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VooDoo History
Voodoo Dolls
Voodoo Spells
Voodoo Shop
What is Voodoo?
What is Black Magic?
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The name
VooDoo is traceable
to an African word for "spirit". VooDoo can be directly traced to the
West African Yoruba people who lived in 18th and 19th century Dahomey.
Its roots may go back 6,000 years in Africa. That country occupied parts
of today's Togo, Benin and Nigeria. Slaves brought their
religion with them
when they were forcibly shipped to Haiti and other islands in the West
Indies.
During the colonial times VooDoo was actively practiced. "Many Priests
were either killed or imprisoned, and their shrines destroyed, because
of the threat they posed to Euro-Christian/Muslim dominion. This forced
some of the Dahomeans to form VooDoo Orders and to create underground
societies, in order to continue the veneration of their ancestors, and
the worship of their powerful gods." It is also followed by most of
the adults in Haiti. It can be found in many of the large cities in
North America, particularly in New Orleans.
An inaccurate and sensational book (S. St. John, "Haiti or the Black
Republic") was written in 1884. This book described VooDoo as
a profoundly evil religion. It included cannibalism, lurid descriptions
of human sacrifice and so on. Some believed
Voodoo priests
were tortured with great force for the information. The people
outside of the West Indies caught on to this book and they were responsible
for much of the misunderstanding of voodoo as well as the fear that
is present today with voodoo. Hollywood found this a rich source for
Voodoo screen plays. Horror movies began in the 1930's and continue
today to misrepresent VooDoo. It is only since the late 1950's that
accurate studies by anthropologists have been published.
VooDoo,
like Christianity, is a religion of many traditions. Each group follows
a different spiritual path and worships a slightly different pantheon
of spirits, called Loa. The word means "mystery" in the Yoruba language.
Yoruba traditional beliefs included a remote and unknowable chief God
Olorun. This chief authorized God Obatala, a lesser god, to create all
the life forms on earth. A battle between the two Gods led to Obatala's
temporary banishment. There are hundreds of minor spirits. Those which
originated from Dahomey are called Rada; those who were added later
are often deceased leaders in the new world and are called Petro. Some
of these Voodoo followers believed that each person has a soul which
is made of two parts: a gros bon ange or "big guardian angel", and a
ti bon ange or "little guardian angel". The latter leaves the body during
sleep and when the person is possessed by a Loa during a ritual. There
is a concern that the ti bon ange can be damaged or captured by evil
sorcery while it is free of the body.
The purpose of
rituals
is to make contact with a spirit, to gain their favor by offering them
animal sacrifices and gifts, to obtain help in the form of more abundant
food, higher standard of living, and improved health. Human and Loa
depend upon each other; humans provide food and other materials; the
Loa provide health, protection from evil spirits and good fortune. Rituals
are held to celebrate lucky events, to attempt to escape a run of bad
fortune, to celebrate a seasonal day of celebration associated with
a Loa, for healing, at birth, marriage and death. VooDoo priests can
be male (houngan or hungan), or female (mambo). A VooDoo temple is called
a hounfour (or humfort). At its center is a poteau-mitan a pole where
the God and spirits communicate with the people. An altar will be elaborately
decorated with candles, pictures of Christian saints, symbolic items
related to the Loa, etc.
One belief unique to VooDoo is that a dead person can be revived after
having been buried. After resurrection, the zombie has no will of their
own, but remains under the control of others. In reality, a
zombie is a living
person who has never died, but is under the influence of powerful drugs
administered by an evil sorcerer. Although most Haitians believe in
zombies, few have ever seen one. There are a few recorded instances
of persons who have claimed to be zombies.
Sticking pins in "voodoo dolls" was once used as a method of cursing
an individual by some followers of
VooDoo in New
Orleans; this practice continues occasionally in South America.
The practice became closely associated with Voodoo in the public mind
through the vehicle of horror movies.
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