioner, the spirit is installed within these shrines.[73] It is the objects added, and the rituals performed while adding them, that are deemed to give the spirit its earthly power.[63]
An animal will usually be sacrificed to ensure the spirit manifests within the shrine;[75] it is believed that the animal charges the spirit's acɛ, which gives the shrine life.[26] For shrines to Lɛgbà, for instance, a rooster force-fed red palm oil will often by buried alive at the spot where the shrine is to be built.[26] When praying at a shrine, it is customary for a worshipper to leave a gift of money for the spirits.[76] There are often also pots around it in which offerings may be placed.[36] Wooden stakes may be impaled into the floor around the shrine as part of an individual's petition.[77]
In this material form, the spirits must be maintained, fed, and cared for.[78] Offerings and prayers will be directed towards the shrine as a means of revitalising its power.[52] At many shrines, years of dried blood and palm oil have left a patina across the shrine and offering vessels.[36] Some have been maintained for hundreds of years.[27] Shrines may also be adorned and embellished with new objects gifted by devotees.[79] Shrines of Yalódè for instance may be adorned in brass bracelets, and those of Xɛbyosò with carved wooden axes.[64] Although these objects are not seen as part of the spirit's material body itself, they are thought to carry the deity's divine essence.[80]
Oró and Egúngún
[edit]The Oró and Egúngún groups are all-male secret societies.[81] In Beninese society, these groups command respect through fear.[82] In contemporary Benin, it is common for a young man to be initiated into both societies on the same day.[82]
A culture of secrecy surrounds the Egúngún society.[83] Once initiated, a man will be expected to have his own Egúngún mask made;[84] these masks are viewed as embodiments of the ancestors.[85] Some people also make these masks, but do not consecrate or use them, for sale on the international art market, but other members of the society disapprove of this practice.[86]
Possession
[edit]Possession is part of most Vodún cults.[58] Rosenthal noted, from her ethnographic research in Togo, that females were more often possessed than males.[67] Her research also found children as young as 10 being possessed, although most were over 15.[67] In some vodún groups, priests will rarely go into possession trance as they are responsible for overseeing the broader ceremony.[67]
The possessed person is often referred to as the vodún itself.[87] Once the person has received the spirit, they will often be dressed in attire suitable for that possessing entity.[88] The possessed will address other attendees, offering them advice on illnesses, conduct, and making promises.[89] When a person is possessed, they may be cared for by another individual.[67] Those possessed often enjoy the prestige of having hosted their deities.[90]
Offerings and animal sacrifice
[edit]Vodun involves animal sacrifices to both ancestors and other spirits,[26] a practice called vɔ in Fon.[36] Animal species commonly used for sacrifice include birds, dogs, cats, goats, rams, and bulls.[91] There is ample evidence that in parts of West Africa, human sacrifice was also performed prior to European colonisation, such as in the Dahomey kingdom during the Annual Customs of Dahomey.[92]
Typically, a message to the spirits will be spoken into the animal's ear and its throat will then be cut.[93] The shrine itself will be covered in the victim's blood.[94] This is done to feed the spirit by nourishing its acɛ.[95] Practitioners believe that this act maintains the relationship between humans and the spirits.[26] The meat will be cooked and consumed by the attendees,[96] something believed to bestow blessing from the vodún for the person eating it.[89] The individual who killed the animal will often take ritual precautions to pacify their victim and discourage their spirit from taking vengeance upon them.[97]
Among followers in the United States, where butchery skills are far rarer, it is less common for practitioners to eat the meat.[98] Also present in the U.S. are practitioners who have rejected the role of animal sacrifice in Vodun, deeming it barbaric.[99]
Initiation
[edit]Initiation bestows a person with the power of a vodún.[42] It results in long-term obligations to the spirits that a person has received; that person is expected to honour their spirits with praise, to feed them, and to supply them with money, while in turn the spirit offers benefits to the initiate, giving them promises of protection, abundance, long-life, and a large family.[73]
The typical age of a person being initiated varies between spirit cults; in some cases children are preferred.[92] The process of initiation can last from a few months to a few years.[10] It differs among spirit cults; in Benin, Fá initiation usually takes less than a week, whereas initiations into the cults of other vodún may take several weeks or months.[100] Initiation is expensive;[101] especially high sums are generally charged for foreigners seeking initiation or training.[102] Practitioners believe that some spirits embody powers that are too intense for non-initiates.[42] Being initiated is described as "to find the spirit's depths".[103] Animal sacrifice is a typical feature of initiation.[26] Trainees will often be expected to learn many different types of leaves and respective qualities.[43]
Divination
[edit]Divination plays an important role in Vodún.[29] Different vodún groups often utilise different divinatory methods; the priestesses of Mamíwátá for instance employ mirror gazing, while the priests of Tron use kola nut divination.[29]
Across Vodún's practitioners, Fá is often deemed the best form of divination.[104] Its initiates claim that it is the only system that has sufficient acɛ to be consistently accurate.[104] This is a system adopted from the Yoruba.[105] Fá diviners typically believe that the priests of other spirits do not have the right to read the sacred signs of Fá.[42] A consultation with an initiate is termed a fákínan.[106]
In Vodun, a diviner is called a bokónó.[107] A successful diviner is expected to provide solutions to their client's problem, for instance selling them charms, spiritual baths, or ceremonies to alleviate their issue.[108] The fee charged will often vary depending on the client, with the diviner charging a reduced rate for family members and a more expensive rate to either tourists or to middle and upper-class Beninese.[108] Diviners will often recommend that their client seeks initiation.[109]
Healing and bǒ
[edit]Healing is a central element of Vodún.[16]
The Fon term bǒ can be translated into English as "charm"; many Francophone Beninese refer to them as gris gris.[110] These are amulets made from zoological and botanical material that is then activated using secret incantations,[111] the latter called bǒgbé ("bǒ's language").[112] Families or individuals often keep their recipes for creating bǒ a closely guarded secret;[113] there is a widespread belief that if someone else discovers the precise ingredients they will have power over its maker.[114] Bǒ are often sold;[115] tourists for instance often buy them to aid in attracting love, wealth, or protection while travelling.[116]
Bǒ designed for specific functions may have particular names; a zǐn bǒ is alleged to offer invisibility while a fifó bǒ provides the power of translocation.[113] Anthropomorphic figurines produced especially in the Fon and Ayizo area of southern Benin are commonly called bǒciɔ ("bǒ cadaver").[117] These bǒciɔ are often kept within a shrine or house—sometimes concealed in the rafters or under a bed—although in some places have also been situated outside, in public spaces.[118] Although bǒciɔ are not intended as representations of vodún,[119] early European travellers who encountered these objects labelled them "idols" and "fetishes".[120]
Azě
[edit]Another belief in Vodún is in azě, a universal and invisible power,[121] and one which many practitioners regard as the most powerful spiritual force available.[41] In English, azě has sometimes been translated as "witchcraft".[41] Several vodún, such as Kɛnnɛsi, Mǐnɔna, and Gbădu, are thought to draw their power from azě.[121] Many practitioners draw a distinction between azě wiwi, the destructive and harmful side of this power, and azě wèwé, its protective and benevolent side.[122] People who claim to use this power call themselves azětɔ and typically insist that they employ azě wèwé to protect their families from azě wiwi.[123] In Vodún lore, becoming an azětɔ comes at a cost, for the azě gives the practitioner a propensity for illness and shortens their life.[110]
According to Vodún belief, azěto wiwi are capable of transforming into animals and flying.[113] To become an azěto wiwi, an individual must use azě to kill someone, commonly a relative.[110] In the tradition, practitioners of azě wiwi send their soul out at night, where they gather with other practitioners to plot how they will devour other people's souls, ultimately killing them.[16] Owls, black cats, and vultures are all regarded as dangerous agents of azě.[121] Many people fear that their success will attract the envy of malevolent azětɔ within their family or neighbourhood.[121] The identity of the azěto wiwi, many practitioners believe, can be ascertained through divination.[124] Landry found that everyone he encountered in Benin believed in azě to various degrees,[125] whereas many non-Africans arriving for initiation were more sceptical of its existence.[126]
History
[edit]Pre-colonial history
[edit]Landry noted that prior to European colonialism, Vodún was not identified as "a monolithic religion" but was "a social system made of countless spirit and ancestor cults that existed without religious boundaries."[7] Many of these cults were closely interwoven with political structures, sometimes representing something akin to state religions.[127] From the early 16th century, waves of Adja and related peoples migrated eastward, establishing close ties with each other and forming the basis for the emergent Fon people.[128] The Fon made contact with Portuguese sailors in the 16th century and subsequently also the French, British, Dutch, and Danish in the 17th and 18th centuries.[128]
The 17th century saw the rise of the Dahomey state in this area of West Africa.[119] This generated religious change; early in the 17th century, Dahomey's king Agaja conquered the Xwedá kingdom (in what is now southern Benin) and the Xwedá's serpent vodún came to be widely adopted by the Fon.[35] From circa 1727 to 1823, Dahomey was a vassal state of Oyo, the Yoruba-led kingdom to the east, with this period seeing considerable religious exchange between the two.[129] Fon peoples adopted the Fá, Oró, and Egúngún cults from the Yoruba.[129] Fá was for instance present among the Fon by the reign of Dahomey's fifth ruler, Tegbesu (r.1732-74) and by the reign of Gezo (r.1818-58) had become well established in the Dahomean royal palace.[129]
As a result of the Atlantic slave trade, practitioners of Vodún were enslaved and transported to the Americas, where their practices influenced those of developing African diasporic traditions.[130] Coupled with the religion of the Kongo people from Central Africa, the Vodún religion of the Fon became one of the two main influences on Haitian Vodou.[131] Like the name Vodou itself, many of the terms used in this creolised Haitian religion derive from the Fon language;[132] including the names of many deities, which in Haiti are called lwa.[133] In Brazil, the dominant African diasporic religion became Candomblé and this was divided into various traditions called nacoes ("nations"). Of these nacoes, the Jeje tradition uses terms borrowed from Ewe and Fon languages,[134] for instance referring to its spirit deities as vodun.[135]
Colonialism and Christianity
[edit]In 1890, France invaded Dahomey and dethroned its king, Béhanzin.[136] In 1894, it became a French protectorate under a puppet king, Agoli-agbo, but in 1900 the French ousted him and abolished the Kingdom of Dahomey.[136] To the west, the area that became Togo became a German protectorate in 1884. Germany maintained control until 1919 when, following their defeat in the First World War, the eastern portion became part of the British Gold Coast and the western part became French territory.[137]
Christian missionaries were active in this part of West Africa from the 18th century. A German Presbyterian mission had established in the Gold Coast in 1737 before spreading their efforts into the Slave Coast in the 19th century. These Presbyterians attempted to break adherence to Vodún in the southern and plateau regions.[20] The 19th century also saw conversion efforts launched by Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Methodist missionaries.[20]
Although proving less of an influence than Christianity, Islam also impacted Vodún, reflected in the occasional use of Islamic script in the construction of Vodún charms.[138]
Post-colonial history
[edit]In 1960, Dahomey became an independent state,[139] as did Togo.[140] In 1972, Mathieu Kérékou seized power of Dahomey in a military coup and subsequently transformed it into a Marxist-Leninist state, the People's Republic of Benin.[141] Kérékou believed that Vodún wasted time, money, and resources that were better spent on economic development.[142] In 1973 he banned Vodún ceremonies during the rainy season, with further measures to suppress the religion following throughout the 1970s.[143] Under Kérékou's rule, Vodun priests had to perform new initiations in secret, and the duration of the initiatory process was often shortened from a period of years to one of months, weeks, or days.[144]
In 1989, Benin transitioned to democratic governance.[145] After becoming prime minister in 1991, Nicéphore Soglo lifted many anti-Vodún laws.[145] The Beninese government planned "Ouidah '92: The First International Festival of Vodun Arts and Cultures," which took place in 1993;[146] among the special guests invited were Pierre Verger and Mama Lola, reflecting attempts to build links across the African diaspora.[127] It also established 10 January as "National Vodún Day."[145] From the 1990s, the Beninese government increasingly made a concerted effort to encourage Vodún-themed tourism, hoping that many foreigners would come seeking initiation.[147]
By the late 1960s, some American black nationalists were travelling to West Africa to gain initiation into Vodún or Yoruba religion.[148] By the late 1980s, some white middle-class Americans began arriving for the same reason.[148] Some initiates of Haitian Vodou or Santería still go to West Africa for initiation as they believe that it is there that the "real secrets" or "true spiritual power" can be found;[149] the majority of arrivals seek initiation into Fá.[58] West Africans have also taken the religion to the U.S., where it has interacted and blended with diasporic religions like Vodou and Santería.[150] Many West African practitioners have seen the international promotion of Vodún as a means of healing the world and countering hate and violence,[151] as well as a means of promoting their own ritual abilities to an international audience, which will potentially attract new clients.[152]
Demographics
[edit]About 17% of the population of Benin, some 1.6 million people, follow Vodun. (This does not count other traditional religions in Benin.) In addition, many of the 41.5% of the population that refer to themselves as "Christian" practice a syncretized religion, not dissimilar from Haitian Vodou or Brazilian Candomblé; indeed, many of them are descended from freed Brazilian slaves who settled on the coast near Ouidah.[153]
In Togo, about half the population practices indigenous religions, of which Vodun is by far the largest, with some 2.5 million followers; there may be another million Vodunists among the Ewe of Ghana, as a 13% of the total Ghana population of 20 million are Ewe and 38% of Ghanaians practice traditional religion. According to census data, about 14 million people practice traditional religion in Nigeria, most of whom are Yoruba practicing Ifá, but no specific breakdown is available.[153]
Although initially present only among West Africans, Vodún is not followed by people of many races, ethnicities, nationalities, and classes.[154] Foreigners who come for initiation are predominantly from the United States;[155] many of them have already explored African diasporic traditions like Haitian Vodou, Santería, or Candomblé, or alternatively Western esoteric religions such as Wicca.[156] Many of the spiritual tourists who arrived in West Africa had little or no Fon or French, nor an understanding of the region's cultural and social norms.[157] Some of these foreigners seek initiation so that they can initiate others as a source of revenue.[158]
Reception and influence
[edit]In the view of some foreign observers, Vodún is Satanism and demon worship.[159] Although seeing its deities as malevolent demons, many West African Christians still regard Vodún as being effective and powerful.[160] Some Beninese regard Christianity as "less worrisome and less expensive" than Vodún;[106] many individuals converted to Christianity to deal with bewitchment, believing that Jesus could heal and protect them for free, whereas any vodún offering to counter witches would extract a substantial price.[161]
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- Forte, Jung Ran (2010a). "Vodun Ancestry, Diaspora Homecoming, and the Ambiguities of Transnational Belongings in the Republic of Benin". In Percy C. Hintzen; Jean Muteba Rahier; Felipe Smith (eds.). Global Circuits of Blackness: Interrogating the African Diaspora. University of Illinois Press. pp. 174–200. ISBN 978-0252077531.
- Landry, Timothy R. (2015). "Vodún, Globalisation, and the Creative Layering of Belief in Southern Benin". Journal of Religion in Africa. 45 (2): 170–199.
- Landry, Timothy R. (2016). "Incarnating Spirits, Composing Shrines, and Cooking Divine Power in Vodún". Material Religion. 12: 50–73. doi:10.1080/17432200.2015.1120086. S2CID 148063421.
- Landry, Timothy R. (2019). Vodún: Secrecy and the Search for Divine Power. Contemporary Ethnography. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0812250749.
- Long, Carolyn Morrow (2002). "Perceptions of New Orleans Voodoo: Sin, Fraud, Entertainment, and Religion". Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions. 6 (1): 86–101. doi:10.1525/nr.2002.6.1.86. JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2002.6.1.86.
- Métraux, Alfred (1972) [1959]. Voodoo in Haiti. Translated by Hugo Charteris. New York: Schocken Books.
- Rosenthal, Judy (1998). Possession, Ecstasy and Law in Ewe Voodoo. Charlottesville and London: University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0813918044.
- Rush, Diana (2017) [2013]. Vodun in Coastal Bénin: Unfinished, Open-Ended, Global. Critical Investigations of the African Diaspora. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press. ISBN 978-0826519085.
- Wafer, Jim (1991). The Taste of Blood: Spirit Possession in Brazilian Candomblé. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-1341-6.
Further reading
[edit]- Aronson, Lisa (2007). "Ewe Ceramics as the Visualisation of Vodun". African Arts. 40 (1): 80–85.
- Bay, Edna (2008). Asen, Ancestors, and Vodun: Tracing Change in African Art. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
- Falen, Douglas J. (2007). "Good and Bad Witches: The Transformation of Witchcraft in Bénin". West Africa Review. 10 (1): 1–27.
- Falen, Douglas J. (2018). African Science: Witchcraft, Vodun, and Healing in Southern Benin. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299318901.
- Forte, Jung Ran (2010). "Black Gods, White Bodies: Westerners' Initiations in Contemporary Benin". Transforming Anthropology. 18 (2): 129–145.
- Meyer, Birgit (1999). Translating the Devil: Religion and Modernity among the Ewe in Ghana. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
- Montgomery, Eric; Vannier, Christian (2017). An Ethnography of a Vodu Shrine in Southern Togo: Of Spirit, Slave and Sea. Studies of Religion in Africa. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-34108-1.
- Strandsberg, Camilla (2000). "Kérékou, God of the Ancestors: Religion and the Conception of Political Power in Benin". African Affairs. 99 (396): 395–414.