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Haitian Vodou

Haitian Vodou[a] is an African diasporic religion that developed in Haiti between the 16th and 19th centuries. It arose through a process of syncretism between several traditional religions of West and Central Africa and Roman Catholicism. There is no central authority in control of the religion and much diversity exists among practitioners, who are known as Vodouists, Vodouisants, or Serviteurs.

A sequined drapo flag, depicting the vèvè symbol of the lwa Loko Atison; these symbols play an important role in Vodou ritual

Vodou teaches the existence of a transcendent creator deity, Bondye, under whom are spirits known as lwa. Typically deriving their names and attributes from traditional West and Central African divinities, they are equated with Roman Catholic saints. The lwa divide into different groups, the nanchon ("nations"), most notably the Rada and the Petwo, about whom various myths and stories are told. This theology has been labelled both monotheistic and polytheistic. An initiatory tradition, Vodouists commonly venerate the lwa at an ounfò (temple), run by an oungan (priest) or manbo (priestess). Alternatively, Vodou is also practised within family groups or in secret societies like the Bizango. A central ritual involves practitioners drumming, singing, and dancing to encourage a lwa to possess one of their members and thus communicate with them. Offerings to the lwa include fruit, liquor, and sacrificed animals. Offerings are also given to the spirits of the dead. Several forms of divination are utilized to decipher messages from the lwa. Healing rituals and the preparation of herbal remedies and talismans also play a prominent role.

Vodou developed among Afro-Haitian communities amid the Atlantic slave trade of the 16th to 19th centuries. Its structure arose from the blending of the traditional religions of those enslaved West and Central Africans, among them Yoruba, Fon, and Kongo, who had been brought to the island of Hispaniola. There, it absorbed influences from the culture of the French colonialists who controlled the colony of Saint-Domingue, most notably Roman Catholicism but also Freemasonry. Many Vodouists were involved in the Haitian Revolution of 1791 to 1801 which overthrew the French colonial government, abolished slavery, and transformed Saint-Domingue into the republic of Haiti. The Roman Catholic Church left for several decades following the Revolution, allowing Vodou to become Haiti's dominant religion. In the 20th century, growing emigration spread Vodou abroad. The late 20th century saw growing links between Vodou and related traditions in West Africa and the Americas, such as Cuban Santería and Brazilian Candomblé, while some practitioners influenced by the Négritude movement have sought to remove Roman Catholic influences.

Most Haitians practice both Vodou and Roman Catholicism, seeing no contradiction in pursuing the two different systems simultaneously. Smaller Vodouist communities exist elsewhere, especially among the Haitian diaspora in the United States. Both in Haiti and abroad Vodou has spread beyond its Afro-Haitian origins and is practiced by individuals of various ethnicities. Vodou has faced much criticism through its history, having repeatedly been described as one of the world's most misunderstood religions.

Definitions and terminology Edit

 
An oungan (Vodou priest) with another practitioner at a ceremony in Haiti in 2011

Vodou is a religion.[6] More specifically it has been characterised as Haiti's "national religion"[7] and as an Afro-Haitian religion,[8] as well as a "traditional religion"[9] and a "folk religion."[10] Its main structure derives from the African traditional religions of West and Central Africa which were brought to Haiti by enslaved Africans between the 16th and 19th centuries.[11] On the island, these African religions mixed with the iconography of European-derived traditions such as Roman Catholicism and Freemasonry,[12] taking the form of Vodou around the mid-18th century.[13] In combining varied influences, Vodou has often been described as syncretic,[14] or a "symbiosis",[15] a religion exhibiting diverse cultural influences.[16]

Despite its older influences, Vodou represented "a new religion",[17] "a creolized New World system",[18] one that differs in many ways from African traditional religions.[19] One of the most complex of the African diasporic traditions,[20] the scholar Leslie Desmangles called it an "African-derived tradition",[21] Ina J. Fandrich termed it a "neo-African religion",[22] and Markel Thylefors called it an "Afro-Latin American religion".[23] Owing to their shared origins in West African traditional religion, Vodou has been characterized as a "sister religion" of Cuban Santería and Brazilian Candomblé.[24]

In English, Vodou's practitioners are termed Vodouists,[25] or—in French and Haitian CreoleVodouisants[26] or Vodouyizan.[27] Another term for adherents is sèvitè (serviteurs, "devotees"),[28] reflecting their self-description as people who sèvi lwa ("serve the lwa"), the supernatural beings that play a central role in Vodou.[29] Lacking any central institutional authority,[30] Vodou has no single leader.[31] It thus has no orthodoxy,[32] no central liturgy,[33] nor a formal creed.[34] Developing over the course of several centuries,[35] it has changed over time.[36] It displays variation at both the regional and local level[37]—including variation between Haiti and the Haitian diaspora[38]—as well as among different congregations.[39] It is practiced domestically, by families on their land, but also by congregations meeting communally,[40] with the latter termed "temple Vodou".[41]

 
Vodou paraphernalia for sale at the Marché de Fer (Iron Market) in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

In Haitian culture, religions are not generally deemed totally autonomous, with many Haitians practicing both Vodou and Roman Catholicism.[42] Vodouists usually regard themselves as Roman Catholics.[43] In Haiti, Vodouists have also practiced Mormonism[44] and Freemasonry,[45] while abroad they have involved themselves in Santería[46] and modern Paganism.[47] Vodou has also absorbed elements from other contexts; in Cuba, some Vodouists have adopted elements from Spiritism.[48] Influenced by the Négritude movement, other Vodouists have sought to remove Roman Catholic and other European influences from their practice of Vodou.[49]

The ritual language used in Vodou is termed langaj.[50] Many of these terms—including the word Vodou itself[11]—derive from the Fon language of West Africa.[51] First recorded in the 1658 Doctrina Christiana,[52] the Fon word Vôdoun was used in the West African kingdom of Dahomey to signify a spirit or deity.[53] In Haitian Creole, Vodou came to designate a specific style of dance and drumming,[54] before outsiders to the religion adopted it as a generic term for much Afro-Haitian religion.[55] The word Vodou now encompasses "a variety of Haiti's African-derived religious traditions and practices",[56] incorporating "a bundle of practices that practitioners themselves do not aggregate".[57] Vodou is thus a term primarily used by scholars and outsiders to the religion;[57] many practitioners describe their belief system with the term Ginen, which especially denotes a moral philosophy and ethical code regarding how to live and to serve the spirits.[38]

Vodou is the common spelling for the religion among scholars, in official Haitian Creole orthography, and by the United States Library of Congress.[58][59] Some scholars use the spellings Vodoun or Vodun,[60] while in French the spellings vaudou[61] or vaudoux also appear.[62] The spelling Voodoo, once common, is now generally avoided by practitioners and scholars when referring to the Haitian religion.[63] This is both to avoid confusion with Louisiana Voodoo, a related but distinct tradition,[64] and to distinguish it from the negative connotations that the term Voodoo has in Western popular culture.[65]

Beliefs Edit

Bondye and the lwa Edit

 
A selection of ritual items used in Vodou practice on display in the Canadian Museum of Civilization.

Teaching the existence of single supreme God,[66] Vodou has been described as monotheistic.[67] Believed to have created the universe,[68] this entity is called Bondye or Bonié,[69] a term deriving from the French Bon Dieu ("Good God").[70] Another term used is the Gran Mèt,[71] which derives from Freemasonry.[45] For Vodouists, Bondye is seen as the ultimate source of power,[72] deemed responsible for maintaining universal order.[73] Bondye is also regarded as remote and transcendent,[74] not involving itself in human affairs;[75] there is thus little point in approaching it directly.[76] Haitians will frequently use the phrase si Bondye vle ("if Bondye wishes"), suggesting a belief that all things occur in accordance with this divinity's will.[77] While Vodouists often equate Bondye with the Christian God,[78] Vodou does not incorporate belief in a powerful antagonist that opposes the supreme being akin to the Christian notion of Satan.[79]

Vodou has also been characterized as polytheistic.[76] It teaches the existence of beings called the lwa,[80] a term varyingly translated into English as "spirits", "gods", or "geniuses".[81] These lwa are also known as the mystères, anges, saints, and les invisibles,[28] and are sometimes equated with the angels of Christian cosmology.[78] Vodou teaches that there are over a thousand lwa.[82] They serve as Bondye's intermediaries,[83] and communicate with humans both by possessing them and through dreams.[84] Vodouists believe the lwa are capable of offering people help, protection, and counsel in return for ritual service.[85] Each lwa has its own personality,[28] and is associated with specific colors,[86] days of the week,[87] and objects.[28] They are however not seen as moral exemplars for practitioners to imitate.[88] The lwa can be either loyal or capricious in their dealings with their devotees;[28] they are easily offended, for instance if offered food they dislike.[89] When angered, the lwa are believed to remove their protection from their devotees, or to inflict misfortune, illness, or madness on an individual.[90]

Although there are exceptions, most lwa names derive from the Fon and Yoruba languages.[91] New lwa are nevertheless added to the pantheon, with both talismans and certain humans thought capable of becoming lwa,[92] in the latter case through their strength of personality or power.[93] Vodouists often refer to the lwa living in the sea or in rivers,[87] or alternatively in Guinea,[94] a term encompassing a generalized understanding of Africa as the ancestral land.[95]

The nanchon Edit

 
A painting of the lwa Danbala, a serpent, by Haitian artist Hector Hyppolite

The lwa divide into nanchon or "nations".[96] This classificatory system derives from the way in which enslaved West Africans were divided into "nations" upon their arrival in Haiti, usually based on their African port of departure rather than their ethno-cultural identity.[28] The term fanmi (family) is sometimes used synonymously with nanchon or alternatively as a sub-division of the latter category.[97] It is often claimed that there are 17 nanchon,[98] of which the Rada and the Petwo are the largest and most dominant.[99]

The Rada lwa are seen as being 'cool'; the Petwo lwa as 'hot'.[100] This means that the Rada are dous or doux, or sweet-tempered, while the Petwo are lwa cho, indicating that they can be forceful or violent and are associated with fire.[101] Whereas the Rada are generally righteous, their Petwo counterparts are thought of as being more morally ambiguous, associated with issues like money.[102] The Rada rituals owe more to Dahomeyan and Yoruban influences,[103] and their name probably comes from Arada, a city in the Dahomey kingdom of West Africa.[104] The Petwo derive largely from Kongolese religion,[105] although also exhibit Dahomeyan and creolised influences.[106] Some lwa exist andezo or en deux eaux, meaning that they are "in two waters" and are served in both Rada and Petwo rituals.[101]

Papa Legba, also known as Legba, is the first lwa saluted during Rada ceremonies.[107] Depicted as a feeble old man wearing rags and using a crutch,[108] Papa Legba is the protector of gates and fences and thus of the home, as well as of roads, paths, and crossroads.[109] In Petwo rites, the first lwa invoked is usually Mèt Kalfou.[110] The second lwa usually greeted are the Marasa or sacred twins.[111] In Vodou, every nanchon has its own Marasa,[112] reflecting a belief that twins have special powers.[113] Agwe, also known as Agwe-taroyo, is associated with aquatic life, and protector of ships and fishermen.[114] Agwe is believed to rule the sea with his consort, La Sirène.[115] She is a mermaid or siren, and is sometimes described as Èzili of the Waters because she is believed to bring good luck and wealth from the sea.[116] Èzili Freda or Erzuli Freda is the lwa of love and luxury, personifying feminine beauty and grace.[117] Ezili Dantor is a lwa who takes the form of a peasant woman.[118]

 
A vèvè pattern designed to invoke Baron Samedi, the chief of the Gede lwa

Azaka is the lwa of crops and agriculture,[119] usually addressed as "Papa" or "Cousin".[120] His consort is the female lwa Kouzinn.[121] Loco is the lwa of vegetation, and because he is seen to give healing properties to various plant species is considered the lwa of healing too.[122] Ogou is a warrior lwa,[123] associated with weapons.[124] Sogbo is a lwa associated with lightning,[125] while his companion, Bade, is associated with the wind.[126] Danbala is a serpent lwa and is associated with water, being believed to frequent rivers, springs, and marshes;[127] he is one of the most popular deities in the pantheon.[128] Danbala and his consort Ayida-Weddo are often depicted as a pair of intertwining snakes.[127] The Simbi are understood as the guardians of fountains and marshes.[129]

Usually seen as a fanmi rather than a nanchon,[130] the Gede are associated with the realm of the dead.[131] The head of the family is Baron Samedi ("Baron Saturday");[132] his presence is often marked out in a Haitian cemetery with a large cross.[133] His consort is Gran Brigit,[134] who has authority over cemeteries and is mother to many of the other Gede.[135] The Gede regularly satirise the ruling authorities,[136] and are welcomed to rituals as they are thought to bring merriment.[131] The Gede's symbol is an erect penis,[137] while the banda dance associated with them involves sexual-style thrusting,[138] and those possessed by these lwa typically make sexual innuendos.[139]

The lwa and the saints Edit

Most lwa are associated with specific Roman Catholic saints.[140] For instance, Azaka, the lwa of agriculture, is associated with Saint Isidore the farmer.[141] Similarly, because he is understood as the "key" to the spirit world, Papa Legba is typically associated with Saint Peter, who is visually depicted holding keys in traditional Roman Catholic imagery.[142] The lwa of love and luxury, Èzili Freda, is associated with Mater Dolorosa.[143] Danbala the serpent is often equated with Saint Patrick, who is traditionally depicted with snakes, or with Moses, whose staff turned into serpents.[144] The Marasa, or sacred twins, are typically equated with the twin saints Cosmos and Damian.[145]

Scholars like Desmangles have argued that Vodouists originally adopted the Roman Catholic saints to conceal lwa worship when the latter was illegal during the colonial period.[146] Observing Vodou in the latter part of the 20th century, Donald J. Cosentino argued that by that point, the use of Roman Catholic saints reflected the genuine devotional expression of many Vodouists.[147] Many Vodouists possess chromolithographic prints of the saints,[147] while images of these Christian figures can also be found on temple walls[148] and on the drapo flags used in Vodou ritual.[149] Vodouists also often adopt and reinterpret Biblical stories and theorise about the nature of Jesus of Nazareth.[150]

Soul and afterlife Edit

 
A Haitian drapo banner depicting a Roman Catholic saint

Vodou holds that Bondye created humanity in its image, fashioning humans from water and clay.[151] It teaches the existence of a soul, the espri,[152] or the nanm,[153] which is divided in two parts.[154] One of these is the ti bonnanj ("little good angel"), understood as the conscience that allows an individual to engage in self-reflection and self-criticism. The other part is the gwo bonnanj ("big good angel") and this constitutes the psyche, source of memory, intelligence, and personhood.[155] Both parts are believed to reside within an individual's head,[156] although the gwo bonnanj is thought capable of leaving the head and travelling while a person sleeps.[157]

Vodouists believe that every individual is connected to a specific lwa, regarded as their mèt tèt (master of the head).[158] They believe that this lwa informs the individual's personality.[159] Vodou holds that the identity of a person's tutelary lwa can be identified through divination or by consulting lwa when they possess other humans.[160] Some of the religion's priests and priestesses are deemed to have "the gift of eyes", capable of seeing the identity of a person's tutelary lwa.[161]

Vodou holds that Bondye has preordained the time of everyone's death,[162] but does not teach the existence of an afterlife realm akin to the Christian ideas of heaven and hell.[163] Instead, a common belief is that at bodily death, the gwo bonnanj join the Ginen, or ancestral spirits, while the ti bonnanj proceeds to face judgement before Bondye.[164] This idea of judgement is more common in urban areas, having been influenced by Roman Catholicism, while in the Haitian mountains it is more common for Vodouists to believe that the ti bonnanj dissolves into the navel of the earth nine days after death.[165] The land of the Ginen is often identified as being located beneath the sea, under the earth, or above the sky.[166] Some Vodouists believe that the gwo bonnanj stays in the land of the Ginen for a year and a day before being absorbed into the Gede family.[167] However, Vodouists usually distinguish the spirits of the dead from the Gede proper, for the latter are lwa.[168] Vodou also teaches that the dead continue to participate in human affairs,[169] with these spirits often complaining that they suffer from hunger, cold, and damp,[170] and thus requiring sacrifices from the living.[76]

Morality, ethics, and gender roles Edit

Vodou ethical standards correspond to its sense of cosmological order,[73] with a belief in the interdependence of things playing a role in Vodou approaches to ethical issues.[171] Serving the lwa is central to Vodou and its moral codes reflect the reciprocal relationship that practitioners have with these spirits;[172] for Vodouists, virtue is maintained by ensuring a responsible relationship with the lwa.[88] Vodou also promotes a belief in destiny, although individuals are still deemed to have freedom of choice.[173] This view of destiny has been interpreted as encouraging a fatalistic outlook,[174] something that the religion's critics, especially from Christian backgrounds, have argued has discouraged Vodouists from improving their society.[175] This has been extended into an argument that Vodou is responsible for Haiti's poverty,[176] a view that in turn has been accused of being rooted in European colonial prejudices towards Africans.[177]

 
A vèvè pattern designed to invoke Papa Legba, one of the main lwa spirits worshipped in Haitian Vodou

Although Vodou permeates every aspect of its adherent's lives,[178] it offers no prescriptive code of ethics.[179] Rather than being rule-based, Vodou morality is deemed contextual to the situation,[180] with no clear binary division between good and evil.[181] Vodou reflects people's everyday concerns, focusing on techniques for mitigating illness and misfortune;[182] doing what one needs to in order to survive is considered a high ethic.[183] Among Vodouists, a moral person is regarded as someone who lives in tune with their character and that of their tutelary lwa.[180] In general, acts that reinforce Bondye's power are deemed good; those that undermine it are seen as bad.[73] Maji, meaning the use of supernatural powers for self-serving and malevolent ends, are usually thought bad.[184] The term is quite flexible; it is usually used to denigrate other Vodouists, although some practitioners have used it as a self-descriptor in reference to Petwo rites.[185]

The extended family is of importance in Haitian society,[186] with Vodou reinforcing family ties,[187] and emphasising respect for the elderly.[188] Vodou has been described as reflecting misogynistic elements of Haitian culture while simultaneously empowering women by allowing them to become priestesses,[189] through which they can lay claim to moral authority as social and spiritual leaders.[190] Vodou is also considered sympathetic to gay people,[191] with various gay men holding status as Vodou priests,[192] and some groups having largely gay congregations.[193] Some Vodouists state that the lwa determined their sexual orientation, turning them homosexual,[194] while the lwa Èzili is seen as the patron of masisi (gay men).[195]

Practices Edit

The anthropologist Alfred Métraux described Vodou as "a practical and utilitarian religion".[87] Its practices largely revolve around interactions with the lwa,[196] and incorporate song, drumming, dance, prayer, possession, and animal sacrifice.[197] Practitioners gather together for sèvices (services) in which they commune with the lwa.[198] Ceremonies for a particular lwa often coincide with the feast day of the Roman Catholic saint which that lwa is associated with.[199] The mastery of ritual forms is considered imperative in Vodou.[200] The purpose of ritual is to echofe ("heat things up"), thus bringing about change, whether that be to remove barriers or to facilitate healing.[201]

Secrecy is important in Vodou.[202] It is an initiatory tradition,[203] operating through a system of graded induction or initiation.[102] When an individual agrees to serve a lwa, it is deemed a lifelong commitment.[204] Vodou has a strong oral culture, and its teachings are primarily disseminated through oral transmission,[205] although many practitioners began to use texts after they appeared in the mid-20th century.[206]

Oungan and Manbo Edit

 
Ceremonial suit worn in Haitian Vodou rites, on display in the Ethnological Museum of Berlin, Germany

Male priests are referred to as an oungan, alternatively spelled houngan or hungan,[207] or a prèt Vodou ("Vodou priest").[208] Priestesses are termed manbo, alternatively spelled mambo.[209] Oungan numerically dominate in rural Haiti, while there is a more equitable balance of priests and priestesses in urban areas.[210] The oungan and manbo are tasked with organising liturgies, preparing initiations, offering consultations with clients using divination, and preparing remedies for the sick.[211] There is no priestly hierarchy, with oungan and manbo being largely self-sufficient.[211] In many cases, the role is hereditary.[212] Historical evidence suggests that the role of the oungan and manbo intensified over the course of the 20th century.[213] As a result, "temple Vodou" is now more common in rural areas of Haiti than it was in historical periods.[214]

Vodou teaches that the lwa call an individual to become an oungan or manbo,[215] and if the latter refuses then misfortune may befall them.[216] A prospective oungan or manbo must normally rise through the other roles in a Vodou congregation before undergoing an apprenticeship with a pre-existing oungan or manbo lasting several months or years.[217] After this apprenticeship, they undergo an initiation ceremony, the details of which are kept secret from non-initiates.[218] Other oungan and manbo do not undergo any apprenticeship, but claim that they have gained their training directly from the lwa.[219] Their authenticity is often challenged, and they are referred to as hungan-macoutte, a term bearing some disparaging connotations.[217] Becoming an oungan or manbo is expensive, often requiring the purchase of ritual paraphernalia and land on which to build a temple.[220] To finance this, many save up for a long time.[220]

Vodouists believe that the oungan's role is modelled on the lwa Loco;[221] in Vodou mythology, he was the first oungan and his consort Ayizan the first manbo.[222] The oungan and manbo are expected to display the power of second sight,[223] something regarded as a gift from Bondye that can be revealed to the individual through visions or dreams.[224] Many priests and priestesses are often attributed fantastical powers in stories told about them,[225] and may bolster their status with claims to have received revelations from the lwa, sometimes via visits to the lwa's own abode.[226]

There is often bitter competition between different oungan and manbo.[227] Their main income derives from healing the sick, supplemented with payments received for overseeing initiations and selling talismans and amulets.[228] In many cases, oungan and manbo become wealthier than their clients.[229] Oungan and manbo are generally powerful and well-respected members of Haitian society.[230] Being an oungan or manbo provides an individual with both social status and material profit,[192] although the fame and reputation of individual priests and priestesses can vary widely.[231] Respected Vodou priests and priestesses are often literate in a society where semi-literacy and illiteracy are common.[232] They can recite from printed texts and write letters for illiterate members of their community.[232] Owing to their prominence in a community, the oungan and manbo can effectively become political leaders,[224] or otherwise exert an influence on local politics.[192]

The ounfò Edit

A Vodou temple is called an ounfò,[233] varyingly spelled hounfò,[234] hounfort,[20] or humfo.[40] An alternative term is gangan, although the connotations of this term vary regionally in Haiti.[235] Most communal Vodou activities centre around this ounfò,[222] forming what is called "temple Vodou".[41] The size and shape of ounfòs vary, from basic shacks to more lavish structures, the latter being more common in Port-au-Prince.[222] Their designs are dependent on the resources and tastes of the oungan or manbo running them.[236] Each ounfò is autonomous,[237] and often has its own unique customs.[238]

 
A Vodou peristil in Croix des Mission, Haiti, photographed in 1980

The main ceremonial room in the ounfò is the peristil,[239] understood as a microcosmic representation of the cosmos.[240] In the peristil, brightly painted posts hold up the roof;[241] the central post is the poto mitan,[242] which is used as a pivot during ritual dances and the pillar through which the lwa enter the room during ceremonies.[241] It is around this central post that offerings, including both vèvè patterns and animal sacrifices, are made.[196] However, in the Haitian diaspora many Vodouists perform their rites in basements, where no poto mitan are available.[243] The peristil typically has an earthen floor, allowing libations to the lwa to drain directly into the soil;[244] where this is not possible, libations are poured into an enamel basin.[245] Some peristil include seating around the walls.[246]

Adjacent rooms in the ounfò include the caye-mystéres, also known as the bagi, badji, or sobadji.[247] This is where stonework altars, known as , stand against the wall or are arranged in tiers.[247] Also present may be a sink dedicated to the lwa Danbala-Wedo.[248] The caye-mystéres is also used to store clothing that will be worn by those possessed by the lwa during rituals.[249] If space is available, the ounfò may also have a room set aside for the patron lwa of that temple.[250] Many ounfòs have a room known as the djévo in which the initiate is confined during their initiatory ceremony.[249] Every ounfò usually has a room or corner of a room devoted to Erzuli Freda.[251] Some ounfò will also have additional rooms in which the oungan or manbo lives.[250]

The area around the ounfò often contains objects dedicated to particular lwa, such as a pool of water for Danbala, a black cross for Baron Samedi, and a pince (iron bar) embedded in a brazier for Criminel.[252] Sacred trees, known as arbres-reposoirs, sometimes mark the ounfò's external boundary.[253] Hanging from these trees can be found macounte straw sacks, strips of material, and animal skulls.[253] Various animals, particularly birds but also some mammal species such as goats, are sometimes kept within the perimeter of the ounfò for use as sacrifices.[253]

The congregation Edit

 
A Vodou ceremony taking place in an ounfò in Jacmel, Haiti

Forming a spiritual community of practitioners,[196] the ounfò's congregation are known as the pititt-caye (children of the house).[254] They worship under the authority of an oungan or manbo,[40] below whom is ranked the ounsi, individuals who make a lifetime commitment to serving the lwa.[255] Members of either sex can join the ounsi, although most are female.[256] The ounsi's duties include cleaning the peristil, sacrificing animals, and taking part in the dances at which they must be prepared to be possessed by a lwa.[257] The oungan and manbo conduct initiatory ceremonies whereby people become ounsi,[224] oversee their training,[222] and act as their counsellor, healer, and protector.[258] In turn, the ounsi are expected to be obedient to their oungan or manbo.[257]

One of the ounsi becomes the hungenikon or reine-chanterelle, the mistress of the choir. They are responsible for overseeing the liturgical singing and shaking the chacha rattle which dictates the rhythm during ceremonies.[259] They are aided by the hungenikon-la-place, commandant general de la place, or quartermaster, who is charged with overseeing offerings and keeping order during the rites.[222] Another figure is le confiance (the confidant), the ounsi who oversees the ounfò's administrative functions.[260] Congregants often form a sosyete soutyen (société soutien, support society), through which subscriptions are paid to help maintain the ounfò and organize the major religious feasts.[261]

In rural areas especially, a congregation may consist of an extended family.[211] Here, the priest will often be the patriarch of that family.[262] Families, particularly in rural areas, often believe that through their zansèt (ancestors) they are tied to a premye mèt bitasyon (original founder); their descent from this figure is seen as giving them their inheritance both of the land and of familial spirits.[38] In other examples, particularly in urban areas, an ounfò can act as an initiatory family.[263] A priest becomes the papa ("father") while the priestess becomes the manman ("mother") to the initiate;[264] the initiate becomes their initiator's pitit (spiritual child).[206] Those who share an initiator refer to themselves as "brother" and "sister."[217] Individuals may join a particular ounfò because it exists in their locality or because their family are already members. Alternatively, it may be that the ounfò places particular focus on a lwa whom they are devoted to, or that they are impressed by the oungan or manbo who runs the ounfò in question, perhaps having been treated by them.[257]

Initiation Edit

 
A vèvè pattern designed to invoke Gran Brigit, one of the lwa spirits worshipped in Haitian Vodou

Vodou is hierarchical and includes a series of initiations.[206] There are typically four levels of initiation,[265] the fourth of which makes someone an oungan or manbo.[266] There is much variation in what these initiation ceremonies entail,[112] and the details are kept secret.[267] Each initiatory stage is associated with a state of mind called konesans (conaissance or knowledge).[224] Successive initiations are required to move through the various konesans,[224] and it is in these konesans that priestly power is believed to reside.[268]

The first initiation rite is the kanzo;[269] this term also describes the initiate themselves.[270] Initiation is generally expensive,[271] complex,[266] and requires significant preparation.[112] Prospective initiates are for instance required to memorise many songs and learn the characteristics of various lwa.[112] Vodouists believe the lwa may encourage an individual towards initiation, bringing misfortune upon them if they refuse.[272]

Initiation will often be preceded by bathing in special preparations.[273] The first part of the initiation rite is known as the kouche or huño, and is marked by salutations and offerings to the lwa.[274] It begins with the chire ayizan, a ceremony in which palm leaves are frayed and then worn by the initiate.[112] Sometimes the bat ge or batter guerre ("beating war") is performed instead, designed to beat away the old.[112] During the rite, the initiate comes to be regarded as the child of a particular lwa, their mèt tèt.[112]

This is followed by a period of seclusion within the djèvo known as the kouche.[112] A deliberately uncomfortable experience,[156] it involves the initiate sleeping on a mat on the floor, often with a stone for a pillow.[275] They wear a white tunic,[276] and a specific salt-free diet is followed.[277] It includes a lav tèt ("head washing") to prepare the initiate for having the lwa enter and reside in their head.[278] Voudoists believe that one of the two parts of the human soul, the gwo bonnanj, is removed from the initiate's head, thus making space for the lwa to enter and reside there.[156]

The initiation ceremony requires the preparation of pot tèts (head pots), usually white porcelain cups with a lid in which a range of items are placed, including hair, food, herbs, and oils. These are regarded as a home for the spirits.[279] After the period of seclusion in the djèvo, the new initiate is brought out and presented to the congregation; they are now referred to as ounsi lave tèt.[112] When the new initiate is presented to the rest of the community, they carry their pot tèt on their head, before placing it on the altar.[156] The final stage of the process involves the initiate being given an ason rattle.[280] The initiation process is seen to have ended when the new initiate is first possessed by a lwa.[156] Initiation is seen as creating a bond between a devotee and their tutelary lwa,[281] and the former will often take on a new name that alludes to the name of this lwa.[282]

Shrines and altars Edit

 
An altar in Boston, Massachusetts established during the November festival of the Gede

The creation of sacred works is important in Vodou.[200] Votive objects used in Haiti are typically made from industrial materials, including iron, plastic, sequins, china, tinsel, and plaster.[36] An altar, or , will often contain images (typically lithographs) of Roman Catholic saints.[283] Since developing in the mid-19th century, chromolithography has also had an impact on Vodou imagery, facilitating the widespread availability of images of the Roman Catholic saints who are equated with the lwa.[284] Various Vodouists have made use of varied available materials in constructing their shrines. Cosentino encountered a shrine in Port-au-Prince where Baron Samedi was represented by a plastic statue of Santa Claus wearing a black sombrero,[285] and in another by a statue of Star Wars-character Darth Vader.[286] In Port-au-Prince, it is common for Vodouists to include human skulls on their altar for the Gede.[208] Many practitioners will also have an altar devoted to their ancestors in their home, to which they direct offerings.[287] In ounfòs where both Rada and Petwo deities are worshipped, their altars are kept separate.[288]

Various spaces other than the temple are used for Vodou ritual.[289] Cemeteries are seen as places where spirits reside, making them suitable for certain rituals,[289] especially to approach the spirits of the dead.[290] In rural Haiti, cemeteries are often family owned and play a key role in family rituals.[291] Crossroads are also ritual locations, selected as they are believed to be points of access to the spirit world.[289] Other spaces used for Vodou rituals include Christian churches, rivers, the sea, fields, and markets.[289]

 
An ason, the ritual rattle emblematic of the Vodou priesthood

Certain trees are regarded as having spirits resident in them and are used as natural altars.[232] Different species of tree are associated with different lwa; Oyu, for example, is linked with mango trees, and Danbala with bougainvillea.[87] Selected trees in Haiti have had metal items affixed to them, serving as shrines to Ogou, who is associated with both iron and the roads.[292] Spaces for ritual also appear in the homes of many Vodouists.[293] These may vary from complex altars to more simple variants including only images of saints alongside candles and a rosary.[41]

Drawings known as vèvè are sketched onto the floor of the peristil using cornmeal, ash, coffee grounds, or powdered eggshells;[294] these are central to Vodou ritual.[240] Usually arranged symmetrically around the poto-mitan,[295] these designs sometimes incorporate letters;[232] their purpose is to summon lwa.[295] Inside the peristil, practitioners also unfurl ceremonial flags known as drapo (flags) at the start of a ceremony.[296] Often made of silk or velvet and decorated with shiny objects such as sequins,[297] the drapo often feature either the vèvè of specific lwa they are dedicated to or depictions of the associated Roman Catholic saint.[149] These drapo are understood as points of entry through which the lwa can enter the peristil.[298]

A batèms (baptism) is a ritual used to make an object a vessel for the lwa.[299] Objects consecrated for ritual use are believed to contain a spiritual essence or power called nanm.[300] The ason is a sacred rattle used in summoning the lwa.[301] It consists of an empty, dried gourd covered in beads and snake vertebra.[302] Prior to being used in ritual it requires consecration.[303] It is a symbol of the priesthood;[303] assuming the duties of a manbo or oungan is referred to as "taking the ason."[304] Another type of sacred object are the "thunder stones", often prehistoric axe-heads, which are associated with specific lwa and kept in oil to preserve their power.[305]

Offerings and animal sacrifice Edit

 
A drapo flag, which are used to invoke the lwa at Vodou ceremonies

Feeding the lwa is of great importance,[306] with rites often termed manje lwa ("feeding the lwa").[307] Offering food and drink to the lwa is Vodou's most common ritual, conducted both communally and in the home.[306] The choice of food and drink offered varies depending on the lwa in question, with different lwa believed to favor different foodstuffs.[308] Danbala for instance requires white foods, especially eggs,[309] while Legba's offerings, whether meat, tubers, or vegetables, need to be grilled on a fire,[306] and the lwa of the Ogu and Nago nations prefer raw rum or clairin.[306] Certain foods are also offered in the belief that they are intrinsically virtuous, such as grilled maize, peanuts, and cassava.[172]

A manje sèk (dry meal) is an offering of grains, fruit, and vegetables that often precedes a simple ceremony; it takes its name from the absence of blood.[310] Animal sacrifices are often favored at annual feasts that an oungan or manbo organizes for their congregation.[172] Species used for sacrifice include chickens, goats, and bulls, with pigs often favored for Petwo lwa.[307] The animal may be washed, dressed in the color of the specific lwa, and marked with food or water.[311] Often, the animal's throat will be cut and the blood collected in a calabash.[312] Chickens are often killed by the pulling off of their heads; their limbs may be broken beforehand.[313] In the case of Agwé, a lwa of the sea, a white sheep may be sailed out to Trois Ilets and thrown overboard as a sacrifice.[314]

Once killed, the animal may be butchered and organs removed, sometimes cooked, and placed on the altar or vèvè.[315] Here, it sometimes sites within a kwi, a calabash shell bowl.[316] Vodouists believe that the lwa consume the essence of the food.[172] Food is typically offered when it is cool, and is left for a while before humans may eat it.[316] Offerings not consumed by the celebrants are often buried or left at a crossroads.[317] Libations might be poured into the ground.[172]

The Dans Edit

 
Multiple styles of drum are employed in Vodou ritual; this example is used in rites invoking Rada lwa

Vodou's nocturnal gatherings are often referred to as the dans ("dance"), reflecting the prominent role that dancing has in such ceremonies.[243] Their purpose is to invite a lwa to enter the ritual space and possess one of the worshippers, through whom they can communicate with the congregation.[318] The success of this procedure is predicated on mastering the different ritual actions and on getting the aesthetic right to please the lwa.[318] The proceedings can last for the entirety of the night.[243]

On arriving, the congregation typically disperse along the perimeter of the peristil.[243] The ritual often begins with Roman Catholic prayers and hymns;[319] these are often led by a figure known as the prèt savann, although not all ounfò have anyone in this role.[320] This is followed by the shaking of the ason rattle to summon the lwa.[321] Two Haitian Creole songs, the Priyè Deyò ("Outside Prayers"), may then be sung, lasting from 45 minutes to an hour.[322] The main lwa are then saluted, individually, in a specific order.[322] Legba always comes first, as he is believed to open the way for the others.[322] Each lwa may be offered either three or seven songs, which are specific to them.[323]

The rites employed to call down the lwa vary depending on the nanchon in question.[324] During large-scale ceremonies, the lwa are invited to appear through the drawing of vèvè on the ground using cornmeal.[214] Also used to call down the spirits is a process of drumming, singing, prayers, and dances.[214] Libations and offerings of food are made to the lwa, which includes animal sacrifices.[214] The order and protocol for welcoming the lwa is referred to as regleman.[325]

 
Dancing at Vodou ceremony in Port-au-Prince in 1976

A symbol of the religion,[326] the drum is perhaps the most sacred item in Vodou.[327] Vodouists believe that ritual drums contain an etheric force, the nanm,[328] and a spirit called ountò.[329] Specific ceremonies accompany the construction of a drum so that it is considered suitable for ritual use.[330] In the bay manje tanbou ("feeding of the drum") ritual, offerings are given to the drum itself.[328] Reflecting its status, when Vodouists enter the peristil they customarily bow before the drums.[331] Different types of drum are used, sometimes reserved for rituals devoted to specific lwa; Petwo rites for instance involve two types of drum, whereas Rada rituals require three.[332] Ritual drummers are called tanbouryes,[333] and becoming one requires a lengthy apprenticeship.[334] The drumming style, choice of rhythm, and composition of the orchestra differs depending on which nation of lwa are being invoked.[335] The drum rhythms typically generate a kase ("break"), which the master drummer will initiate to oppose the main rhythm being played by the rest of the drummers. This is seen as having a destabilizing effect on the dancers and helping to facilitate their possession.[336]

Drumming is typically accompanied by singing,[331] usually in Haitian Creole.[337] These songs are often structured around a call and response, with a soloist singing a line and the chorus responding with either the same line or an abbreviated version.[337] The soloist is the oundjenikon, who maintains the rhythm with a rattle.[338] Lyrically simple and repetitive, these songs are invocations to summon a lwa.[331] Dancing also plays a major role in ritual,[339] utilising the rhythm of the drummers.[337] The dances are simple, lacking complex choreography, and usually involve the dancers moving counterclockwise around the poto mitan.[340] Specific dance movements can indicate the lwa or their nanchon being summoned;[341] dances for Agwe for instance imitate swimming motions.[342] Vodouists believe that the lwa renew themselves through the vitality of the dancers.[343]

Spirit possession Edit

 
Drummer Frisner Augustin in a Vodou ceremony in Brooklyn, New York City during the early 1980s.

Spirit possession is an important element of Vodou,[344] and is central to many of its rituals.[88] The person being possessed is referred to as the chwal (horse);[345] the act of possession is called "mounting a horse".[346] Vodou teaches that a lwa can possess an individual regardless of gender; both male and female lwa can possess either men or women.[347] Although children are often present at these ceremonies,[348] they are rarely possessed as it is considered too dangerous.[349] While the specific drums and songs used are designed to encourage a specific lwa to possess someone, sometimes an unexpected lwa appears and takes possession instead.[350] In some instances a succession of lwa possess the same individual, one after the other.[351]

The trance of possession is known as the kriz lwa.[334] Vodouists believe that during this process, the lwa enters the head of the chwal and displaces their gwo bon anj.[352] This displacement is believed to cause the chwal to tremble and convulse.[353] As their consciousness has been removed from their head during the possession, Vodouists believe that the chwal will have no memory of what occurs during the incident.[354] The length of the possession varies, often lasting a few hours but sometimes several days.[355] It may end with the chwal collapsing in a semi-conscious state;[356] they are typically left physically exhausted.[343] Some individuals attending the dance will put a certain item, often wax, in their hair or headgear to prevent possession.[357]

Once the lwa possesses an individual, the congregation greet it with a burst of song and dance.[343] The chwal will typically bow before the officiating priest or priestess and prostrate before the poto mitan.[358] The chwal is often escorted into an adjacent room where they are dressed in clothing associated with the possessing lwa. Alternatively, the clothes are brought out and they are dressed in the peristil itself.[347] Once the chwal has been dressed, congregants kiss the floor before them.[347] These costumes and props help the chwal take on the appearance of the lwa.[337] Many ounfò have a large wooden phallus on hand which is used by those possessed by Gede lwa during their dances.[359]

The chwal takes on the behavior and expressions of the possessing lwa;[360] their performance can be very theatrical.[350] Those believing themselves possessed by the serpent Danbala, for instance, often slither on the floor, dart out their tongue, and climb the posts of the peristil.[127] Those possessed by Zaka, lwa of agriculture, will dress as a peasant in a straw hat with a clay pipe and will often speak in a rustic accent.[361] The chwal will often join in with the dances,[343] eat or drink.[337] Sometimes the lwa, through the chwal, will engage in financial transactions with members of the congregation, for instance by selling them food that has been given as an offering or lending them money.[362]

Possession facilitates direct communication between the lwa and its followers;[343] through the chwal, the lwa communicates with their devotees, offering counsel, chastisement, blessings, warnings about the future, and healing.[363] Lwa possession has a healing function, with the possessed individual expected to reveal possible cures to the ailments of those assembled.[343] Clothing that the chwal touches is regarded as bringing luck.[364] The lwa may also offer advice to the individual they are possessing; because the latter is not believed to retain any memory of the events, it is expected that other members of the congregation will pass along the lwa's message.[364] In some instances, practitioners have reported being possessed at other times of ordinary life, such as when someone is in the middle of the market,[365] or when they are asleep.[366]

Divination Edit

A common form of divination employed by oungan and manbo is to invoke a lwa into a pitcher, where it will then be asked questions.[367] Other forms of divination used by Vodouists include the casting of shells,[367] cartomancy,[368] studying leaves, coffee grounds or cinders in a glass, or looking into a candle flame.[369] A form of divination associated especially with Petwo lwa is the use of a gembo shell, sometimes with a mirror attached to one side and affixed at both ends to string. The string is twirled and the directions of the shell used to interpret the responses of the lwa.[367]

Healing and harming Edit

 
A pakèt kongo on display in the Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen in the Netherlands

Healing plays an important role in Vodou.[370] A client will approach a manbo or oungan complaining of illness or misfortune and the latter will use divination to determine the cause and select a remedy.[371] Manbo and oungan typically have a wide knowledge of plants and their medicinal uses.[185] To heal, they often prescribe baths, water infused with various ingredients,[372] or produce powders for a specific purpose, such as to attract good luck or aid seduction.[373] The Vodouists may also produce a material object infused with spirits or medicines, a wanga,[374] although these can also be devoted to harmful purposes.[375] Manbo and oungan often provide talismans,[376] called a pwen (point),[377] travay (work),[378] travay maji (magic work),[379] pakèt or pakèt kongo.[380] The latter term highlights the potential influence of the Kongolese minkisi on these Haitian ritual creations.[381]

In Haiti, oungan or manbo may advise their clients to seek assistance from medical professionals, while the latter may also send their patients to see an oungan or manbo.[229] Although in the late 20th century there were concerns that the Haitian reliance on oungan and manbo was contributing to the spread of HIV/AIDS,[382] by the early 21st century, various NGOs and other groups were working on bringing Vodou officiants into the broader campaign against the virus.[383] In Haiti, there are also "herb doctors" who offer herbal remedies for ailments but deal in fewer problems than oungan and manbo.[228]

Vodou teaches that supernatural factors cause or exacerbate many problems.[384] It holds that humans can cause supernatural harm to others, either unintentionally or deliberately,[385] in the latter case exerting power over a person through possession of hair or nail clippings belonging to them.[386] Vodouists also often believe that supernatural harm can be caused by other entities. The lougawou (werewolf) is a human, usually female, who transforms into an animals and drains blood from sleeping victims,[387] while members of the Bizango secret society are feared for their reputed ability to transform into dogs, in which form they walk the streets at night.[388]

An individual who turns to the lwa to harm others is a choché,[181] or a bòkò,[389] although this latter term can also refer to an oungan generally.[181] They are described as someone who sert des deux mains ("serves with both hands"),[390] or is travaillant des deux mains ("working with both hands").[215] As the good lwa have rejected them as unworthy, bòko are believed to work with lwa achte ("bought lwa"),[391] spirits that will work for anyone who pays them,[392] and often members of the Petwo nanchon.[393] According to Haitian popular belief, bòkò engage in anvwamò ("expeditions"), setting the dead against an individual to cause the latter's sudden illness and death,[394] and utilise baka, malevolent spirits sometimes in animal form.[395] In Haiti, there is much suspicion and censure toward those suspected of being bòkò.[215] The curses of the bòkò are believed to be countered by the oungan and manbo, who can revert the curse through an exorcism that incorporates invocations of protective lwa, massages, and baths.[396] In Haiti, some oungan and manbo have been accused of working with a bòkò, arranging for the latter to curse individuals so that they can financially profit from removing these curses.[215]

Funerals, the dead, and zonbis Edit

 
A cross in a Haitian cemetery, photographed in 2012. The crucifix is central to the iconography of the Gede; the Baron La Croix is a public crucifix associated with Baron Samedi, chief of the Gede.[397]

Vodou features complex funerary customs.[398] Following an individual's death, the desounen ritual frees the gwo bonnanj from their body and disconnects them from their tutelary lwa.[399] The corpse is then bathed in a herbal infusion by an individual termed the benyè, who gives the dead person messages to take with them.[400] A wake, the veye, follows.[401] The body is then buried in the cemetery,[402] often according to Roman Catholic custom.[403] In northern Haiti, an additional rite takes place at the ounfò on the day of the funeral, the kase kanari (breaking of the clay pot). In this, a jar is washed in substances including kleren, placed within a trench dug into the peristil floor, and smashed. The trench is then refilled.[404] The night after the funeral, the novena takes place at the home of the deceased, involving Roman Catholic prayers;[405] a mass for them is held a year after death.[406] Vodouists fear the dead's ability to harm the living;[407] it is believed that the deceased may for instance punish their living relatives if the latter fail to appropriately mourn them.[408]

Many Vodouists believe that a practitioner's spirit dwells in the land of Ginen, located at the bottom of a lake or river, for a year and a day.[409] A year and a day after death, the wete mò nan dlo ("extracting the dead from the waters of the abyss") ritual may take place, in which the deceased's gwo bonnanj is reclaimed from the realm of the dead and placed into a clay jar or bottle called the govi. Now ensconced in the world of the living, the gwo bonnanj of this ancestor is deemed capable of assisting its descendants and guiding them with its wisdom.[410] Practitioners sometimes believe that failing to conduct this ritual can result in misfortune, illness, and death for the family of the deceased.[411] Offerings then given to this spirit of the dead are termed manje mò.[412] The notion of a spirit being encased in a vessel and then used for workings likely derives from Kongolese influences,[413] and has similarities with the Kongolese-derived Palo religion from Cuba.[414]

 
Haitian skulls at the Ethnographic Museum in Berlin. In Vodou, human skulls may be used either for sorcery or for healing.[415]

Another belief about the dead, that of zombis, is one of the most sensationalized aspects of Haitian religion.[416] Zonbi are often regarded as the gwo bonnanj of the recently deceased that have been captured and forced to work for their master.[417] The gwo bonnanj may then be kept inside a bottle or other vessel.[418] The practice is often linked to Chanpwèl (secret societies), which are suspected of murdering the individual they wish to turn into a zonbi.[419] To achieve this, they may obtain the bones of a deceased person, especially their skull, sometimes by bribing cemetery workers;[420] the skull will often be baptised, given food, and set a particular task to specialise in, such as healing a specific malady.[27] Those intending to take a gwo bonnanj as a zonbi may have to borrow or buy them from Baron Samedi.[421]

An alternative idea in Haitian lore is that it is the body that is turned into a zonbi,[422] in which case a bòkò has seized an individual's ti bonnanj and left the body as an empty vessel that can be manipulated.[423] The reality of this phenomenon is contested,[421] although the anthropologist Wade Davis argued that this was based on a real practice whereby Bizango societies used poisons to make certain individuals more pliant.[424] Haitians generally do not fear zombis, but rather fear becoming one themselves.[423] The figure of the zombi has also been interpreted as a metaphor for the enslavement central to Haitian history.[425]

Festival and pilgrimage Edit

 
Vodouists washing in a river following a ceremony; photographed in Haiti in 2010

On the saints' days of the Roman Catholic calendar, Vodouists often hold "birthday parties" for the lwa associated with the saint whose day it is.[426] These are marked with special altars for the celebrated lwa,[427] as well as the preparation of their preferred food.[428] Devotions to the Gede are particularly common around the days of the dead, All Saints (1 November) and All Souls (2 November),[429] with celebrations largely taking place in the cemeteries of Port-au-Prince.[430] At this festival, those devoted to the Gede dress in black and purple, with funeral frock coats, black veils, and top hats, all linking to the Gede's associations with death.[431]

The build-up to Easter sees Rara bands, largely consisting of peasants and the urban poor, process through the streets singing and dancing.[432] Each Rara band is considered to be under the patronage of a particular lwa, holding a contract with them that typically lasts seven years.[433] Performing Rara is regarded as a service to the lwa,[434] and some Rara leaders claim that a lwa instructed them to form their band.[435] An oungan will typically be part of the Rara band and will oversee their religious obligations, for instance performing rituals during their procession,[436] or providing members with a benyen protective bath before they perform.[437]

Pilgrimage is part of Haitian religious culture.[438] In late July, Vodouist pilgrims visit Plaine du Nord near Bwa Caiman, where according to legend the Haitian Revolution began. There, sacrifices are made and pilgrims immerse themselves in the twou (mud pits).[439] The pilgrims often mass before the Church of Saint Jacques, with Saint Jacques perceived as being the lwa Ogou.[440] Another pilgrimage site is Saint d'Eau, a mountain associated with the lwa Èzili Dantò.[441] Pilgrims visit a site outside the town of Ville-Bonheur where Èzili is claimed to have once appeared; there, they bathe under waterfalls.[442] Haitian pilgrims commonly wear coloured ropes around their head or waist;[438] a tradition that may derive from a Kongolese custom, kanga ("to tie"), during which sacred objects were bound with rope.[443]

History Edit

Before the Revolution Edit

 
Area of West African Vodun practice, the religion with the greatest influence on Haitian Vodou

In 1492, Christopher Columbus' Spanish expedition established the first European colony on Hispaniola.[444] A growing European presence decimated the island's indigenous population, which was probably Taíno, both through introduced diseases and exploitation as laborers.[445] The European colonists then turned to imported West African slaves as a new source of labor; Africans first arrived on Hispaniola circa 1512.[446] Most of the enslaved were prisoners of war.[447] Some were probably priests of traditional religions, helping to transport their rites to the Americas.[447] Others may have practiced Abrahamic religions. Some were probably Muslim, although Islam exerted little influence on Vodou,[448] while others probably practiced traditional religions that had already absorbed Roman Catholic iconographic influences.[449]

By the late 16th century, French colonists were settling in western Hispaniola; Spain recognized French sovereignty over that part of the island, which became Saint-Domingue, in a series of treaties signed in 1697.[450] Moving away from its previous subsistence economy, in the 18th century Saint-Domingue refocused its economy around the mass export of indigo, coffee, sugar, and cocoa to Europe.[451] To work the plantations, the French colonists sought labor from various sources, including a renewed emphasis on importing enslaved Africans; whereas there were twice as many Africans as Europeans in the colony in 1681, by 1790 there were eleven times as many Africans as Europeans.[452] Ultimately, Saint-Domingue became the colony with the largest number of slaves in the Caribbean.[453]

The Code Noir issued by King Louis XIV in 1685 forbade the open practice of African religions on Saint-Domingue.[454] This Code compelled slave-owners to have their slaves baptised and instructed as Roman Catholics;[455] the fact that the process of enslavement led to these Africans becoming Christian was a key way in which the slave-owners sought to morally legitimate their actions.[456] However, many slave-owners took little interest in having their slaves instructed in Roman Catholic teaching;[456] they often did not want their slaves to spend time celebrating saints' days rather than laboring and were also concerned that black congregations could provide scope to foment revolt.[457]

Enslavement destroyed the social fabric of African traditional religions, which were typically rooted in ethnic and family membership.[458] Although certain cultural assumptions about the nature of the universe would have been widely shared among the enslaved Africans, they came from diverse linguistic and ethno-cultural backgrounds and had to forge common cultural practices on Hispaniola.[459] Gradually over the course of the 18th century, Vodou emerged as "a composite of various African ethnic traditions", merging diverse practices into a more cohesive form.[460] These African religions had to be practiced secretly, with Roman Catholic iconography and rituals probably adopted so as to conceal the true identity of the deities that enslaved Africans were serving.[146] This resulted in a system of correspondences between African spirits and Roman Catholic saints.[146] Afro-Haitians adopted other aspects of French colonial culture;[461] Vodou drew influence from European grimoires,[462] as well as European commedia performances.[463] Also an influence was Freemasonry, after Masonic lodges were established across Saint-Domingue in the 18th century.[464] Vodou rituals took place in secret, usually at night; one such rite was described during the 1790s by a white man, Médéric Louis Élie Moreau de Saint-Méry.[465] Some enslaved Afro-Haitians escaped to form Maroon groups, which often practiced Vodou in forms influenced by the ethno-cultural background of their leaders.[466]

The Haitian Revolution and the 19th century Edit

 
The Affaire de Bizoton of 1864. The murder and alleged cannibalization of a child by eight Vodou devotees caused a scandal worldwide and was taken as proof of the evil nature of Vodou.

In Haitian lore, Vodou is often presented as having played a vital role in the Haitian Revolution,[23] although scholars debate the extent to which this is true.[467] According to legend, a Vodou ritual took place in Bois-Caïman on 14 August 1791 at which the participants swore to overthrow the slave owners before massacring local whites and sparking the Revolution.[468] Although a popular tale in Haitian folklore, it has no historical evidence to support it.[469] Moreover, two of the revolution's early leaders, Boukman and Francois Mackandal, were reputed to be powerful oungans.[470] Amid growing rebellion, the French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte ordered troops into the colony in 1801,[471] but in 1803 the French conceded defeat and the rebel leader Jean-Jacques Dessalines proclaimed Saint-Domingue to be a new republic named Haiti.[472]

The Revolution broke up the large land-ownings and created a society of small subsistence farmers.[473] Haitians largely began living in lakous, or extended family compounds, which enabled the preservation of African-derived Creole religions.[474] These lakous often had their own lwa rasin (root lwa),[475] being intertwined with concepts of land and kinship.[476] Many Roman Catholic missionaries had been killed in the Revolution,[477] and after its victory Dessalines declared himself head of the Church in Haiti.[477] Protesting these actions, the Roman Catholic Church cut ties with Haiti in 1805;[478] this allowed Vodou to predominate in the country.[479] Many churches left abandoned were adopted for Vodou rites, continuing the syncretization between the two systems.[480] At this point, with no new arrivals from Africa, Vodou began to stabilise,[481] transforming from "a widely-scattered series of local cults" into "a religion".[482] The Roman Catholic Church re-established its formal presence in Haiti in 1860.[479]

Haiti's first three presidents sought to suppress Vodou, using police to break-up rituals which they feared as a source of rebellion.[483] In 1847, Faustin Soulouque became president; he was sympathetic to Vodou and allowed it to be practiced more openly.[484] In the Bizoton Affair of 1863, several Vodou practitioners were accused of ritually killing a child before eating it. Historical sources suggest that they may have been tortured prior to confessing to the crime, at which they were executed.[485] The affair received much attention.[485]

20th century to the present Edit

 
Haitian President François Duvalier called Vodou "the supreme factor of Haitian unity".[486]

The United States occupied Haiti between 1915 and 1934,[487] something which encouraged international interest in Vodou.[488] This interest was catered for in the sensationalist writings of Faustin Wirkus, William Seabrook, and John Craige,[489] as well as in Vodou-themed shows for tourists, especially in Port-au-Prince.[490] The period also saw the growing influence of the Roman Catholic Church,[491] and in 1941 the Church backed Operation Nettoyage (Operation Cleanup), a government campaign to expunge Vodou, during which many ounfòs were destroyed.[492] Violent responses from Vodouists led President Élie Lescot to abandon the Operation.[493]

During the occupation, the indigenist movement among Haiti's middle classes encouraged a more positive assessment of Vodou and peasant culture, a trend supported by the appearance of professional ethnological research on the topic.[494] Church influence in Haiti was curtailed by François Duvalier, the country's president from 1957 to 1971.[495] Although he restored Catholicism as the state religion, Duvalier was widely perceived as a champion of Vodou,[496] calling it "the supreme factor of Haitian unity".[486] He utilized it for his own purposes, encouraging rumors about his own powers of sorcery.[497] Under Duvalier, regional networks of oungans doubled as the country's chefs-de-sections (rural section chiefs).[498]

After his son, Jean-Claude Duvalier, was ousted from office in 1986, there were attacks on Vodouists perceived to have supported the Duvaliers, partly motivated by Protestant anti-Vodou campaigns; practitioners called this violence the Dechoukaj ('uprooting').[499] Two groups, the Zantray and Bode Nasyonal, were formed to defend the rights of Vodouists, holding rallies and demonstrations.[500] Haiti's 1987 constitution enshrined freedom of religion,[501] after which President Jean-Bertrand Aristide granted Vodou official recognition in 2003,[502] thus allowing Vodouists to officiate at civil ceremonies such as weddings and funerals.[503]

 
A Vodou ceremony taking place at the National Black Theatre in New York City in 2017

Since the 1990s, evangelical Protestantism has grown in Haiti, generating tensions with Vodouists.[28] These Protestants regard Vodou as Satanic,[504] and unlike the Roman Catholic authorities have generally refused to compromise with its practiitoners.[505] The 2010 Haiti earthquake fuelled conversion from Vodou to Protestantism,[506] with many Protestants, including the U.S. televangelist Pat Robertson, claiming that the earthquake was punishment for the sins of the Haitian population, including their practice of Vodou.[507] Mob attacks on Vodouists followed in the wake of the earthquake,[508] and again in the wake of the 2010 cholera outbreak.[509]

The first three decades of the 20th century saw growing Haitian migration to eastern Cuba; some Haitians took Vodou with them, where it was adopted by certain Cubans.[510] From 1957, many upper and middle-class Haitians fled abroad to escape Duvalier; from 1971, many poorer Haitians also began emigrating, again taking Vodou with them.[511] In the U.S., Vodou has attracted non-Haitians, especially African Americans and migrants from elsewhere in the Caribbean.[393] There, Vodou has syncretized with other religious systems such as Santería and Spiritism.[393] In the U.S., those seeking to revive Louisiana Voodoo during the latter part of the 20th century initiated practices that brought the religion closer to Haitian Vodou or Santería that it appears to have been early in that century.[512]

Demographics Edit

It is difficult to determine how many Haitians practice Vodou, largely because the country has never had an accurate census and many Vodouists will not openly admit they practice the religion.[513] It is nevertheless the majority religion of Haiti,[514] for most Haitians practice both Vodou and Roman Catholicism.[28] An estimated 80% of Haitians practice Vodou;[515] in 1992, Desmangles put the number of Haitian practitioners at six million.[516] An often used joke about Haiti holds that the island's population is 85% Roman Catholic, 15% Protestant, and 100% Vodou.[517] Even some of those who reject Vodou acknowledge its close associations with Haitian identity.[23] Not all take part in the religion regularly, but many will turn to Vodou priests and priestesses when in times of need.[518]

Vodouists learn about the religion by taking part in its rituals,[519] with children learning by observing adults.[266] Vodou does not focus on proselytizing;[520] according to Brown, it has "no pretensions to the universal."[514] It has nevertheless spread beyond Haiti, including to other Caribbean islands like the Dominican Republic, Cuba, and Puerto Rico, as well as to France and the United States.[521] Major ounfòs exist in U.S. cities such as Miami, New York City, Washington, DC, Boston, and Oakland, California.[522]

Reception and legacy Edit

Various scholars describe Vodou as one of the world's most maligned and misunderstood religions.[523] Throughout Haitian history, Christians have often presented it as a Satanic practice,[524] while in broader Anglophone and Francophone society it has been widely associated with sorcery, witchcraft, and black magic.[525] In U.S. popular culture, for instance, Haitian Vodou is usually portrayed as destructive and malevolent,[526] attitudes often linked with anti-black racism.[78] Non-practitioners have often depicted Vodou in literature, theater, and film;[527] in many cases, such as the films White Zombie (1932) and London Voodoo (2004), these promote sensationalist views of the religion.[528] The lack of any central Vodou authority has hindered efforts to combat these negative representations.[529]

Humanity's relationship with the lwa has been a recurring theme in Haitian art,[318] and the Vodou pantheon was a major topic for the mid-20th century artists of the "Haitian Renaissance."[530] Art collectors began to take an interest in Vodou ritual paraphernalia in the late 1950s, and by the 1970s an established market for this material had emerged.[531] Exhibits of Vodou ritual material have been displayed abroad; the Fowler Museum's exhibit on "Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou" for instance traveled the U.S. for three years in the 1990s.[532] Vodou has appeared in Haitian literature,[533] and has also influenced Haitian music, as with the rock band Boukman Eksperyans,[534] while theatre troupes have performed simulated Vodou rituals for audiences outside Haiti.[535] Documentaries focusing on Vodou have appeared[536]—such as Maya Deren's 1985 film Divine Horsemen[537][538] or Anne Lescot and Laurence Magloire's 2002 work Of Men and Gods[539]—which have in turn encouraged some viewers to take a practical interest in the religion.[540]

See also Edit

References Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "Vodou" is the "customary spelling" of "the traditional religion of the Haitian people."[1] Alternative spellings have included Voodoo /ˈvd/[2] Vaudou /ˈvd/;[3] Vodun /ˈvd/;[3][4] Vodoun[1][3][4] /ˈvdn/; Vodu[5] /ˈvd/, or Vaudoux[5] /ˈvd/

Citations Edit

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  4. ^ a b Courlander 1988, p. 88.
  5. ^ a b Corbett, Bob (16 July 1995). "Yet more on the spelling of Voodoo". www.hartford-hwp.com. from the original on 1 March 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
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  7. ^ Cosentino 1996, p. 1; Michel 1996, p. 293.
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  9. ^ Desmangles 1992, p. 93.
  10. ^ Desmangles 1992, pp. xi, 1.
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  13. ^ Derby 2015, p. 397.
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  255. ^ Brown 1991, p. 324; Fernández Olmos & Paravisini-Gebert 2011, p. 122.
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  • Desmangles, Leslie (1992). The Faces of the Gods: Vodou and Roman Catholicism in Haiti. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807843932.
  • Desmangles, Leslie G. (2012). "Replacing the Term "Voodoo" with "Vodou": A Proposal". Journal of Haitian Studies. 18 (2): 26–33. JSTOR 41949201.
  • Emore, Holli S. (2021). Constellated Ministry: A Guide for Those Serving Today's Pagans. Sheffield: Equinox. ISBN 9781781799574.
  • Fandrich, Ina J. (2007). "Yorùbá Influences on Haitian Vodou and New Orleans Voodoo". Journal of Black Studies. 37 (5): 775–791. doi:10.1177/0021934705280410. JSTOR 40034365. S2CID 144192532.
  • Fernández Olmos, Margarite; Paravisini-Gebert, Lizabeth (2011). Creole Religions of the Caribbean: An Introduction from Vodou and Santería to Obeah and Espiritismo (second ed.). New York and London: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-6228-8.
  • Germain, Felix (2011). "The Earthquake, the Missionaries, and the Future of Vodou". Journal of Black Studies. 42 (2): 247–263. doi:10.1177/0021934710394443. JSTOR 41151338. S2CID 144087606.
  • Girouard, Tina (1995). "The Sequin Arts of Vodou". In Donald J., Cosentino (ed.). Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou. Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History. pp. 357–377. ISBN 0-930741-47-1.
  • Hagedorn, Katherine J. (2001). Divine Utterances: The Performance of Afro-Cuban Santería. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Books. ISBN 978-1560989479.
  • Hammond, Charlotte (2012). ""Children" of the Gods: Filming the Private Rituals of Haitian Vodou". Journal of Haitian Studies. 18 (2): 64–82. JSTOR 41949204.
  • Hebblethwaite, Benjamin (2015). "The Scapegoating of Haitian Vodou Religion: David Brooks's (2010) Claim That "Voodoo" is a "Progress-Resistant" Cultural Influence". Journal of Black Studies. 46 (1): 3–22. doi:10.1177/0021934714555186. S2CID 54828385.
  • Houlberg, Marilyn (1995). "Magique Marasa: The Ritual Cosmos of Twins and Other Sacred Children". In Donald J., Cosentino (ed.). Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou. Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History. pp. 267–283. ISBN 0-930741-47-1.
  • Hurbon, Laënnec (1995). "American Fantasy and Haitian Vodou". In Donald J., Cosentino (ed.). Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou. Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History. pp. 181–197. ISBN 0-930741-47-1.
  • Johnson, Paul Christopher (2002). Secrets, Gossip, and Gods: The Transformation of Brazilian Candomblé. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195150582.
  • 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.
  • McAlister, Elizabeth (1993). "Sacred Stories from the Haitian Diaspora: A Collective Biography of Seven Vodou Priestesses in New York City". Journal of Caribbean Studies. 9 (1 & 2 (Winter)): 10–27. from the original on 2012-04-22. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  • McAlister, Elizabeth (1995). "A Sorcerer's Bottle: The Visual Art of Magic in Haiti". In Donald J., Cosentino (ed.). Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou. Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History. pp. 305–321. ISBN 0-930741-47-1. from the original on 2015-05-05. Retrieved 2015-05-03.
  • McAlister, Elizabeth (2002). Rara! Vodou, Power, and Performance in Haiti and its Diaspora. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520228221.
  • Michel, Claudine (1996). "Of Worlds Seen and Unseen: The Educational Character of Haitian Vodou". Comparative Education Review. 40 (3): 280–294. doi:10.1086/447386. JSTOR 1189105. S2CID 144256087.
  • Michel, Claudine (2001). "Women's Moral and Spiritual Leadership in Haitian Vodou: The Voice of Mama Lola and Karen McCarthy Brown". Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion. 17 (2): 61–87. JSTOR 25002412.
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  • Ramsey, Kate (2011). The Spirits and the Law: Vodou and Power in Haiti. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-70379-4.
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  • Thylefors, Markel (2009). (PDF). Stockholm Review of Latin American Studies (4): 73–84. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-22. Retrieved 2009-04-26.
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  • Wilcken, Lois (2005). "The Sacred Music and Dance of Haitian Vodou from Temple to Stage and the Ethics of Representation". Latin American Perspectives. 32 (1): 193–210. doi:10.1177/0094582X04271880. JSTOR 30040235. S2CID 144260390.
  • Wilcken, Lois (2007). "Vodou Theater in the Land of the Rising Sun: A Report from Tokyo". Journal of Haitian Studies. 13 (1): 112–117. JSTOR 41715346.

Further reading Edit

  • Bellegarde-Smith, Patrick; Michel, Claudine (2006). Haitian Vodou: Spirit, Myth & Reality. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253218537.
  • Benedicty-Kokken, Alessandra (2014). Spirit Possession in French, Haitian, and Vodou Thought: An Intellectual History. Lanham: Lexington. ISBN 978-0739184653.
  • Joseph, Celucien L.; Cleophat, Nixon S. (2016). Vodou in the Haitian Experience: A Black Atlantic Perspective. Lanham: Lexington. ISBN 978-1498508346.
  • Joseph, Celucien L.; Cleophat, Nixon S. (2016). Vodou in Haitian Memory: The Idea and Representation of Vodou in Haitian Imagination. Lanham: Lexington. ISBN 978-1498508346.
  • Daniel, Yvonne (2005). Dancing Wisdom: Embodied Knowledge in Haitian Vodou, Cuban Yoruba, and Bahian Candomblé. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0252072079.
  • Deren, Maya (1953). Divine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti. New York: Thames and Hudson.
  • Hebblethwaite, Benjamin (2021). A Transatlantic History of Haitian Vodou: Rasin Figuier, Rasin Bwa Kayiman, and the Rada and Gede Rites. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496835604.
  • Herskovits, Melville J. (1937). Life in a Haitian Valley. New York City: Knopf.
  • Largey, Michael (2009). Vodou Nation: Haitian Art Music and Cultural Nationalism (enlarged ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226468655.
  • Long, Carolyn (2001). Spiritual Merchants: Magic, Religion and Commerce. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 978-1572331105.
  • McAlister, Elizabeth. 1998. "The Madonna of 115th St. Revisited: Vodou and Haitian Catholicism in the Age of Transnationalism. 2009-08-27 at the Wayback Machine" In S. Warner, ed., Gatherings in Diaspora. Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press.
  • Rey, Terry; Stepick, Alex (2013). Crossing the Water and Keeping the Faith: Haitian Religion in Miami. New York and London: NYU Press. ISBN 978-0814777084.
  • Richman, Karen E. (2005). Migration and Vodou. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0813033259.
  • Strongman, Roberto (2019). Queering Black Atlantic Religions: Transcorporeality in Candomblé, Santería, and Vodou. Religious Cultures of African and African Diaspora People. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-1478003106.
  • Vanhee, Hein (2002). "Central African Popular Christianity and the Making of Haitian Vodou Religion". In L. M. Heywood (ed.). Central Africans and Cultural Transformations in the American Diaspora. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 243–264. ISBN 978-0521002783.

External links Edit

haitian, vodou, african, diasporic, religion, that, developed, haiti, between, 16th, 19th, centuries, arose, through, process, syncretism, between, several, traditional, religions, west, central, africa, roman, catholicism, there, central, authority, control, . Haitian Vodou a is an African diasporic religion that developed in Haiti between the 16th and 19th centuries It arose through a process of syncretism between several traditional religions of West and Central Africa and Roman Catholicism There is no central authority in control of the religion and much diversity exists among practitioners who are known as Vodouists Vodouisants or Serviteurs A sequined drapo flag depicting the veve symbol of the lwa Loko Atison these symbols play an important role in Vodou ritualVodou teaches the existence of a transcendent creator deity Bondye under whom are spirits known as lwa Typically deriving their names and attributes from traditional West and Central African divinities they are equated with Roman Catholic saints The lwa divide into different groups the nanchon nations most notably the Rada and the Petwo about whom various myths and stories are told This theology has been labelled both monotheistic and polytheistic An initiatory tradition Vodouists commonly venerate the lwa at an ounfo temple run by an oungan priest or manbo priestess Alternatively Vodou is also practised within family groups or in secret societies like the Bizango A central ritual involves practitioners drumming singing and dancing to encourage a lwa to possess one of their members and thus communicate with them Offerings to the lwa include fruit liquor and sacrificed animals Offerings are also given to the spirits of the dead Several forms of divination are utilized to decipher messages from the lwa Healing rituals and the preparation of herbal remedies and talismans also play a prominent role Vodou developed among Afro Haitian communities amid the Atlantic slave trade of the 16th to 19th centuries Its structure arose from the blending of the traditional religions of those enslaved West and Central Africans among them Yoruba Fon and Kongo who had been brought to the island of Hispaniola There it absorbed influences from the culture of the French colonialists who controlled the colony of Saint Domingue most notably Roman Catholicism but also Freemasonry Many Vodouists were involved in the Haitian Revolution of 1791 to 1801 which overthrew the French colonial government abolished slavery and transformed Saint Domingue into the republic of Haiti The Roman Catholic Church left for several decades following the Revolution allowing Vodou to become Haiti s dominant religion In the 20th century growing emigration spread Vodou abroad The late 20th century saw growing links between Vodou and related traditions in West Africa and the Americas such as Cuban Santeria and Brazilian Candomble while some practitioners influenced by the Negritude movement have sought to remove Roman Catholic influences Most Haitians practice both Vodou and Roman Catholicism seeing no contradiction in pursuing the two different systems simultaneously Smaller Vodouist communities exist elsewhere especially among the Haitian diaspora in the United States Both in Haiti and abroad Vodou has spread beyond its Afro Haitian origins and is practiced by individuals of various ethnicities Vodou has faced much criticism through its history having repeatedly been described as one of the world s most misunderstood religions Contents 1 Definitions and terminology 2 Beliefs 2 1 Bondye and the lwa 2 1 1 The nanchon 2 1 2 The lwa and the saints 2 2 Soul and afterlife 2 3 Morality ethics and gender roles 3 Practices 3 1 Oungan and Manbo 3 2 The ounfo 3 2 1 The congregation 3 3 Initiation 3 4 Shrines and altars 3 5 Offerings and animal sacrifice 3 6 The Dans 3 6 1 Spirit possession 3 7 Divination 3 8 Healing and harming 3 9 Funerals the dead and zonbis 3 10 Festival and pilgrimage 4 History 4 1 Before the Revolution 4 2 The Haitian Revolution and the 19th century 4 3 20th century to the present 5 Demographics 6 Reception and legacy 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksDefinitions and terminology Edit nbsp An oungan Vodou priest with another practitioner at a ceremony in Haiti in 2011Vodou is a religion 6 More specifically it has been characterised as Haiti s national religion 7 and as an Afro Haitian religion 8 as well as a traditional religion 9 and a folk religion 10 Its main structure derives from the African traditional religions of West and Central Africa which were brought to Haiti by enslaved Africans between the 16th and 19th centuries 11 On the island these African religions mixed with the iconography of European derived traditions such as Roman Catholicism and Freemasonry 12 taking the form of Vodou around the mid 18th century 13 In combining varied influences Vodou has often been described as syncretic 14 or a symbiosis 15 a religion exhibiting diverse cultural influences 16 Despite its older influences Vodou represented a new religion 17 a creolized New World system 18 one that differs in many ways from African traditional religions 19 One of the most complex of the African diasporic traditions 20 the scholar Leslie Desmangles called it an African derived tradition 21 Ina J Fandrich termed it a neo African religion 22 and Markel Thylefors called it an Afro Latin American religion 23 Owing to their shared origins in West African traditional religion Vodou has been characterized as a sister religion of Cuban Santeria and Brazilian Candomble 24 In English Vodou s practitioners are termed Vodouists 25 or in French and Haitian Creole Vodouisants 26 or Vodouyizan 27 Another term for adherents is sevite serviteurs devotees 28 reflecting their self description as people who sevi lwa serve the lwa the supernatural beings that play a central role in Vodou 29 Lacking any central institutional authority 30 Vodou has no single leader 31 It thus has no orthodoxy 32 no central liturgy 33 nor a formal creed 34 Developing over the course of several centuries 35 it has changed over time 36 It displays variation at both the regional and local level 37 including variation between Haiti and the Haitian diaspora 38 as well as among different congregations 39 It is practiced domestically by families on their land but also by congregations meeting communally 40 with the latter termed temple Vodou 41 nbsp Vodou paraphernalia for sale at the Marche de Fer Iron Market in Port au Prince Haiti In Haitian culture religions are not generally deemed totally autonomous with many Haitians practicing both Vodou and Roman Catholicism 42 Vodouists usually regard themselves as Roman Catholics 43 In Haiti Vodouists have also practiced Mormonism 44 and Freemasonry 45 while abroad they have involved themselves in Santeria 46 and modern Paganism 47 Vodou has also absorbed elements from other contexts in Cuba some Vodouists have adopted elements from Spiritism 48 Influenced by the Negritude movement other Vodouists have sought to remove Roman Catholic and other European influences from their practice of Vodou 49 The ritual language used in Vodou is termed langaj 50 Many of these terms including the word Vodou itself 11 derive from the Fon language of West Africa 51 First recorded in the 1658 Doctrina Christiana 52 the Fon word Vodoun was used in the West African kingdom of Dahomey to signify a spirit or deity 53 In Haitian Creole Vodou came to designate a specific style of dance and drumming 54 before outsiders to the religion adopted it as a generic term for much Afro Haitian religion 55 The word Vodou now encompasses a variety of Haiti s African derived religious traditions and practices 56 incorporating a bundle of practices that practitioners themselves do not aggregate 57 Vodou is thus a term primarily used by scholars and outsiders to the religion 57 many practitioners describe their belief system with the term Ginen which especially denotes a moral philosophy and ethical code regarding how to live and to serve the spirits 38 Vodou is the common spelling for the religion among scholars in official Haitian Creole orthography and by the United States Library of Congress 58 59 Some scholars use the spellings Vodoun or Vodun 60 while in French the spellings vaudou 61 or vaudoux also appear 62 The spelling Voodoo once common is now generally avoided by practitioners and scholars when referring to the Haitian religion 63 This is both to avoid confusion with Louisiana Voodoo a related but distinct tradition 64 and to distinguish it from the negative connotations that the term Voodoo has in Western popular culture 65 Beliefs EditBondye and the lwa Edit nbsp A selection of ritual items used in Vodou practice on display in the Canadian Museum of Civilization Teaching the existence of single supreme God 66 Vodou has been described as monotheistic 67 Believed to have created the universe 68 this entity is called Bondye or Bonie 69 a term deriving from the French Bon Dieu Good God 70 Another term used is the Gran Met 71 which derives from Freemasonry 45 For Vodouists Bondye is seen as the ultimate source of power 72 deemed responsible for maintaining universal order 73 Bondye is also regarded as remote and transcendent 74 not involving itself in human affairs 75 there is thus little point in approaching it directly 76 Haitians will frequently use the phrase si Bondye vle if Bondye wishes suggesting a belief that all things occur in accordance with this divinity s will 77 While Vodouists often equate Bondye with the Christian God 78 Vodou does not incorporate belief in a powerful antagonist that opposes the supreme being akin to the Christian notion of Satan 79 Vodou has also been characterized as polytheistic 76 It teaches the existence of beings called the lwa 80 a term varyingly translated into English as spirits gods or geniuses 81 These lwa are also known as the mysteres anges saints and les invisibles 28 and are sometimes equated with the angels of Christian cosmology 78 Vodou teaches that there are over a thousand lwa 82 They serve as Bondye s intermediaries 83 and communicate with humans both by possessing them and through dreams 84 Vodouists believe the lwa are capable of offering people help protection and counsel in return for ritual service 85 Each lwa has its own personality 28 and is associated with specific colors 86 days of the week 87 and objects 28 They are however not seen as moral exemplars for practitioners to imitate 88 The lwa can be either loyal or capricious in their dealings with their devotees 28 they are easily offended for instance if offered food they dislike 89 When angered the lwa are believed to remove their protection from their devotees or to inflict misfortune illness or madness on an individual 90 Although there are exceptions most lwa names derive from the Fon and Yoruba languages 91 New lwa are nevertheless added to the pantheon with both talismans and certain humans thought capable of becoming lwa 92 in the latter case through their strength of personality or power 93 Vodouists often refer to the lwa living in the sea or in rivers 87 or alternatively in Guinea 94 a term encompassing a generalized understanding of Africa as the ancestral land 95 The nanchon Edit nbsp A painting of the lwa Danbala a serpent by Haitian artist Hector HyppoliteThe lwa divide into nanchon or nations 96 This classificatory system derives from the way in which enslaved West Africans were divided into nations upon their arrival in Haiti usually based on their African port of departure rather than their ethno cultural identity 28 The term fanmi family is sometimes used synonymously with nanchon or alternatively as a sub division of the latter category 97 It is often claimed that there are 17 nanchon 98 of which the Rada and the Petwo are the largest and most dominant 99 The Rada lwa are seen as being cool the Petwo lwa as hot 100 This means that the Rada are dous or doux or sweet tempered while the Petwo are lwa cho indicating that they can be forceful or violent and are associated with fire 101 Whereas the Rada are generally righteous their Petwo counterparts are thought of as being more morally ambiguous associated with issues like money 102 The Rada rituals owe more to Dahomeyan and Yoruban influences 103 and their name probably comes from Arada a city in the Dahomey kingdom of West Africa 104 The Petwo derive largely from Kongolese religion 105 although also exhibit Dahomeyan and creolised influences 106 Some lwa exist andezo or en deux eaux meaning that they are in two waters and are served in both Rada and Petwo rituals 101 Papa Legba also known as Legba is the first lwa saluted during Rada ceremonies 107 Depicted as a feeble old man wearing rags and using a crutch 108 Papa Legba is the protector of gates and fences and thus of the home as well as of roads paths and crossroads 109 In Petwo rites the first lwa invoked is usually Met Kalfou 110 The second lwa usually greeted are the Marasa or sacred twins 111 In Vodou every nanchon has its own Marasa 112 reflecting a belief that twins have special powers 113 Agwe also known as Agwe taroyo is associated with aquatic life and protector of ships and fishermen 114 Agwe is believed to rule the sea with his consort La Sirene 115 She is a mermaid or siren and is sometimes described as Ezili of the Waters because she is believed to bring good luck and wealth from the sea 116 Ezili Freda or Erzuli Freda is the lwa of love and luxury personifying feminine beauty and grace 117 Ezili Dantor is a lwa who takes the form of a peasant woman 118 nbsp A veve pattern designed to invoke Baron Samedi the chief of the Gede lwaAzaka is the lwa of crops and agriculture 119 usually addressed as Papa or Cousin 120 His consort is the female lwa Kouzinn 121 Loco is the lwa of vegetation and because he is seen to give healing properties to various plant species is considered the lwa of healing too 122 Ogou is a warrior lwa 123 associated with weapons 124 Sogbo is a lwa associated with lightning 125 while his companion Bade is associated with the wind 126 Danbala is a serpent lwa and is associated with water being believed to frequent rivers springs and marshes 127 he is one of the most popular deities in the pantheon 128 Danbala and his consort Ayida Weddo are often depicted as a pair of intertwining snakes 127 The Simbi are understood as the guardians of fountains and marshes 129 Usually seen as a fanmi rather than a nanchon 130 the Gede are associated with the realm of the dead 131 The head of the family is Baron Samedi Baron Saturday 132 his presence is often marked out in a Haitian cemetery with a large cross 133 His consort is Gran Brigit 134 who has authority over cemeteries and is mother to many of the other Gede 135 The Gede regularly satirise the ruling authorities 136 and are welcomed to rituals as they are thought to bring merriment 131 The Gede s symbol is an erect penis 137 while the banda dance associated with them involves sexual style thrusting 138 and those possessed by these lwa typically make sexual innuendos 139 The lwa and the saints Edit Most lwa are associated with specific Roman Catholic saints 140 For instance Azaka the lwa of agriculture is associated with Saint Isidore the farmer 141 Similarly because he is understood as the key to the spirit world Papa Legba is typically associated with Saint Peter who is visually depicted holding keys in traditional Roman Catholic imagery 142 The lwa of love and luxury Ezili Freda is associated with Mater Dolorosa 143 Danbala the serpent is often equated with Saint Patrick who is traditionally depicted with snakes or with Moses whose staff turned into serpents 144 The Marasa or sacred twins are typically equated with the twin saints Cosmos and Damian 145 Scholars like Desmangles have argued that Vodouists originally adopted the Roman Catholic saints to conceal lwa worship when the latter was illegal during the colonial period 146 Observing Vodou in the latter part of the 20th century Donald J Cosentino argued that by that point the use of Roman Catholic saints reflected the genuine devotional expression of many Vodouists 147 Many Vodouists possess chromolithographic prints of the saints 147 while images of these Christian figures can also be found on temple walls 148 and on the drapo flags used in Vodou ritual 149 Vodouists also often adopt and reinterpret Biblical stories and theorise about the nature of Jesus of Nazareth 150 Soul and afterlife Edit nbsp A Haitian drapo banner depicting a Roman Catholic saintVodou holds that Bondye created humanity in its image fashioning humans from water and clay 151 It teaches the existence of a soul the espri 152 or the nanm 153 which is divided in two parts 154 One of these is the ti bonnanj little good angel understood as the conscience that allows an individual to engage in self reflection and self criticism The other part is the gwo bonnanj big good angel and this constitutes the psyche source of memory intelligence and personhood 155 Both parts are believed to reside within an individual s head 156 although the gwo bonnanj is thought capable of leaving the head and travelling while a person sleeps 157 Vodouists believe that every individual is connected to a specific lwa regarded as their met tet master of the head 158 They believe that this lwa informs the individual s personality 159 Vodou holds that the identity of a person s tutelary lwa can be identified through divination or by consulting lwa when they possess other humans 160 Some of the religion s priests and priestesses are deemed to have the gift of eyes capable of seeing the identity of a person s tutelary lwa 161 Vodou holds that Bondye has preordained the time of everyone s death 162 but does not teach the existence of an afterlife realm akin to the Christian ideas of heaven and hell 163 Instead a common belief is that at bodily death the gwo bonnanj join the Ginen or ancestral spirits while the ti bonnanj proceeds to face judgement before Bondye 164 This idea of judgement is more common in urban areas having been influenced by Roman Catholicism while in the Haitian mountains it is more common for Vodouists to believe that the ti bonnanj dissolves into the navel of the earth nine days after death 165 The land of the Ginen is often identified as being located beneath the sea under the earth or above the sky 166 Some Vodouists believe that the gwo bonnanj stays in the land of the Ginen for a year and a day before being absorbed into the Gede family 167 However Vodouists usually distinguish the spirits of the dead from the Gede proper for the latter are lwa 168 Vodou also teaches that the dead continue to participate in human affairs 169 with these spirits often complaining that they suffer from hunger cold and damp 170 and thus requiring sacrifices from the living 76 Morality ethics and gender roles Edit See also Haitian Vodou and sexual orientation Vodou ethical standards correspond to its sense of cosmological order 73 with a belief in the interdependence of things playing a role in Vodou approaches to ethical issues 171 Serving the lwa is central to Vodou and its moral codes reflect the reciprocal relationship that practitioners have with these spirits 172 for Vodouists virtue is maintained by ensuring a responsible relationship with the lwa 88 Vodou also promotes a belief in destiny although individuals are still deemed to have freedom of choice 173 This view of destiny has been interpreted as encouraging a fatalistic outlook 174 something that the religion s critics especially from Christian backgrounds have argued has discouraged Vodouists from improving their society 175 This has been extended into an argument that Vodou is responsible for Haiti s poverty 176 a view that in turn has been accused of being rooted in European colonial prejudices towards Africans 177 nbsp A veve pattern designed to invoke Papa Legba one of the main lwa spirits worshipped in Haitian VodouAlthough Vodou permeates every aspect of its adherent s lives 178 it offers no prescriptive code of ethics 179 Rather than being rule based Vodou morality is deemed contextual to the situation 180 with no clear binary division between good and evil 181 Vodou reflects people s everyday concerns focusing on techniques for mitigating illness and misfortune 182 doing what one needs to in order to survive is considered a high ethic 183 Among Vodouists a moral person is regarded as someone who lives in tune with their character and that of their tutelary lwa 180 In general acts that reinforce Bondye s power are deemed good those that undermine it are seen as bad 73 Maji meaning the use of supernatural powers for self serving and malevolent ends are usually thought bad 184 The term is quite flexible it is usually used to denigrate other Vodouists although some practitioners have used it as a self descriptor in reference to Petwo rites 185 The extended family is of importance in Haitian society 186 with Vodou reinforcing family ties 187 and emphasising respect for the elderly 188 Vodou has been described as reflecting misogynistic elements of Haitian culture while simultaneously empowering women by allowing them to become priestesses 189 through which they can lay claim to moral authority as social and spiritual leaders 190 Vodou is also considered sympathetic to gay people 191 with various gay men holding status as Vodou priests 192 and some groups having largely gay congregations 193 Some Vodouists state that the lwa determined their sexual orientation turning them homosexual 194 while the lwa Ezili is seen as the patron of masisi gay men 195 Practices EditThe anthropologist Alfred Metraux described Vodou as a practical and utilitarian religion 87 Its practices largely revolve around interactions with the lwa 196 and incorporate song drumming dance prayer possession and animal sacrifice 197 Practitioners gather together for sevices services in which they commune with the lwa 198 Ceremonies for a particular lwa often coincide with the feast day of the Roman Catholic saint which that lwa is associated with 199 The mastery of ritual forms is considered imperative in Vodou 200 The purpose of ritual is to echofe heat things up thus bringing about change whether that be to remove barriers or to facilitate healing 201 Secrecy is important in Vodou 202 It is an initiatory tradition 203 operating through a system of graded induction or initiation 102 When an individual agrees to serve a lwa it is deemed a lifelong commitment 204 Vodou has a strong oral culture and its teachings are primarily disseminated through oral transmission 205 although many practitioners began to use texts after they appeared in the mid 20th century 206 Oungan and Manbo Edit nbsp Ceremonial suit worn in Haitian Vodou rites on display in the Ethnological Museum of Berlin GermanyMale priests are referred to as an oungan alternatively spelled houngan or hungan 207 or a pret Vodou Vodou priest 208 Priestesses are termed manbo alternatively spelled mambo 209 Oungan numerically dominate in rural Haiti while there is a more equitable balance of priests and priestesses in urban areas 210 The oungan and manbo are tasked with organising liturgies preparing initiations offering consultations with clients using divination and preparing remedies for the sick 211 There is no priestly hierarchy with oungan and manbo being largely self sufficient 211 In many cases the role is hereditary 212 Historical evidence suggests that the role of the oungan and manbo intensified over the course of the 20th century 213 As a result temple Vodou is now more common in rural areas of Haiti than it was in historical periods 214 Vodou teaches that the lwa call an individual to become an oungan or manbo 215 and if the latter refuses then misfortune may befall them 216 A prospective oungan or manbo must normally rise through the other roles in a Vodou congregation before undergoing an apprenticeship with a pre existing oungan or manbo lasting several months or years 217 After this apprenticeship they undergo an initiation ceremony the details of which are kept secret from non initiates 218 Other oungan and manbo do not undergo any apprenticeship but claim that they have gained their training directly from the lwa 219 Their authenticity is often challenged and they are referred to as hungan macoutte a term bearing some disparaging connotations 217 Becoming an oungan or manbo is expensive often requiring the purchase of ritual paraphernalia and land on which to build a temple 220 To finance this many save up for a long time 220 Vodouists believe that the oungan s role is modelled on the lwa Loco 221 in Vodou mythology he was the first oungan and his consort Ayizan the first manbo 222 The oungan and manbo are expected to display the power of second sight 223 something regarded as a gift from Bondye that can be revealed to the individual through visions or dreams 224 Many priests and priestesses are often attributed fantastical powers in stories told about them 225 and may bolster their status with claims to have received revelations from the lwa sometimes via visits to the lwa s own abode 226 There is often bitter competition between different oungan and manbo 227 Their main income derives from healing the sick supplemented with payments received for overseeing initiations and selling talismans and amulets 228 In many cases oungan and manbo become wealthier than their clients 229 Oungan and manbo are generally powerful and well respected members of Haitian society 230 Being an oungan or manbo provides an individual with both social status and material profit 192 although the fame and reputation of individual priests and priestesses can vary widely 231 Respected Vodou priests and priestesses are often literate in a society where semi literacy and illiteracy are common 232 They can recite from printed texts and write letters for illiterate members of their community 232 Owing to their prominence in a community the oungan and manbo can effectively become political leaders 224 or otherwise exert an influence on local politics 192 The ounfo Edit A Vodou temple is called an ounfo 233 varyingly spelled hounfo 234 hounfort 20 or humfo 40 An alternative term is gangan although the connotations of this term vary regionally in Haiti 235 Most communal Vodou activities centre around this ounfo 222 forming what is called temple Vodou 41 The size and shape of ounfos vary from basic shacks to more lavish structures the latter being more common in Port au Prince 222 Their designs are dependent on the resources and tastes of the oungan or manbo running them 236 Each ounfo is autonomous 237 and often has its own unique customs 238 nbsp A Vodou peristil in Croix des Mission Haiti photographed in 1980The main ceremonial room in the ounfo is the peristil 239 understood as a microcosmic representation of the cosmos 240 In the peristil brightly painted posts hold up the roof 241 the central post is the poto mitan 242 which is used as a pivot during ritual dances and the pillar through which the lwa enter the room during ceremonies 241 It is around this central post that offerings including both veve patterns and animal sacrifices are made 196 However in the Haitian diaspora many Vodouists perform their rites in basements where no poto mitan are available 243 The peristil typically has an earthen floor allowing libations to the lwa to drain directly into the soil 244 where this is not possible libations are poured into an enamel basin 245 Some peristil include seating around the walls 246 Adjacent rooms in the ounfo include the caye mysteres also known as the bagi badji or sobadji 247 This is where stonework altars known as pe stand against the wall or are arranged in tiers 247 Also present may be a sink dedicated to the lwa Danbala Wedo 248 The caye mysteres is also used to store clothing that will be worn by those possessed by the lwa during rituals 249 If space is available the ounfo may also have a room set aside for the patron lwa of that temple 250 Many ounfos have a room known as the djevo in which the initiate is confined during their initiatory ceremony 249 Every ounfo usually has a room or corner of a room devoted to Erzuli Freda 251 Some ounfo will also have additional rooms in which the oungan or manbo lives 250 The area around the ounfo often contains objects dedicated to particular lwa such as a pool of water for Danbala a black cross for Baron Samedi and a pince iron bar embedded in a brazier for Criminel 252 Sacred trees known as arbres reposoirs sometimes mark the ounfo s external boundary 253 Hanging from these trees can be found macounte straw sacks strips of material and animal skulls 253 Various animals particularly birds but also some mammal species such as goats are sometimes kept within the perimeter of the ounfo for use as sacrifices 253 The congregation Edit nbsp A Vodou ceremony taking place in an ounfo in Jacmel HaitiForming a spiritual community of practitioners 196 the ounfo s congregation are known as the pititt caye children of the house 254 They worship under the authority of an oungan or manbo 40 below whom is ranked the ounsi individuals who make a lifetime commitment to serving the lwa 255 Members of either sex can join the ounsi although most are female 256 The ounsi s duties include cleaning the peristil sacrificing animals and taking part in the dances at which they must be prepared to be possessed by a lwa 257 The oungan and manbo conduct initiatory ceremonies whereby people become ounsi 224 oversee their training 222 and act as their counsellor healer and protector 258 In turn the ounsi are expected to be obedient to their oungan or manbo 257 One of the ounsi becomes the hungenikon or reine chanterelle the mistress of the choir They are responsible for overseeing the liturgical singing and shaking the chacha rattle which dictates the rhythm during ceremonies 259 They are aided by the hungenikon la place commandant general de la place or quartermaster who is charged with overseeing offerings and keeping order during the rites 222 Another figure is le confiance the confidant the ounsi who oversees the ounfo s administrative functions 260 Congregants often form a sosyete soutyen societe soutien support society through which subscriptions are paid to help maintain the ounfo and organize the major religious feasts 261 In rural areas especially a congregation may consist of an extended family 211 Here the priest will often be the patriarch of that family 262 Families particularly in rural areas often believe that through their zanset ancestors they are tied to a premye met bitasyon original founder their descent from this figure is seen as giving them their inheritance both of the land and of familial spirits 38 In other examples particularly in urban areas an ounfo can act as an initiatory family 263 A priest becomes the papa father while the priestess becomes the manman mother to the initiate 264 the initiate becomes their initiator s pitit spiritual child 206 Those who share an initiator refer to themselves as brother and sister 217 Individuals may join a particular ounfo because it exists in their locality or because their family are already members Alternatively it may be that the ounfo places particular focus on a lwa whom they are devoted to or that they are impressed by the oungan or manbo who runs the ounfo in question perhaps having been treated by them 257 Initiation Edit nbsp A veve pattern designed to invoke Gran Brigit one of the lwa spirits worshipped in Haitian VodouVodou is hierarchical and includes a series of initiations 206 There are typically four levels of initiation 265 the fourth of which makes someone an oungan or manbo 266 There is much variation in what these initiation ceremonies entail 112 and the details are kept secret 267 Each initiatory stage is associated with a state of mind called konesans conaissance or knowledge 224 Successive initiations are required to move through the various konesans 224 and it is in these konesans that priestly power is believed to reside 268 The first initiation rite is the kanzo 269 this term also describes the initiate themselves 270 Initiation is generally expensive 271 complex 266 and requires significant preparation 112 Prospective initiates are for instance required to memorise many songs and learn the characteristics of various lwa 112 Vodouists believe the lwa may encourage an individual towards initiation bringing misfortune upon them if they refuse 272 Initiation will often be preceded by bathing in special preparations 273 The first part of the initiation rite is known as the kouche or huno and is marked by salutations and offerings to the lwa 274 It begins with the chire ayizan a ceremony in which palm leaves are frayed and then worn by the initiate 112 Sometimes the bat ge or batter guerre beating war is performed instead designed to beat away the old 112 During the rite the initiate comes to be regarded as the child of a particular lwa their met tet 112 This is followed by a period of seclusion within the djevo known as the kouche 112 A deliberately uncomfortable experience 156 it involves the initiate sleeping on a mat on the floor often with a stone for a pillow 275 They wear a white tunic 276 and a specific salt free diet is followed 277 It includes a lav tet head washing to prepare the initiate for having the lwa enter and reside in their head 278 Voudoists believe that one of the two parts of the human soul the gwo bonnanj is removed from the initiate s head thus making space for the lwa to enter and reside there 156 The initiation ceremony requires the preparation of pot tets head pots usually white porcelain cups with a lid in which a range of items are placed including hair food herbs and oils These are regarded as a home for the spirits 279 After the period of seclusion in the djevo the new initiate is brought out and presented to the congregation they are now referred to as ounsi lave tet 112 When the new initiate is presented to the rest of the community they carry their pot tet on their head before placing it on the altar 156 The final stage of the process involves the initiate being given an ason rattle 280 The initiation process is seen to have ended when the new initiate is first possessed by a lwa 156 Initiation is seen as creating a bond between a devotee and their tutelary lwa 281 and the former will often take on a new name that alludes to the name of this lwa 282 Shrines and altars Edit nbsp An altar in Boston Massachusetts established during the November festival of the GedeThe creation of sacred works is important in Vodou 200 Votive objects used in Haiti are typically made from industrial materials including iron plastic sequins china tinsel and plaster 36 An altar or pe will often contain images typically lithographs of Roman Catholic saints 283 Since developing in the mid 19th century chromolithography has also had an impact on Vodou imagery facilitating the widespread availability of images of the Roman Catholic saints who are equated with the lwa 284 Various Vodouists have made use of varied available materials in constructing their shrines Cosentino encountered a shrine in Port au Prince where Baron Samedi was represented by a plastic statue of Santa Claus wearing a black sombrero 285 and in another by a statue of Star Wars character Darth Vader 286 In Port au Prince it is common for Vodouists to include human skulls on their altar for the Gede 208 Many practitioners will also have an altar devoted to their ancestors in their home to which they direct offerings 287 In ounfos where both Rada and Petwo deities are worshipped their altars are kept separate 288 Various spaces other than the temple are used for Vodou ritual 289 Cemeteries are seen as places where spirits reside making them suitable for certain rituals 289 especially to approach the spirits of the dead 290 In rural Haiti cemeteries are often family owned and play a key role in family rituals 291 Crossroads are also ritual locations selected as they are believed to be points of access to the spirit world 289 Other spaces used for Vodou rituals include Christian churches rivers the sea fields and markets 289 nbsp An ason the ritual rattle emblematic of the Vodou priesthoodCertain trees are regarded as having spirits resident in them and are used as natural altars 232 Different species of tree are associated with different lwa Oyu for example is linked with mango trees and Danbala with bougainvillea 87 Selected trees in Haiti have had metal items affixed to them serving as shrines to Ogou who is associated with both iron and the roads 292 Spaces for ritual also appear in the homes of many Vodouists 293 These may vary from complex altars to more simple variants including only images of saints alongside candles and a rosary 41 Drawings known as veve are sketched onto the floor of the peristil using cornmeal ash coffee grounds or powdered eggshells 294 these are central to Vodou ritual 240 Usually arranged symmetrically around the poto mitan 295 these designs sometimes incorporate letters 232 their purpose is to summon lwa 295 Inside the peristil practitioners also unfurl ceremonial flags known as drapo flags at the start of a ceremony 296 Often made of silk or velvet and decorated with shiny objects such as sequins 297 the drapo often feature either the veve of specific lwa they are dedicated to or depictions of the associated Roman Catholic saint 149 These drapo are understood as points of entry through which the lwa can enter the peristil 298 A batems baptism is a ritual used to make an object a vessel for the lwa 299 Objects consecrated for ritual use are believed to contain a spiritual essence or power called nanm 300 The ason is a sacred rattle used in summoning the lwa 301 It consists of an empty dried gourd covered in beads and snake vertebra 302 Prior to being used in ritual it requires consecration 303 It is a symbol of the priesthood 303 assuming the duties of a manbo or oungan is referred to as taking the ason 304 Another type of sacred object are the thunder stones often prehistoric axe heads which are associated with specific lwa and kept in oil to preserve their power 305 Offerings and animal sacrifice Edit nbsp A drapo flag which are used to invoke the lwa at Vodou ceremoniesFeeding the lwa is of great importance 306 with rites often termed manje lwa feeding the lwa 307 Offering food and drink to the lwa is Vodou s most common ritual conducted both communally and in the home 306 The choice of food and drink offered varies depending on the lwa in question with different lwa believed to favor different foodstuffs 308 Danbala for instance requires white foods especially eggs 309 while Legba s offerings whether meat tubers or vegetables need to be grilled on a fire 306 and the lwa of the Ogu and Nago nations prefer raw rum or clairin 306 Certain foods are also offered in the belief that they are intrinsically virtuous such as grilled maize peanuts and cassava 172 A manje sek dry meal is an offering of grains fruit and vegetables that often precedes a simple ceremony it takes its name from the absence of blood 310 Animal sacrifices are often favored at annual feasts that an oungan or manbo organizes for their congregation 172 Species used for sacrifice include chickens goats and bulls with pigs often favored for Petwo lwa 307 The animal may be washed dressed in the color of the specific lwa and marked with food or water 311 Often the animal s throat will be cut and the blood collected in a calabash 312 Chickens are often killed by the pulling off of their heads their limbs may be broken beforehand 313 In the case of Agwe a lwa of the sea a white sheep may be sailed out to Trois Ilets and thrown overboard as a sacrifice 314 Once killed the animal may be butchered and organs removed sometimes cooked and placed on the altar or veve 315 Here it sometimes sites within a kwi a calabash shell bowl 316 Vodouists believe that the lwa consume the essence of the food 172 Food is typically offered when it is cool and is left for a while before humans may eat it 316 Offerings not consumed by the celebrants are often buried or left at a crossroads 317 Libations might be poured into the ground 172 The Dans Edit nbsp Multiple styles of drum are employed in Vodou ritual this example is used in rites invoking Rada lwaVodou s nocturnal gatherings are often referred to as the dans dance reflecting the prominent role that dancing has in such ceremonies 243 Their purpose is to invite a lwa to enter the ritual space and possess one of the worshippers through whom they can communicate with the congregation 318 The success of this procedure is predicated on mastering the different ritual actions and on getting the aesthetic right to please the lwa 318 The proceedings can last for the entirety of the night 243 On arriving the congregation typically disperse along the perimeter of the peristil 243 The ritual often begins with Roman Catholic prayers and hymns 319 these are often led by a figure known as the pret savann although not all ounfo have anyone in this role 320 This is followed by the shaking of the ason rattle to summon the lwa 321 Two Haitian Creole songs the Priye Deyo Outside Prayers may then be sung lasting from 45 minutes to an hour 322 The main lwa are then saluted individually in a specific order 322 Legba always comes first as he is believed to open the way for the others 322 Each lwa may be offered either three or seven songs which are specific to them 323 The rites employed to call down the lwa vary depending on the nanchon in question 324 During large scale ceremonies the lwa are invited to appear through the drawing of veve on the ground using cornmeal 214 Also used to call down the spirits is a process of drumming singing prayers and dances 214 Libations and offerings of food are made to the lwa which includes animal sacrifices 214 The order and protocol for welcoming the lwa is referred to as regleman 325 nbsp Dancing at Vodou ceremony in Port au Prince in 1976A symbol of the religion 326 the drum is perhaps the most sacred item in Vodou 327 Vodouists believe that ritual drums contain an etheric force the nanm 328 and a spirit called ounto 329 Specific ceremonies accompany the construction of a drum so that it is considered suitable for ritual use 330 In the bay manje tanbou feeding of the drum ritual offerings are given to the drum itself 328 Reflecting its status when Vodouists enter the peristil they customarily bow before the drums 331 Different types of drum are used sometimes reserved for rituals devoted to specific lwa Petwo rites for instance involve two types of drum whereas Rada rituals require three 332 Ritual drummers are called tanbouryes 333 and becoming one requires a lengthy apprenticeship 334 The drumming style choice of rhythm and composition of the orchestra differs depending on which nation of lwa are being invoked 335 The drum rhythms typically generate a kase break which the master drummer will initiate to oppose the main rhythm being played by the rest of the drummers This is seen as having a destabilizing effect on the dancers and helping to facilitate their possession 336 Drumming is typically accompanied by singing 331 usually in Haitian Creole 337 These songs are often structured around a call and response with a soloist singing a line and the chorus responding with either the same line or an abbreviated version 337 The soloist is the oundjenikon who maintains the rhythm with a rattle 338 Lyrically simple and repetitive these songs are invocations to summon a lwa 331 Dancing also plays a major role in ritual 339 utilising the rhythm of the drummers 337 The dances are simple lacking complex choreography and usually involve the dancers moving counterclockwise around the poto mitan 340 Specific dance movements can indicate the lwa or their nanchon being summoned 341 dances for Agwe for instance imitate swimming motions 342 Vodouists believe that the lwa renew themselves through the vitality of the dancers 343 Spirit possession Edit nbsp Drummer Frisner Augustin in a Vodou ceremony in Brooklyn New York City during the early 1980s Spirit possession is an important element of Vodou 344 and is central to many of its rituals 88 The person being possessed is referred to as the chwal horse 345 the act of possession is called mounting a horse 346 Vodou teaches that a lwa can possess an individual regardless of gender both male and female lwa can possess either men or women 347 Although children are often present at these ceremonies 348 they are rarely possessed as it is considered too dangerous 349 While the specific drums and songs used are designed to encourage a specific lwa to possess someone sometimes an unexpected lwa appears and takes possession instead 350 In some instances a succession of lwa possess the same individual one after the other 351 The trance of possession is known as the kriz lwa 334 Vodouists believe that during this process the lwa enters the head of the chwal and displaces their gwo bon anj 352 This displacement is believed to cause the chwal to tremble and convulse 353 As their consciousness has been removed from their head during the possession Vodouists believe that the chwal will have no memory of what occurs during the incident 354 The length of the possession varies often lasting a few hours but sometimes several days 355 It may end with the chwal collapsing in a semi conscious state 356 they are typically left physically exhausted 343 Some individuals attending the dance will put a certain item often wax in their hair or headgear to prevent possession 357 Once the lwa possesses an individual the congregation greet it with a burst of song and dance 343 The chwal will typically bow before the officiating priest or priestess and prostrate before the poto mitan 358 The chwal is often escorted into an adjacent room where they are dressed in clothing associated with the possessing lwa Alternatively the clothes are brought out and they are dressed in the peristil itself 347 Once the chwal has been dressed congregants kiss the floor before them 347 These costumes and props help the chwal take on the appearance of the lwa 337 Many ounfo have a large wooden phallus on hand which is used by those possessed by Gede lwa during their dances 359 The chwal takes on the behavior and expressions of the possessing lwa 360 their performance can be very theatrical 350 Those believing themselves possessed by the serpent Danbala for instance often slither on the floor dart out their tongue and climb the posts of the peristil 127 Those possessed by Zaka lwa of agriculture will dress as a peasant in a straw hat with a clay pipe and will often speak in a rustic accent 361 The chwal will often join in with the dances 343 eat or drink 337 Sometimes the lwa through the chwal will engage in financial transactions with members of the congregation for instance by selling them food that has been given as an offering or lending them money 362 Possession facilitates direct communication between the lwa and its followers 343 through the chwal the lwa communicates with their devotees offering counsel chastisement blessings warnings about the future and healing 363 Lwa possession has a healing function with the possessed individual expected to reveal possible cures to the ailments of those assembled 343 Clothing that the chwal touches is regarded as bringing luck 364 The lwa may also offer advice to the individual they are possessing because the latter is not believed to retain any memory of the events it is expected that other members of the congregation will pass along the lwa s message 364 In some instances practitioners have reported being possessed at other times of ordinary life such as when someone is in the middle of the market 365 or when they are asleep 366 Divination Edit A common form of divination employed by oungan and manbo is to invoke a lwa into a pitcher where it will then be asked questions 367 Other forms of divination used by Vodouists include the casting of shells 367 cartomancy 368 studying leaves coffee grounds or cinders in a glass or looking into a candle flame 369 A form of divination associated especially with Petwo lwa is the use of a gembo shell sometimes with a mirror attached to one side and affixed at both ends to string The string is twirled and the directions of the shell used to interpret the responses of the lwa 367 Healing and harming Edit nbsp A paket kongo on display in the Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen in the NetherlandsHealing plays an important role in Vodou 370 A client will approach a manbo or oungan complaining of illness or misfortune and the latter will use divination to determine the cause and select a remedy 371 Manbo and oungan typically have a wide knowledge of plants and their medicinal uses 185 To heal they often prescribe baths water infused with various ingredients 372 or produce powders for a specific purpose such as to attract good luck or aid seduction 373 The Vodouists may also produce a material object infused with spirits or medicines a wanga 374 although these can also be devoted to harmful purposes 375 Manbo and oungan often provide talismans 376 called a pwen point 377 travay work 378 travay maji magic work 379 paket or paket kongo 380 The latter term highlights the potential influence of the Kongolese minkisi on these Haitian ritual creations 381 In Haiti oungan or manbo may advise their clients to seek assistance from medical professionals while the latter may also send their patients to see an oungan or manbo 229 Although in the late 20th century there were concerns that the Haitian reliance on oungan and manbo was contributing to the spread of HIV AIDS 382 by the early 21st century various NGOs and other groups were working on bringing Vodou officiants into the broader campaign against the virus 383 In Haiti there are also herb doctors who offer herbal remedies for ailments but deal in fewer problems than oungan and manbo 228 Vodou teaches that supernatural factors cause or exacerbate many problems 384 It holds that humans can cause supernatural harm to others either unintentionally or deliberately 385 in the latter case exerting power over a person through possession of hair or nail clippings belonging to them 386 Vodouists also often believe that supernatural harm can be caused by other entities The lougawou werewolf is a human usually female who transforms into an animals and drains blood from sleeping victims 387 while members of the Bizango secret society are feared for their reputed ability to transform into dogs in which form they walk the streets at night 388 An individual who turns to the lwa to harm others is a choche 181 or a boko 389 although this latter term can also refer to an oungan generally 181 They are described as someone who sert des deux mains serves with both hands 390 or is travaillant des deux mains working with both hands 215 As the good lwa have rejected them as unworthy boko are believed to work with lwa achte bought lwa 391 spirits that will work for anyone who pays them 392 and often members of the Petwo nanchon 393 According to Haitian popular belief boko engage in anvwamo expeditions setting the dead against an individual to cause the latter s sudden illness and death 394 and utilise baka malevolent spirits sometimes in animal form 395 In Haiti there is much suspicion and censure toward those suspected of being boko 215 The curses of the boko are believed to be countered by the oungan and manbo who can revert the curse through an exorcism that incorporates invocations of protective lwa massages and baths 396 In Haiti some oungan and manbo have been accused of working with a boko arranging for the latter to curse individuals so that they can financially profit from removing these curses 215 Funerals the dead and zonbis Edit nbsp A cross in a Haitian cemetery photographed in 2012 The crucifix is central to the iconography of the Gede the Baron La Croix is a public crucifix associated with Baron Samedi chief of the Gede 397 Vodou features complex funerary customs 398 Following an individual s death the desounen ritual frees the gwo bonnanj from their body and disconnects them from their tutelary lwa 399 The corpse is then bathed in a herbal infusion by an individual termed the benye who gives the dead person messages to take with them 400 A wake the veye follows 401 The body is then buried in the cemetery 402 often according to Roman Catholic custom 403 In northern Haiti an additional rite takes place at the ounfo on the day of the funeral the kase kanari breaking of the clay pot In this a jar is washed in substances including kleren placed within a trench dug into the peristil floor and smashed The trench is then refilled 404 The night after the funeral the novena takes place at the home of the deceased involving Roman Catholic prayers 405 a mass for them is held a year after death 406 Vodouists fear the dead s ability to harm the living 407 it is believed that the deceased may for instance punish their living relatives if the latter fail to appropriately mourn them 408 Many Vodouists believe that a practitioner s spirit dwells in the land of Ginen located at the bottom of a lake or river for a year and a day 409 A year and a day after death the wete mo nan dlo extracting the dead from the waters of the abyss ritual may take place in which the deceased s gwo bonnanj is reclaimed from the realm of the dead and placed into a clay jar or bottle called the govi Now ensconced in the world of the living the gwo bonnanj of this ancestor is deemed capable of assisting its descendants and guiding them with its wisdom 410 Practitioners sometimes believe that failing to conduct this ritual can result in misfortune illness and death for the family of the deceased 411 Offerings then given to this spirit of the dead are termed manje mo 412 The notion of a spirit being encased in a vessel and then used for workings likely derives from Kongolese influences 413 and has similarities with the Kongolese derived Palo religion from Cuba 414 nbsp Haitian skulls at the Ethnographic Museum in Berlin In Vodou human skulls may be used either for sorcery or for healing 415 Another belief about the dead that of zombis is one of the most sensationalized aspects of Haitian religion 416 Zonbi are often regarded as the gwo bonnanj of the recently deceased that have been captured and forced to work for their master 417 The gwo bonnanj may then be kept inside a bottle or other vessel 418 The practice is often linked to Chanpwel secret societies which are suspected of murdering the individual they wish to turn into a zonbi 419 To achieve this they may obtain the bones of a deceased person especially their skull sometimes by bribing cemetery workers 420 the skull will often be baptised given food and set a particular task to specialise in such as healing a specific malady 27 Those intending to take a gwo bonnanj as a zonbi may have to borrow or buy them from Baron Samedi 421 An alternative idea in Haitian lore is that it is the body that is turned into a zonbi 422 in which case a boko has seized an individual s ti bonnanj and left the body as an empty vessel that can be manipulated 423 The reality of this phenomenon is contested 421 although the anthropologist Wade Davis argued that this was based on a real practice whereby Bizango societies used poisons to make certain individuals more pliant 424 Haitians generally do not fear zombis but rather fear becoming one themselves 423 The figure of the zombi has also been interpreted as a metaphor for the enslavement central to Haitian history 425 Festival and pilgrimage Edit nbsp Vodouists washing in a river following a ceremony photographed in Haiti in 2010On the saints days of the Roman Catholic calendar Vodouists often hold birthday parties for the lwa associated with the saint whose day it is 426 These are marked with special altars for the celebrated lwa 427 as well as the preparation of their preferred food 428 Devotions to the Gede are particularly common around the days of the dead All Saints 1 November and All Souls 2 November 429 with celebrations largely taking place in the cemeteries of Port au Prince 430 At this festival those devoted to the Gede dress in black and purple with funeral frock coats black veils and top hats all linking to the Gede s associations with death 431 The build up to Easter sees Rara bands largely consisting of peasants and the urban poor process through the streets singing and dancing 432 Each Rara band is considered to be under the patronage of a particular lwa holding a contract with them that typically lasts seven years 433 Performing Rara is regarded as a service to the lwa 434 and some Rara leaders claim that a lwa instructed them to form their band 435 An oungan will typically be part of the Rara band and will oversee their religious obligations for instance performing rituals during their procession 436 or providing members with a benyen protective bath before they perform 437 Pilgrimage is part of Haitian religious culture 438 In late July Vodouist pilgrims visit Plaine du Nord near Bwa Caiman where according to legend the Haitian Revolution began There sacrifices are made and pilgrims immerse themselves in the twou mud pits 439 The pilgrims often mass before the Church of Saint Jacques with Saint Jacques perceived as being the lwa Ogou 440 Another pilgrimage site is Saint d Eau a mountain associated with the lwa Ezili Danto 441 Pilgrims visit a site outside the town of Ville Bonheur where Ezili is claimed to have once appeared there they bathe under waterfalls 442 Haitian pilgrims commonly wear coloured ropes around their head or waist 438 a tradition that may derive from a Kongolese custom kanga to tie during which sacred objects were bound with rope 443 History EditBefore the Revolution Edit nbsp Area of West African Vodun practice the religion with the greatest influence on Haitian VodouIn 1492 Christopher Columbus Spanish expedition established the first European colony on Hispaniola 444 A growing European presence decimated the island s indigenous population which was probably Taino both through introduced diseases and exploitation as laborers 445 The European colonists then turned to imported West African slaves as a new source of labor Africans first arrived on Hispaniola circa 1512 446 Most of the enslaved were prisoners of war 447 Some were probably priests of traditional religions helping to transport their rites to the Americas 447 Others may have practiced Abrahamic religions Some were probably Muslim although Islam exerted little influence on Vodou 448 while others probably practiced traditional religions that had already absorbed Roman Catholic iconographic influences 449 By the late 16th century French colonists were settling in western Hispaniola Spain recognized French sovereignty over that part of the island which became Saint Domingue in a series of treaties signed in 1697 450 Moving away from its previous subsistence economy in the 18th century Saint Domingue refocused its economy around the mass export of indigo coffee sugar and cocoa to Europe 451 To work the plantations the French colonists sought labor from various sources including a renewed emphasis on importing enslaved Africans whereas there were twice as many Africans as Europeans in the colony in 1681 by 1790 there were eleven times as many Africans as Europeans 452 Ultimately Saint Domingue became the colony with the largest number of slaves in the Caribbean 453 The Code Noir issued by King Louis XIV in 1685 forbade the open practice of African religions on Saint Domingue 454 This Code compelled slave owners to have their slaves baptised and instructed as Roman Catholics 455 the fact that the process of enslavement led to these Africans becoming Christian was a key way in which the slave owners sought to morally legitimate their actions 456 However many slave owners took little interest in having their slaves instructed in Roman Catholic teaching 456 they often did not want their slaves to spend time celebrating saints days rather than laboring and were also concerned that black congregations could provide scope to foment revolt 457 Enslavement destroyed the social fabric of African traditional religions which were typically rooted in ethnic and family membership 458 Although certain cultural assumptions about the nature of the universe would have been widely shared among the enslaved Africans they came from diverse linguistic and ethno cultural backgrounds and had to forge common cultural practices on Hispaniola 459 Gradually over the course of the 18th century Vodou emerged as a composite of various African ethnic traditions merging diverse practices into a more cohesive form 460 These African religions had to be practiced secretly with Roman Catholic iconography and rituals probably adopted so as to conceal the true identity of the deities that enslaved Africans were serving 146 This resulted in a system of correspondences between African spirits and Roman Catholic saints 146 Afro Haitians adopted other aspects of French colonial culture 461 Vodou drew influence from European grimoires 462 as well as European commedia performances 463 Also an influence was Freemasonry after Masonic lodges were established across Saint Domingue in the 18th century 464 Vodou rituals took place in secret usually at night one such rite was described during the 1790s by a white man Mederic Louis Elie Moreau de Saint Mery 465 Some enslaved Afro Haitians escaped to form Maroon groups which often practiced Vodou in forms influenced by the ethno cultural background of their leaders 466 The Haitian Revolution and the 19th century Edit nbsp The Affaire de Bizoton of 1864 The murder and alleged cannibalization of a child by eight Vodou devotees caused a scandal worldwide and was taken as proof of the evil nature of Vodou In Haitian lore Vodou is often presented as having played a vital role in the Haitian Revolution 23 although scholars debate the extent to which this is true 467 According to legend a Vodou ritual took place in Bois Caiman on 14 August 1791 at which the participants swore to overthrow the slave owners before massacring local whites and sparking the Revolution 468 Although a popular tale in Haitian folklore it has no historical evidence to support it 469 Moreover two of the revolution s early leaders Boukman and Francois Mackandal were reputed to be powerful oungans 470 Amid growing rebellion the French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte ordered troops into the colony in 1801 471 but in 1803 the French conceded defeat and the rebel leader Jean Jacques Dessalines proclaimed Saint Domingue to be a new republic named Haiti 472 The Revolution broke up the large land ownings and created a society of small subsistence farmers 473 Haitians largely began living in lakous or extended family compounds which enabled the preservation of African derived Creole religions 474 These lakous often had their own lwa rasin root lwa 475 being intertwined with concepts of land and kinship 476 Many Roman Catholic missionaries had been killed in the Revolution 477 and after its victory Dessalines declared himself head of the Church in Haiti 477 Protesting these actions the Roman Catholic Church cut ties with Haiti in 1805 478 this allowed Vodou to predominate in the country 479 Many churches left abandoned were adopted for Vodou rites continuing the syncretization between the two systems 480 At this point with no new arrivals from Africa Vodou began to stabilise 481 transforming from a widely scattered series of local cults into a religion 482 The Roman Catholic Church re established its formal presence in Haiti in 1860 479 Haiti s first three presidents sought to suppress Vodou using police to break up rituals which they feared as a source of rebellion 483 In 1847 Faustin Soulouque became president he was sympathetic to Vodou and allowed it to be practiced more openly 484 In the Bizoton Affair of 1863 several Vodou practitioners were accused of ritually killing a child before eating it Historical sources suggest that they may have been tortured prior to confessing to the crime at which they were executed 485 The affair received much attention 485 20th century to the present Edit nbsp Haitian President Francois Duvalier called Vodou the supreme factor of Haitian unity 486 The United States occupied Haiti between 1915 and 1934 487 something which encouraged international interest in Vodou 488 This interest was catered for in the sensationalist writings of Faustin Wirkus William Seabrook and John Craige 489 as well as in Vodou themed shows for tourists especially in Port au Prince 490 The period also saw the growing influence of the Roman Catholic Church 491 and in 1941 the Church backed Operation Nettoyage Operation Cleanup a government campaign to expunge Vodou during which many ounfos were destroyed 492 Violent responses from Vodouists led President Elie Lescot to abandon the Operation 493 During the occupation the indigenist movement among Haiti s middle classes encouraged a more positive assessment of Vodou and peasant culture a trend supported by the appearance of professional ethnological research on the topic 494 Church influence in Haiti was curtailed by Francois Duvalier the country s president from 1957 to 1971 495 Although he restored Catholicism as the state religion Duvalier was widely perceived as a champion of Vodou 496 calling it the supreme factor of Haitian unity 486 He utilized it for his own purposes encouraging rumors about his own powers of sorcery 497 Under Duvalier regional networks of oungans doubled as the country s chefs de sections rural section chiefs 498 After his son Jean Claude Duvalier was ousted from office in 1986 there were attacks on Vodouists perceived to have supported the Duvaliers partly motivated by Protestant anti Vodou campaigns practitioners called this violence the Dechoukaj uprooting 499 Two groups the Zantray and Bode Nasyonal were formed to defend the rights of Vodouists holding rallies and demonstrations 500 Haiti s 1987 constitution enshrined freedom of religion 501 after which President Jean Bertrand Aristide granted Vodou official recognition in 2003 502 thus allowing Vodouists to officiate at civil ceremonies such as weddings and funerals 503 nbsp A Vodou ceremony taking place at the National Black Theatre in New York City in 2017Since the 1990s evangelical Protestantism has grown in Haiti generating tensions with Vodouists 28 These Protestants regard Vodou as Satanic 504 and unlike the Roman Catholic authorities have generally refused to compromise with its practiitoners 505 The 2010 Haiti earthquake fuelled conversion from Vodou to Protestantism 506 with many Protestants including the U S televangelist Pat Robertson claiming that the earthquake was punishment for the sins of the Haitian population including their practice of Vodou 507 Mob attacks on Vodouists followed in the wake of the earthquake 508 and again in the wake of the 2010 cholera outbreak 509 The first three decades of the 20th century saw growing Haitian migration to eastern Cuba some Haitians took Vodou with them where it was adopted by certain Cubans 510 From 1957 many upper and middle class Haitians fled abroad to escape Duvalier from 1971 many poorer Haitians also began emigrating again taking Vodou with them 511 In the U S Vodou has attracted non Haitians especially African Americans and migrants from elsewhere in the Caribbean 393 There Vodou has syncretized with other religious systems such as Santeria and Spiritism 393 In the U S those seeking to revive Louisiana Voodoo during the latter part of the 20th century initiated practices that brought the religion closer to Haitian Vodou or Santeria that it appears to have been early in that century 512 Demographics EditIt is difficult to determine how many Haitians practice Vodou largely because the country has never had an accurate census and many Vodouists will not openly admit they practice the religion 513 It is nevertheless the majority religion of Haiti 514 for most Haitians practice both Vodou and Roman Catholicism 28 An estimated 80 of Haitians practice Vodou 515 in 1992 Desmangles put the number of Haitian practitioners at six million 516 An often used joke about Haiti holds that the island s population is 85 Roman Catholic 15 Protestant and 100 Vodou 517 Even some of those who reject Vodou acknowledge its close associations with Haitian identity 23 Not all take part in the religion regularly but many will turn to Vodou priests and priestesses when in times of need 518 Vodouists learn about the religion by taking part in its rituals 519 with children learning by observing adults 266 Vodou does not focus on proselytizing 520 according to Brown it has no pretensions to the universal 514 It has nevertheless spread beyond Haiti including to other Caribbean islands like the Dominican Republic Cuba and Puerto Rico as well as to France and the United States 521 Major ounfos exist in U S cities such as Miami New York City Washington DC Boston and Oakland California 522 Reception and legacy EditVarious scholars describe Vodou as one of the world s most maligned and misunderstood religions 523 Throughout Haitian history Christians have often presented it as a Satanic practice 524 while in broader Anglophone and Francophone society it has been widely associated with sorcery witchcraft and black magic 525 In U S popular culture for instance Haitian Vodou is usually portrayed as destructive and malevolent 526 attitudes often linked with anti black racism 78 Non practitioners have often depicted Vodou in literature theater and film 527 in many cases such as the films White Zombie 1932 and London Voodoo 2004 these promote sensationalist views of the religion 528 The lack of any central Vodou authority has hindered efforts to combat these negative representations 529 Humanity s relationship with the lwa has been a recurring theme in Haitian art 318 and the Vodou pantheon was a major topic for the mid 20th century artists of the Haitian Renaissance 530 Art collectors began to take an interest in Vodou ritual paraphernalia in the late 1950s and by the 1970s an established market for this material had emerged 531 Exhibits of Vodou ritual material have been displayed abroad the Fowler Museum s exhibit on Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou for instance traveled the U S for three years in the 1990s 532 Vodou has appeared in Haitian literature 533 and has also influenced Haitian music as with the rock band Boukman Eksperyans 534 while theatre troupes have performed simulated Vodou rituals for audiences outside Haiti 535 Documentaries focusing on Vodou have appeared 536 such as Maya Deren s 1985 film Divine Horsemen 537 538 or Anne Lescot and Laurence Magloire s 2002 work Of Men and Gods 539 which have in turn encouraged some viewers to take a practical interest in the religion 540 See also EditHaitian mythology Haitian Vodou art Voodoo in popular culture nbsp Traditional African religion portalReferences EditNotes Edit Vodou is the customary spelling of the traditional religion of the Haitian people 1 Alternative spellings have included Voodoo ˈ v uː d uː 2 Vaudou ˈ v oʊ d uː 3 Vodun ˈ v oʊ d uː 3 4 Vodoun 1 3 4 ˈ v oʊ d uː n Vodu 5 ˈ v oʊ d uː or Vaudoux 5 ˈ v oʊ d uː Citations Edit a b Beauvoir Dominique 1995 p 153 Metraux 1972 a b c Michel 1996 p 280 a b Courlander 1988 p 88 a b Corbett Bob 16 July 1995 Yet more on the spelling of Voodoo www hartford hwp com Archived from the original on 1 March 2021 Retrieved 14 October 2020 Desmangles 1992 p 2 Desmangles 2012 p 27 Thylefors 2009 p 74 Cosentino 1996 p 1 Michel 1996 p 293 Germain 2011 p 254 Desmangles 1992 p 93 Desmangles 1992 pp xi 1 a b Cosentino 1995a p 29 Cosentino 1995a p 26 Derby 2015 p 396 Derby 2015 p 397 Desmangles 1990 p 476 Desmangles 1992 p 7 Hammond 2012 p 64 Derby 2015 p 396 Desmangles 1990 p 476 Desmangles 1992 p 8 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 p 123 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 p 128 McAlister 1995 p 308 Blier 1995 p 84 a b Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 117 Desmangles 1992 p 172 Fandrich 2007 p 782 a b c Thylefors 2009 p 74 Johnson 2002 p 9 Cosentino 1995a p 26 Thompson 1995 p 92 Desmangles 1990 p 480 Desmangles 1992 p xii Thylefors 2009 p 74 Derby 2015 p 399 a b McAlister 1995 p 319 a b c d e f g h Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 120 Brown 1991 p 49 Ramsey 2011 p 6 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 5 de Heusch 1989 p 292 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 p 123 Boutros 2011 p 1984 Desmangles 1990 p 480 Brown 1991 p 221 Desmangles 1990 p 480 Desmangles 1992 p 63 Boutros 2011 p 1984 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 118 Brown 1991 p 221 Desmangles 1992 p 4 Desmangles 1990 p 480 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 p 123 a b Cosentino 1995a p 53 Metraux 1972 pp 19 20 Desmangles 1992 pp 4 36 Cosentino 1995a p 53 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 pp 123 124 Ramsey 2011 p 7 a b c Ramsey 2011 p 7 Desmangles 1992 p 63 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 119 a b c Metraux 1972 p 61 a b c Michel 1996 p 285 Michel 1996 p 285 Basquiat 2004 p 1 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 154 Brown 1991 pp 111 241 Cosentino 1995a p 36 Cosentino 1995b pp 253 260 Basquiat 2004 pp 25 26 a b Cosentino 1995a p 44 Hagedorn 2001 p 133 Viddal 2012 p 231 Emore 2021 p 59 Viddal 2012 p 226 Cosentino 1995a p 43 Cosentino 1995a p 32 Blier 1995 p 86 Cosentino 1995a p 30 Blier 1995 p 61 Desmangles 1992 p xi Ramsey 2011 pp 6 7 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Derby 2015 p 407 Brown 1995 p 205 Derby 2015 p 407 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 116 a b Derby 2015 p 407 Desmangles 1992 pp xi xii Ramsey 2011 p 6 Ramsey 2012 Desmangles 1992 p xi Ramsey 2011 p 258 Desmangles 1992 p xii Ramsey 2011 p 10 Derby 2015 p 407 Desmangles 1992 p xi Long 2002 p 87 Fandrich 2007 pp 779 780 Desmangles 2012 pp 26 27 Brown 1991 p 111 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 120 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 5 Michel 1996 p 288 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 120 Desmangles 1992 p 159 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 120 Desmangles 1992 p 168 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Desmangles 1992 p 160 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 120 Desmangles 1992 p 97 a b c Desmangles 1992 p 96 Desmangles 1992 pp 4 162 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Brown 1991 p 6 Desmangles 1992 p 168 a b c Metraux 1972 p 82 Desmangles 1992 p 161 Ramsey 2011 p 7 a b c Brown 1991 p 111 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 5 Desmangles 1992 p 3 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 117 120 Metraux 1972 p 84 Desmangles 1992 p 98 Brown 1991 p 4 Michel 1996 p 288 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Metraux 1972 pp 66 120 Metraux 1972 pp 95 96 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 117 Metraux 1972 p 92 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 120 a b c d Metraux 1972 p 92 a b c Brown 1991 p 6 Metraux 1972 p 97 Metraux 1972 p 99 Metraux 1972 p 28 Metraux 1972 pp 84 85 McAlister 2002 p 91 Metraux 1972 p 91 Houlberg 1995 pp 267 268 Metraux 1972 p 87 Brown 1991 p 100 Desmangles 1992 p 94 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 120 Metraux 1972 p 87 Desmangles 1992 p 94 Houlberg 1995 p 279 Metraux 1972 pp 39 86 Brown 1991 p 100 Apter 2002 p 238 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 121 Apter 2002 p 238 McAlister 2002 p 87 a b Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 125 a b Apter 2002 p 239 McAlister 2002 p 87 Metraux 1972 p 39 Desmangles 1992 p 95 de Heusch 1989 p 293 McAlister 1995 p 308 McAlister 2002 p 87 Apter 2002 p 248 Metraux 1972 p 101 Metraux 1972 p 102 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 125 Metraux 1972 p 101 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 125 McAlister 2002 p 97 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 132 a b c d e f g h i Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 133 Metraux 1972 pp 146 149 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 132 Metraux 1972 p 102 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 126 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 126 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 126 127 Metraux 1972 p 110 Brown 1991 p 220 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 129 Brown 1991 p 220 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 131 Metraux 1972 p 108 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 127 Brown 1991 p 36 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 127 Brown 1991 p 156 Metraux 1972 pp 107 108 Brown 1991 p 95 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 131 Metraux 1972 p 109 Brown 1991 p 101 Metraux 1972 p 106 Metraux 1972 pp 106 107 a b c Metraux 1972 p 105 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 127 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 127 Metraux 1972 p 105 Cosentino 1995c pp 405 406 a b Metraux 1972 p 112 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 128 Brown 1991 p 198 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 128 Metraux 1972 p 257 McAlister 2002 p 99 Brown 1991 p 380 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 128 Metraux 1972 p 114 McAlister 2002 p 60 Beasley 2010 p 43 Metraux 1972 p 113 Cosentino 1995a p 52 Cosentino 1995c p 403 Metraux 1972 p 113 Brown 1991 pp 357 358 Brendbekken 2002 p 42 Ramsey 2011 p 8 Brown 1991 p 61 Ramsey 2011 p 8 Metraux 1972 p 101 Desmangles 1992 p 11 Cosentino 1995a p 35 Ramsey 2011 p 8 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 130 131 Brown 1991 p 275 Desmangles 1992 pp 10 11 130 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 127 128 Metraux 1972 p 146 Houlberg 1995 p 271 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 133 a b c Desmangles 1990 p 475 a b Cosentino 1995b p 253 Brown 1995 p 215 a b Polk 1995 pp 326 327 McAlister 2002 pp 127 128 Desmangles 1992 p 64 Desmangles 1992 p 66 McAlister 1995 p 317 McAlister 2002 p 103 Metraux 1972 pp 155 156 Desmangles 1992 p 66 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 134 Metraux 1972 pp 155 156 Brown 1987 p 69 Desmangles 1992 pp 66 67 McAlister 2002 p 103 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 134 a b c d e Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 134 Brown 1991 p 61 Brown 1987 p 70 Brown 1991 p 112 Wilcken 2005 p 196 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 134 Brown 1991 p 112 Brown 1991 p 133 Brown 1991 pp 133 134 McAlister 1995 p 314 Brown 1991 pp 242 309 Michel 2001 p 68 Desmangles 1992 pp 68 69 Desmangles 1992 p 75 Desmangles 1992 p 69 Desmangles 1992 pp 70 71 Metraux 1972 p 112 Metraux 1972 p 82 Brown 1991 p 242 Brown 1991 p 242 Michel 2001 p 78 a b c d e Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 140 Desmangles 1992 p 111 Desmangles 1992 p 161 Germain 2011 p 256 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 3 4 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 4 Hebblethwaite 2015 pp 15 16 Michel 2001 pp 67 68 Ramsey 2011 p 11 Michel 1996 p 282 Michel 2001 p 71 a b Brown 1991 p 241 a b c Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 p 131 Metraux 1972 p 60 Brown 1991 pp 242 254 Ramsey 2011 p 9 a b Brown 1991 p 188 Brown 1991 p 13 Brown 1991 p 132 Michel 2001 p 75 Brown 1991 p 220 Michel 2001 p 62 McAlister 2002 p 76 a b c Metraux 1972 p 64 McAlister 2002 p 75 Hammond 2012 p 72 Cosentino 1995a p 35 a b c Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 124 Basquiat 2004 p 8 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 117 Metraux 1972 p 168 Ramsey 2011 p 8 Desmangles 1992 p 8 Ramsey 2011 p 8 a b Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 141 Brown 1991 p 134 Brown 1991 p 378 Boutros 2011 p 188 Boutros 2011 p 188 Brown 1991 pp 166 167 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 12 a b c Hebblethwaite 2015 p 13 Metraux 1972 p 36 Brown 1991 p 4 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 11 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 13 a b McAlister 1995 p 318 Metraux 1972 p 36 Brown 1991 p 4 Ramsey 2011 p 7 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 121 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 13 Brown 1991 p 221 a b c Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 121 Metraux 1972 p 67 Ramsey 2011 pp 7 8 a b c d Ramsey 2011 p 8 a b c d Metraux 1972 p 65 Metraux 1972 p 66 Brown 1991 p 131 a b c Metraux 1972 p 68 Metraux 1972 p 69 Metraux 1972 p 68 Brown 1991 p 224 a b Metraux 1972 p 73 Brown 1991 p 55 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 122 123 a b c d e Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 123 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 121 122 a b c d e Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 122 Metraux 1972 p 63 Apter 2002 pp 239 240 Metraux 1972 p 76 a b Metraux 1972 p 75 a b Metraux 1972 p 74 Michel 1996 p 287 Metraux 1972 pp 62 63 a b c d Hebblethwaite 2015 p 14 Ramsey 2011 p 17 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 117 Michel 1996 p 284 Germain 2011 p 254 Metraux 1972 p 62 Metraux 1972 p 77 Metraux 1972 p 19 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 121 Metraux 1972 p 19 Metraux 1972 p 77 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 123 a b Desmangles 1992 p 105 a b Metraux 1972 p 77 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 124 Metraux 1972 p 77 Wilcken 2005 p 194 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 124 a b c d Wilcken 2005 p 194 Brown 1991 p 37 Brown 1991 pp 55 377 378 Metraux 1972 p 78 a b Metraux 1972 p 79 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 124 Metraux 1972 p 104 de Heusch 1989 p 296 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 124 a b Metraux 1972 p 80 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 124 a b Metraux 1972 p 80 Metraux 1972 p 110 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 130 Metraux 1972 pp 80 81 a b c Metraux 1972 p 81 Metraux 1972 pp 18 193 Brown 1991 p 37 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 122 Brown 1991 p 324 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 122 Metraux 1972 p 69 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 123 a b c Metraux 1972 p 70 Metraux 1972 p 71 Metraux 1972 p 71 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 123 Metraux 1972 p 72 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 123 Metraux 1972 p 72 Brown 1991 p 10 Brown 1995 p 207 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 121 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 13 Metraux 1972 p 70 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 13 Brown 1987 p 70 Brown 1991 p 350 Michel 1996 p 290 a b c Michel 1996 p 290 Metraux 1972 p 157 Brown 1991 p 356 Metraux 1972 p 192 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 133 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 124 133 Metraux 1972 p 192 Brown 1991 p 351 Michel 1996 p 290 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 133 Hebblethwaite 2015 p 12 Metraux 1972 p 193 Metraux 1972 p 195 Metraux 1972 pp 195 196 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 133 Metraux 1972 p 201 Metraux 1972 p 199 Metraux 1972 p 202 Brown 1987 p 70 Brown 1991 p 350 Desmangles 1992 p 87 Wilcken 2005 p 196 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 134 Brown 1991 p 265 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 134 Brown 1991 p 351 Metraux 1972 p 244 Desmangles 1992 p 86 Desmangles 1992 p 8 Basquiat 2004 p 8 Cosentino 2005 pp 239 240 Cosentino 2005 p 244 Cosentino 1995c p 408 Desmangles 1992 p 85 de Heusch 1989 p 298 a b c d Michel 1996 p 284 Brown 1991 p 364 Brown 1991 p 369 Cosentino 2005 p 237 Michel 1996 pp 284 285 Metraux 1972 p 163 Thompson 1995 p 102 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 142 a b Metraux 1972 p 165 Metraux 1972 p 161 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 142 143 Metraux 1972 p 160 Girouard 1995 p 357 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 142 Desmangles 1992 p 87 Metraux 1972 p 153 Metraux 1972 p 66 Brown 1987 p 71 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 122 Metraux 1972 p 66 Brown 1991 pp 278 279 a b Metraux 1972 p 66 Metraux 1972 p 66 Brown 1991 p 76 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 122 Metraux 1972 p 166 a b c d Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 139 a b Metraux 1972 p 168 Metraux 1972 p 176 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 139 Metraux 1972 p 105 Brown 1991 p 274 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 127 Brown 1991 p 190 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 140 Metraux 1972 p 169 Metraux 1972 p 175 Metraux 1972 p 173 Metraux 1972 p 103 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 126 Metraux 1972 pp 173 175 a b Brown 1991 p 49 Metraux 1972 p 177 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 140 a b c Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 143 Brown 1991 p 52 Desmangles 1992 pp 8 9 Desmangles 1992 pp 87 88 Brown 1991 pp 53 54 a b c Brown 1991 p 54 Brown 1991 p 55 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 124 125 Wilcken 2005 p 195 Ramsey 2011 p 8 Metraux 1972 p 177 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 123 124 135 a b Metraux 1972 p 182 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 136 Metraux 1972 p 182 Metraux 1972 p 183 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 136 a b c Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 136 Metraux 1972 p 180 Metraux 1972 p 178 a b Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 135 Metraux 1972 p 86 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 135 Wilcken 2005 pp 195 196 a b c d e Wilcken 2005 p 195 Metraux 1972 p 186 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 136 Metraux 1972 p 188 189 Desmangles 1992 p 103 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 137 Metraux 1972 p 86 190 Wilcken 2005 p 195 Metraux 1972 p 190 a b c d e f Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 138 Metraux 1972 p 120 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 134 Metraux 1972 p 120 Brown 1991 p 61 Ramsey 2011 p 9 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 117 118 Metraux 1972 p 120 Ramsey 2011 p 8 a b c Metraux 1972 p 124 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 138 Brown 1991 p 373 Brown 1991 p 252 a b Metraux 1972 p 128 Metraux 1972 p 129 Brown 1991 p 66 Metraux 1972 p 120 Brown 1991 p 352 Ramsey 2011 p 9 Metraux 1972 p 120 Brown 1991 p 61 Metraux 1972 p 122 Ramsey 2011 p 9 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 138 Metraux 1972 p 123 Metraux 1972 p 124 Metraux 1972 p 131 Metraux 1972 pp 124 125 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 138 Metraux 1972 p 113 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 128 Metraux 1972 p 120 Wilcken 2005 p 196 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 138 Metraux 1972 p 108 Brown 1991 p 61 Metraux 1972 pp 95 96 Brown 1991 pp 62 63 67 Metraux 1972 p 125 Ramsey 2011 pp 8 9 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 138 a b Metraux 1972 p 125 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 138 Metraux 1972 pp 131 133 34 Metraux 1972 p 144 a b c Metraux 1972 p 321 Metraux 1972 pp 321 322 Metraux 1972 p 322 Brown 1991 pp 4 5 Metraux 1972 pp 305 306 Metraux 1972 pp 309 310 Brown 1991 p 348 Brown 1995 p 219 Metraux 1972 p 310 McAlister 2002 p 90 Metraux 1972 p 285 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 pp 149 151 Metraux 1972 p 280 Brown 1991 p 135 Brown 1987 p 70 Brown 1991 p 348 Brown 1995 p 213 Derby 2015 p 395 Brown 1995 p 210 McAlister 1995 p 306 Metraux 1972 pp 310 312 Cosentino 1995a p 30 Thompson 1995 p 108 McAlister 1995 pp 310 311 Benoit 2007 pp 59 60 Benoit 2007 p 63 Brown 1991 p 346 Brown 1991 p 347 Metraux 1972 p 246 Metraux 1972 p 304 Derby 2015 p 401 McAlister 2002 p 88 Derby 2015 pp 402 403 Metraux 1972 p 48 Brown 1991 p 189 Ramsey 2011 p 12 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 149 Ramsey 2011 p 12 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 149 Metraux 1972 pp 65 267 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 149 McAlister 2002 p 88 a b c Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 149 Metraux 1972 p 274 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 149 Metraux 1972 p 288 Brown 1991 p 231 Desmangles 1992 p 113 Derby 2015 pp 400 401 McAlister 1995 p 318 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 149 Brown 1991 pp 368 369 Metraux 1972 p 243 Metraux 1972 pp 244 245 Desmangles 1992 p 69 Metraux 1972 p 246 Desmangles 1992 p 73 Metraux 1972 p 247 Desmangles 1992 p 73 Desmangles 1992 p 73 Metraux 1972 p 250 Metraux 1972 p 252 Desmangles 1992 p 74 Metraux 1972 p 251 Desmangles 1992 pp 74 75 Desmangles 1992 p 76 Metraux 1972 pp 243 244 Metraux 1972 p 256 Metraux 1972 p 258 Desmangles 1992 pp 70 71 Metraux 1972 pp 259 263 Desmangles 1992 p 80 Desmangles 1992 pp 81 82 Metraux 1972 p 263 McAlister 2002 p 104 McAlister 2002 pp 100 102 McAlister 2002 p 105 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 151 McAlister 2002 pp 102 193 McAlister 1995 p 320 McAlister 2002 p 106 McAlister 1995 p 319 McAlister 2002 p 104 a b McAlister 2002 p 103 Metraux 1972 pp 281 282 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 152 a b Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 153 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 152 McAlister 1995 p 314 McAlister 2002 p 102 Brown 1991 p 5 Brown 1991 pp 40 41 Brown 1991 pp 41 43 Houlberg 1995 p 275 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 128 Beasley 2010 pp 42 44 Metraux 1972 p 113 Brown 1991 p 362 Fernandez Olmos amp Paravisini Gebert 2011 p 128 McAlister 2002 pp 3 4 McAlister 2002 pp 7 34 36 McAlister 2002 p 86 McAlister 2002 p 35 McAlister 2002 p 33 McAlister 2002 p 44 a b Rey amp Richman 2010 p 388 Cosentino 1995b p 244 Cosentino 2005 pp 231 232 Cosentino 1995b pp 243 244 Cosentino 2005 p 232 Brown 1991 p 231 Desmangles 1992 pp 134 135 Rey amp Richman 2010 p 389 Desmangles 1992 pp 17 18 Desmangles 1992 pp 18 19 Desmangles 1992 p 19 a b Metraux 1972 p 30 Metraux 1972 p 31 Cosentino 1995a pp 31 35 36 Desmangles 1990 p 479 Desmangles 1992 p 19 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 p 134 Desmangles 1990 p 479 Desmangles 1992 p 20 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 p 134 Desmangles 1990 p 479 Desmangles 1992 p 21 Desmangles 1992 p 21 Desmangles 1990 p 475 McAlister 2002 p 120 Metraux 1972 p 33 Desmangles 1990 p 475 Desmangles 1992 p 26 a b Metraux 1972 p 33 Metraux 1972 p 34 Desmangles 1992 pp 24 25 27 Desmangles 1990 pp 476 477 Mintz amp Trouillot 1995 pp 125 127 Desmangles 1990 p 476 Cosentino 1995a p 33 Metraux 1972 p 270 Beauvoir Dominique 1995 pp 162 163 Cosentino 1995a p 41 Beauvoir Dominique 1995 p 161 Cosentino 1995a p 44 Desmangles 1990 p 479 Desmangles 1992 p 25 Desmangles 1990 p 477 Desmangles 1992 p 35 Thylefors 2009 pp 76 77 Metraux 1972 p 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in Haitian Vodou American Ethnologist 29 2 233 260 doi 10 1525 ae 2002 29 2 233 Basquiat Jennifer Huss 2004 Embodied Mormonism Performance Vodou and the LDS Church in Haiti Dialogue A Journal of Mormon Thought 37 4 1 34 doi 10 2307 45227646 JSTOR 45227646 S2CID 254397178 Beasley Myron M 2010 Vodou Penises and Bones Ritual Performances of Death and Eroticism in the Cemetery and the Junk Yard of Port au Prince Performance Research 15 1 41 47 doi 10 1080 13528165 2010 485762 S2CID 194097863 Beauvoir Dominique Rachel 1995 Underground Realms of Being Vodoun Magic In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 153 177 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Brendbekken Marit 2002 Beyond Vodou and Anthroposophy in the Dominican Haitian Borderlands Social Analysis 46 3 31 74 doi 10 3167 015597702782409266 JSTOR 23170167 Benoit Catherine 2007 The Politics of Vodou Aids Access to Health Care and the Use of Culture in Haiti Anthropology in Action 14 3 59 68 doi 10 3167 aia 2007 140307 Berkovitch Ellen 1999 Drapo Vodou The Sequin Flags of Haiti American Craft 59 2 70 75 Blier Suzanne Preston 1995 Vodun West African Roots of Vodou In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 61 87 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Boutros Alexandra 2011 Gods on the Move The Mediatisation of Vodou Culture and Religion 12 2 185 201 doi 10 1080 14755610 2011 579718 S2CID 144434687 Brown Karen McCarthy 1987 Plenty Confidence in Myself The Initiation of a White Woman Scholar into Haitian Vodou Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 3 1 67 76 JSTOR 25002057 Brown Karen McCarthy 1991 Mama Lola A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22475 2 Brown Karen McCarthy 1995 Serving the Spirits The Ritual Economy of Haitian Vodou In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 205 223 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Cosentino Donald J 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174322009X12448040552160 S2CID 191333249 Courlander Harold 1988 The Word Voodoo African Arts 21 2 February 88 doi 10 2307 3336535 JSTOR 3336535 de Heusch Luc 1989 Kongo in Haiti A New Approach to Religious Syncretism Man 24 2 290 303 JSTOR 2803307 Derby Lauren 2015 Imperial Idols French and United States Revenants in Haitian Vodou History of Religions 54 4 394 422 doi 10 1086 680175 JSTOR 10 1086 680175 S2CID 163428569 Desmangles Leslie G 1990 The Maroon Republics and Religious Diversity in Colonial Haiti Anthropos 85 4 6 475 482 JSTOR 40463572 Desmangles Leslie 1992 The Faces of the Gods Vodou and Roman Catholicism in Haiti Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807843932 Desmangles Leslie G 2012 Replacing the Term Voodoo with Vodou A Proposal Journal of Haitian Studies 18 2 26 33 JSTOR 41949201 Emore Holli S 2021 Constellated Ministry A Guide for Those Serving Today s Pagans Sheffield Equinox ISBN 9781781799574 Fandrich Ina J 2007 Yoruba Influences on Haitian Vodou 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Benjamin 2015 The Scapegoating of Haitian Vodou Religion David Brooks s 2010 Claim That Voodoo is a Progress Resistant Cultural Influence Journal of Black Studies 46 1 3 22 doi 10 1177 0021934714555186 S2CID 54828385 Houlberg Marilyn 1995 Magique Marasa The Ritual Cosmos of Twins and Other Sacred Children In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 267 283 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Hurbon Laennec 1995 American Fantasy and Haitian Vodou In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 181 197 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Johnson Paul Christopher 2002 Secrets Gossip and Gods The Transformation of Brazilian Candomble Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195150582 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 Metraux Alfred 1972 1959 Voodoo in Haiti Translated by Hugo Charteris New York Schocken Books McAlister Elizabeth 1993 Sacred Stories from the Haitian Diaspora A Collective Biography of Seven Vodou Priestesses in New York City Journal of Caribbean Studies 9 1 amp 2 Winter 10 27 Archived from the original on 2012 04 22 Retrieved 2012 03 22 McAlister Elizabeth 1995 A Sorcerer s Bottle The Visual Art of Magic in Haiti In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 305 321 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Archived from the original on 2015 05 05 Retrieved 2015 05 03 McAlister Elizabeth 2002 Rara Vodou Power and Performance in Haiti and its Diaspora Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0520228221 Michel Claudine 1996 Of Worlds Seen and Unseen The Educational Character of Haitian Vodou Comparative Education Review 40 3 280 294 doi 10 1086 447386 JSTOR 1189105 S2CID 144256087 Michel Claudine 2001 Women s Moral and Spiritual Leadership in Haitian Vodou The Voice of Mama Lola and Karen McCarthy Brown Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 17 2 61 87 JSTOR 25002412 Mintz Sidney Trouillot Michel Rolph 1995 The Social History of Haitian Vodou In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 123 147 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Polk Patrick 1995 Sacred Banners and the Divine Cavalry Charge In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 325 347 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Ramsey Kate 2011 The Spirits and the Law Vodou and Power in Haiti Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 70379 4 Ramsey Kate 2012 From Voodooism to Vodou Changing a US Library of Congress Subject Heading Journal of Haitian Studies 18 2 14 25 ISSN 2333 7311 JSTOR 41949200 Rey Terry Richman Karen 2010 The Somatics of Syncretism Tying Body and Soul in Haitian Religion Studies in Religion Sciences Religieuses 39 3 279 403 doi 10 1177 0008429810373321 S2CID 145782975 Archived from the original on 2013 03 07 Retrieved 2013 09 26 Thompson Robert Farris 1995 From the Isle Beneath the Sea Haiti s Africanizing Vodou Art In Donald J Cosentino ed Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou Los Angeles UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History pp 91 119 ISBN 0 930741 47 1 Thylefors Markel 2009 Our Government is in Bwa Kayiman A Vodou Ceremony in 1791 and its Contemporary Significations PDF Stockholm Review of Latin American Studies 4 73 84 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 22 Retrieved 2009 04 26 Valme Jean M 24 December 2010 Officials 45 people lynched in Haiti amid cholera fears CNN Archived from the original on 22 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2012 Viddal Grete 2012 Vodu Chic Haitian Religion and the Folkloric Imaginary in Socialist Cuba NWIG New West Indian Guide Nieuwe West Indische Gids 86 3 4 205 235 doi 10 1163 13822373 90002414 JSTOR 24713388 S2CID 145157609 Wilcken Lois 2005 The Sacred Music and Dance of Haitian Vodou from Temple to Stage and the Ethics of Representation Latin American Perspectives 32 1 193 210 doi 10 1177 0094582X04271880 JSTOR 30040235 S2CID 144260390 Wilcken Lois 2007 Vodou Theater in the Land of the Rising Sun A Report from Tokyo Journal of Haitian Studies 13 1 112 117 JSTOR 41715346 Further reading EditBellegarde Smith Patrick Michel Claudine 2006 Haitian Vodou Spirit Myth amp Reality Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253218537 Benedicty Kokken Alessandra 2014 Spirit Possession in French Haitian and Vodou Thought An Intellectual History Lanham Lexington ISBN 978 0739184653 Joseph Celucien L Cleophat Nixon S 2016 Vodou in the Haitian Experience A Black Atlantic Perspective Lanham Lexington ISBN 978 1498508346 Joseph Celucien L Cleophat Nixon S 2016 Vodou in Haitian Memory The Idea and Representation of Vodou in Haitian Imagination Lanham Lexington ISBN 978 1498508346 Daniel Yvonne 2005 Dancing Wisdom Embodied Knowledge in Haitian Vodou Cuban Yoruba and Bahian Candomble Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0252072079 Deren Maya 1953 Divine Horsemen The Living Gods of Haiti New York Thames and Hudson Hebblethwaite Benjamin 2021 A Transatlantic History of Haitian Vodou Rasin Figuier Rasin Bwa Kayiman and the Rada and Gede Rites Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781496835604 Herskovits Melville J 1937 Life in a Haitian Valley New York City Knopf Largey Michael 2009 Vodou Nation Haitian Art Music and Cultural Nationalism enlarged ed Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226468655 Long Carolyn 2001 Spiritual Merchants Magic Religion and Commerce Knoxville University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 1572331105 McAlister Elizabeth 1998 The Madonna of 115th St Revisited Vodou and Haitian Catholicism in the Age of Transnationalism Archived 2009 08 27 at the Wayback Machine In S Warner ed Gatherings in Diaspora Philadelphia Temple Univ Press Rey Terry Stepick Alex 2013 Crossing the Water and Keeping the Faith Haitian Religion in Miami New York and London NYU Press ISBN 978 0814777084 Richman Karen E 2005 Migration and Vodou Gainesville FL University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0813033259 Strongman Roberto 2019 Queering Black Atlantic Religions Transcorporeality in Candomble Santeria and Vodou Religious Cultures of African and African Diaspora People Durham NC Duke University Press ISBN 978 1478003106 Vanhee Hein 2002 Central African Popular Christianity and the Making of Haitian Vodou Religion In L M Heywood ed Central Africans and Cultural Transformations in the American Diaspora Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 243 264 ISBN 978 0521002783 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haitian Vodou Elizabeth A McAlister Vodou Encyclopaedia Britannica Living Vodou Speaking of Faith from American Public Media Audio and transcript February 4 2010 div, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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