fbpx
Wikipedia

Religion in Fiji

Religiously, Fiji is a mixed society with most people being Christian (64.4% of the population), with a sizable Hindu (27.9%) and Muslim (6.3%) minority, according to the 2007 census.[2] Religion tends to split along ethnic lines with most Indigenous Fijians being Christian and most Indo-Fijians being either Hindu or Muslim.[3]

Religion in Fiji (2007)[1]

  Methodism (34.6%)
  Anglicanism (0.8%)
  Catholicism (9.1%)
  Adventism (3.9%)
  Other Christian (10.4%)
  Hinduism (27.9%)
  Sikhism (0.3%)
  Islam (6.3%)
  Other (0.3%)
  No religion (0.8%)
A bure kalou, a pre-Christian Fijian religious building

Aboriginal Fijian religion could be classified in modern terms as forms of animism or shamanism, traditions utilizing various systems of divination which strongly affected every aspect of life. Fiji was Christianized in the 19th century. Today there are various Christian denominations in Fiji, the largest being the Methodist church. Hinduism and Islam arrived with the importation of large numbers of people from South Asia, most of them indentured, in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

Fiji has many public holidays as it acknowledges the special days held by the various belief systems, such as Easter and Christmas for the Christians, Diwali for the Hindus and the Eid al-Adha for the Muslims.[4]

History

Fijian religion prior to the 19th century included various forms of animism and divination. Contact from the early 19th century with European Christian missionaries, especially of the Methodist denomination, saw conversion of dominant chiefs such as Octavia and thus also the people they controlled. Cession of the islands to Great Britain in 1874 saw great change in all aspects of life including religious practice. Christianity became the dominant faith. Hinduism, Sikhism and Islam were introduced as minority migrant communities came to work in Fiji.

Demographics

Comparison of 1996 and 2007 census results[2]
Religion 1996 1996 % 2007 2007 %
Anglican 6325 0.8% 6319 0.8%
Assembly of God 31072 4.0% 47791 5.7%
Catholic 69320 8.9% 76465 9.1%
Methodist 280628 36.2% 289990 34.6%
Seventh-day Adventist 22187 2.9% 32316 3.9%
Other Christians 39950 5.2% 86672 10.4%
Hindu 261097 33.7% 233414 27.9%
Sikh 3067 0.4% 2540 0.3%
Muslim 54323 7.0% 52505 6.3%
Other Religion 1967 0.3% 2181 0.3%
No Religion 5132 0.7% 7078 0.8%
Total Christian 449482 58.0% 539553 64.4%
Total 775068 100% 837271 100%


1996 Data
Religion Indigenous Fijian Indo-Fijian Others TOTAL
393,575 % 338,818 % 42,684 % 775,077 %
Methodist 261,972 66.6 5,432 1.6 13,224 31.0 280,628 36.2
Roman Catholic 52,163 13.3 3,520 1.0 13,637 31.9 69,320 8.9
Assemblies of God 24,717 6.2 4,620 1.4 1,735 4.1 31,072 4.0
Seventh-day Adventist 19,896 5.1 572 0.2 1,719 4.0 22,187 2.9
Anglican 2,508 0.6 1,208 0.4 2,609 6.2 6,325 0.8
Jehovah's Witness 4,815 1.2 486 0.1 801 1.9 6,102 0.8
CMF (Every Home) 5,149 1.3 269 0.1 255 0.6 5,673 0.7
Latter Day Saints 2,253 0.6 633 0.2 589 1.4 3,475 0.4
Apostolic 2,237 0.6 250 0.1 106 0.2 2,593 0.3
Gospel 618 0.2 514 0.2 222 0.5 1,354 0.2
Baptist 695 0.2 382 0.1 219 0.5 1,296 0.2
Salvation Army 628 0.2 251 0.1 110 0.3 989 0.1
Presbyterian 105 0.0 90 0.0 188 0.4 383 0.0
Other Christian 12,624 3.2 2,492 0.7 2,969 7.0 18,085 2.3
All Christians 390,380 99.2 20,719 6.1 38,383 89.9 449,482 58.0
Sanātanī 551 0.1 193,061 57.0 315 0.7 193,927 25.0
Arya Samaj 44 0.0 9,493 2.8 27 0.1 9,564 1.2
Kabir Panthi 43 0.0 73 0.0 2 0.0 118 0.0
Sai Baba 7 0.0 52 0.0 1 0.0 60 0.0
Other Hindu 219 0.1 57,096 16.9 113 0.3 57,428 7.4
All Hindus 864 0.2 259,775 76.7 458 1.1 261,097 33.7
Sunni Islam 175 0.0 32,082 9.5 94 0.2 32,351 4.2
Ahmadiyya 18 0.0 1,944 0.6 14 0.0 1,976 0.3
Other Muslim 131 0.0 19,727 5.8 138 0.3 19,996 2.6
All Muslims 324 0.1 53,753 15.9 246 0.6 54,323 7.0
Sikh 0 0.0 3,076 0.9 0 0.0 3,067 0.4
Baháʼí Faith 389 0.1 25 0.0 149 0.3 563 0.1
Confucianism 8 0.0 21 0.0 336 0.8 365 0.0
Other religions 61 0.0 314 0.1 664 1.6 1,039 0.1
No religion† 1549 0.4 1,135 0.3 2,448 5.7 5,132 0.7

† Includes atheists and agnostics. Source: . Fiji Islands Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original on 16 September 2008. Retrieved 5 August 2017.,

Law

Fiji had traditional law prior to becoming a colony. After cession, laws that governed Britain were also applied to its colonies and religion developed under the Westminster system. Freedom of religion and conscience has been constitutionally protected in Fiji since the country gained independence in 1970. In 1997, a new constitution was drawn up. It stated

Although religion and the State are separate, the people of the Fiji Islands acknowledge that worship and reverence of God are the source of good government and leadership.

but also guaranteed every person

35.-(1) Every person has the right to freedom of conscience, religion and belief.

(2) Every person has the right, either individually or in community with others, and both in public and in private, to manifest his or her religion or belief in worship, observance, practice or teaching.

(3) The right set out in subsection (2) extends to the right of religious communities or denominations to provide religious instruction as part of any education provided by them, whether or not they are in receipt of any financial assistance from the State.

(4) The right set out in subsection (2) may be made subject to such limitations prescribed by law as are necessary:

(a) to protect:

(i) the rights or freedoms of other persons; or

(ii) public safety, public order, public morality or public health: or

(b) to prevent a public nuisance.

(5) Except with his or her consent or, in the case of a person under the age of 18, the consent of a parent or guardian, a person attending a place of education is not required to receive religious instruction or to take part in or attend a religious ceremony or observance if the instruction, ceremony or observance relates to a religion that is not his or her own or if he or she does not hold any religious belief.

(6) A person must not be compelled to take an oath, or to take an oath in a manner, that is contrary to his or her religion or belief or that requires him or her to express a belief that he or she does not hold.[5]

The 1997 Constitution was suspended in 2009 and replaced in 2013. This constitution states in chapter 1:[6]

4.(1) Religious liberty, as recognised in the Bill of Rights, is a founding principle of the State.
(2) Religious belief is personal.
(3) Religion and the State are separate, which means—
(a) the State and all persons holding public office must treat all religions equally;
(b) the State and all persons holding public office must not dictate any religious belief;
(c) the State and all persons holding public office must not prefer or advance, by any means, any particular religion, religious denomination, religious belief, or religious practice over another, or over any non-religious belief; and
(d) no person shall assert any religious belief as a legal reason to disregard this Constitution or any other law.

The 2013 Constitution also explicitly allows people to swear an oath or to make an affirmation when legally necessary.

Ancient religion

The term ancient religion in this article refers to the religious beliefs and practices in Fiji prior to it becoming a Colony.

 
A bure kalou, A sketch done in the early 1800s
 
A Sleeping Buri, Built at Vewa, For the favourite little son of Namosemalua, Feejee (October 1852, p.108)[7]

Gods, temples and magic

Fijian religion, myth, and legend were closely linked and in the centuries before the cession of 1874, it was considered part of everyday life. Of the traditional religion in Fiji, Basil Thomson (1908:111) writes:

"The religion of the Fijians was so closely interwoven with their social polity that it was impossible to tear away the one without lacerating the other. ... Religion was a hard taskmaster to the heathen Fijian; it governed his every action from the cradle-mat to the grave. In the tabu it prescribed what he should eat and drink, how he should address his betters, whom he should marry, and where his body should be laid. It limited his choice of the fruits of the earth and of the sea; it controlled his very bodily attitude in his own house. All his life he walked warily for fear of angering the deities that went in and out with him, ever watchful to catch him tripping, and death but cast him naked into their midst to be the sport of their vindictive ingenuity."

Myth was very much reality in the years preceding and following cession. For example, in Taveuni their god, Kalou Vu(root god), is named Dakuwaqa (Back boat). In Levuka and Kadavu Islands he is known as Daucina (Expert Light) due to the phosphorescence he caused in the sea as he passed. Daucina, however, has a different connotation as a Kalou yalo (deified ancestors) in other parts of Fiji.

Dakuwaqa took the form of a great shark and lived on Benau Island, opposite Somosomo Strait. He was highly respected by the people of Cakaudrove and Natewa as the god of seafaring and fishing communities, but also the patron of adulterers and philanderers. In the book "Pacific Irishman", the Anglican priest Charles William Whonsbon-Ashton records in Chapter 1, "Creation":[8]

"When I came to Fiji the famed fish-god, the Dakuwaqa, was very much a reality. The Government ship, the Lady Escott, reached Levuka with signs of an encounter with the great fish, while the late Captain Robbie, a well known, tall, and very erect Scot, even to his nineties, told of the sleepy afternoon as his cutter was sailing from his tea estate at Wainunu, under a very light wind, with most of the crew dozing. A great fish, which he described as near 60 feet in length, brown-spotted and mottled on its back, with the head of a shark and the tail of a whale, came up under his ship, almost capsizing it. The crew, instantly awake and concerned, followed the ancient pattern, pouring a strong libation of kava into the sea, which, it would seem, was just the right idea for placating fish-gods; the monster slowly submerged, the breeze gradually gathered the cutter away, its keel dragging along the monster's back, making the skin pale. To the Fijian crew this was the "Dakuwaqa"--in the twentieth century; what must have been the effect in the tenth?"

As late as 1957, R.A Derrick (1957:13) states:

"Many Yavusa still venerate a bird (e.g. kingfisher, pigeon, heron), an animal (e.g. dog, rat, or even man), a fish or reptile (e.g. shark, eel, snake), a tree (especially the ironwood or Nokonoko), or a vegetable, claiming one or more of these as peculiarly their own and refusing to injure or eat them. The relationship is evidently totemic, and it is probable that each totemic group originally recognized a complete series of three totems: manumanu (living creature, whether animal, bird or insect), fish or vegetable, and tree."

The Gods and their temples

Traditionally Fijian religion had a hierarchy of gods called "Kalou" or sometimes in the western dialect "Nanitu". In 1854 an early Methodist missionary, Rev. Joseph Waterhouse stated:

"It is impossible to ascertain even the probable number of the gods of Fiji; for disembodied spirits are called gods, and are regarded as such. But the natives make a distinction between those who were gods originally, and those who are only deified spirits. The former they call Kalou-vu (root-gods), the latter Kalou-yalo (deified mortals). Of the former class the number is great; but the latter are without number...There were various ranks amongst the Kalou-vu according to the extent of their territory and the number of their worshippers. Thus, some gods were universally known throughout Fiji, others were local gods of large or small territories, while some were simply gods of particular families."

Basil Thomson (1908:113) suggests that, "Groups in Fiji who are tauvu or kalou-vata, i.e. worshippers of the same god, have a common origin".

The Fijian gods (Kalou-Vu, Kalou-Yalo and numerous lesser spirits) were generally not made into any form of idol or material form for worship apart from some small objects used in ceremony and divination. However, it was more prevalent that certain places or objects like rocks, bamboo clumps, giant trees such as Baka or Ivi trees, caves, isolated sections of the forest, dangerous paths and passages through the reef were considered sacred and home to a particular Kalou-Vu or Kalou-Yalo and were thus treated with respect and a sense of awe and fear, or "Rere", as it was believed they could cause sickness, death, or punish disobedience. Others would provide protection. Thomas Williams and James Calvert in their book "Fiji and the Fijians" writes:

"Idolatry - in the strict sense of the term - he seems to have never known for he makes no material attempts to fashion material representations of his gods."

The main gods were honoured in the Bure Kalou or temple. Each village had its Bure Kalou and its priest (Bete). Villages that played a pivotal role in the affairs of the Vanua had several Bure Kalou. The Bure Kalou was constructed on a high raised rock foundation that resembled a rough pyramid base and stood out from other bures because of its high roof, which formed an elongated pyramid shape. Inside, a strip of white masi cloth hung from the top rafters to the floor as conduit of the god. More permanent offerings hung around the wall inside. Outside of the Bure Kalou, plants with pleasant aromas were grown which facilitated spiritual contact and meditation. Many of the gods were not celebrated for their sympathetic ear to man or their loving natures, rather they were beings of supernatural strength and abilities that had little concern for the affairs of man. Peter France (1966:109 and 113) notes:

"Local gods were plentiful, but were celebrated in legend and song more for the wild obscenities of their sylvan antics than for their influence in human affairs...The old tales [told] of gymnastic encounters in bathing places, which celebrated, with hilarious ribaldry, the sexual prowess of ancestor-gods."

First and foremost among the Kalou-vu was Degei, who was a god of Rakiraki but was known throughout most of the Fiji Group of islands except for the eastern islands of the Lau group. He was believed to be the origin of all tribes within Fiji and his power was superior to most, if not all, the other gods. He was often depicted as a snake, or as half snake and half stone. R.A Derrick (1957:11) says:

"In these traditions Degei figures not only as the origin of the people, but also as a huge snake, living in a cave near the summit of the mountain Uluda - the northernmost peak of the Nakauvadra Range. Earth tremors and thunder were ascribed as his uneasy turnings within the cave. He took no interest in his people’s affairs; his existence was no more than a round of eating and sleeping. By association with him, snakes were honoured as ‘the Offspring of the origin’. The snake cult was generally throughout the group."

Other gods recognized throughout the Fiji group were: Ravuyalo, Rakola, and Ratumaibulu. Rokola was the son of Degei and was the patron of carpenters and canoe-builders, while Ratumaibulu assured the success of garden crops. Ravuyalo would stand watch on the path followed by departed spirits: he would look to catch them off guard and club them. His purpose was to obstruct their journey to the afterlife (Bulu).

Aspects and practices of the old religion

Consulting the gods

The different gods were consulted regularly on all manner of things from war to farming to forgiveness. The Bete (Priest) acted as a mediator between the people and the various Gods. R.A Derrick (1957:10 and 12) notes:

"The gods were propitiated to ensure favourable winds for sailing, fruitful seasons, success in war, deliverance from sickness...In times of peace and prosperity, the Bure Kalou might fall into disrepair; but when drought and scarcity came, or war threatened, the god was remembered, his dwelling repaired, its priest overwhelmed with gifts and attention."

Rev. Joseph Waterhouse (1854:404) reports on the types of worship offered to the gods:

"The temple-worship of the gods consists of the lovi, an act of propitiation; the musukau, an act of covenant or solemn vow; the soro, and act of atonement for sin; and the madrali, an act of thanksgiving. The first-fruits of the earth are invariably presented to the gods."

As a medium of the god, the Bete relied on dreams and, when inspired, fell into trances. His body trembled as he was possessed and in a strange voice he announced the message of the god.

Laura Thompson (1940:112) speaking of the situation in Southern Lau states with regard to the Bete:

"The priest had charge of the worship of the clan’s ancestor gods (Kalou vu). He was the intermediary for the people and the god. Since he was influential in securing mana from the god, he was feared and respected. He controlled the activities of the people in warfare, in times of famine, and in sickness, receiving offerings from the people and presenting them to the god according to the sevusevu ceremonial pattern...The principal offerings were first fruits, kava, and cooked feasts, including human sacrifices. As a small offering wreaths were presented. The priest prayed to the god, who presently took possession of him and spoke through him or revealed his will by means of a sign or omen...When a priest was possessed his whole body shook in convulsions and his flesh twitched...The people gave a loud cry as the god took possession of the priest. When the god finally left the Bete was served with Yaqona. After the ceremony the priest and his clan consumed the sacred offerings.

Rev. Joseph Waterhouse (1854:404/405) notes:

"All the offerings (to the gods) refer to the present life. The Fijians propitiate the gods for success in war, offspring, deliverance from danger and sickness, fruitful seasons, fine weather, rain, favourable winds, etc., etc.; but their religious ideas do neither extend to the soul, nor to another world...The influence of the priest over the common people is immense, although he is generally the tool of the chief. Indeed, these two personages most usually act in concert."

Witchcraft

Consulting the spirit world and using them to influence daily affairs were part of the Fiji religion. Using various specially decorated natural objects like a conch shell bound in coconut fibre rope or war club, it was a form of divination and was not only in the realm of priests. It was referred to as "Draunikau" in the Bauan vernacular and the practice was viewed as suspicious, forcing the practicers to do it stealthily. R.A Derrick (1957:10 and 15) writes:

"The Fijians...attributed all unexplained phenomena to gods, spirits or to witchcraft...Sickness and insanity were the work of malignant spirits, and food gardens wilted under their spells. In such cases sorcery was assumed and steps were taken to find the sorcerer and counter his spell with another, more potent."

A.M Hocart (1929:172) claims:

"That Ba was considered to be the home of witchcraft and that Moala, Mualevu and Matuku also have a bad reputation for witchcraft".

Dreaming

Dreams were also viewed as a means by which spirits and supernatural forces would communicate with the living and communicate special messages and knowledge. A dream where close relatives were seen conveying a message was termed "Kaukaumata" and was an omen warning of an approaching event that may have a negative impact on the dreamer's life. R.A Derrick, 1957:15-16:

Special knowledge could be gained through dreams and, while dreaming, people could be told to do certain things - even murder.

Bert O. States in his book Dreaming and Story Telling states:

"They believe dreams are real experiences of the wandering soul released by sleep..."

In some instances, there was also a person whose sole purpose was to interpret dreams. He or she was referred to as the "Dautadra", or the "dream expert". Martha Kaplan in her book Neither Cargo Nor Cult: Ritual Politics and the Colonial Imagination in Fiji notes:

"Seers (Daurai) and dreamers (Dautadra) could predict the future, communicating with deities either in a trance or a dream."

Mana

"Mana" could be loosely translated as meaning magic or power or prestige, but it is better explained by anthropologist Laura Thompson (1940:109) when she writes:

"The concept of mana associated with the ancestor cult is strong in the native pattern of thought. According to this concept mana is the vital force or potency which gives supernatural significance to persons or things...Its presence in a person or thing is not attributed to power inherent in the thing itself but to some spiritual force lodging in it...The first-born of each noble clan was the temporary repository of the mana of the clan’s ancestral forefathers. The chiefs had the strongest forefathers and the high chief was the most sacred because theoretically they received mana from the most powerful ancestor gods."

Ana I. González in her web article "Oceania Project Fiji" writes:

Mana is a term for a diffuse supernatural power or influence that resides in certain objects or persons and accounts for their extraordinary qualities or effectiveness. In Melanesia a stone having mana may be buried in a garden to increase the crops. Mana may also be attached to songs, dreams or ideas. Mana is not the same as a personal power or influence. It is an arbitrary, uncontrollable force that may come or go without explanation.

In modern Fiji, while the term is still used in a traditional sense, it has a more generalized use and with the introduction of the Fijian Bible it is used to describe miracles. The term Mana, when used in ceremonial speech, can be interpreted as "it is true and has come to pass."

Afterlife

At death it is believed that the spirits of the dead would set off on a journey to Bulu, which is the home of the dead sometimes described as a paradise. Immediately after death the spirit of the recently departed is believed to remain around the house for four days and after such time it then goes to a jumping off point (a cliff, a tree, or a rock on the beach). At that point the spirit will begin their journey to the land of spirits (Vanua Ni Yalo). The spirit's journey would be a dangerous one because the god Ravuyalo would try to obstruct and hinder it on its travels to Vanua Ni Yalo. Anthropologist Laura Thompson (1940:115) writes:

"The dominant belief...is that when a man dies his soul goes to Nai Thibathiba, a ‘jumping-off’ place found on or near each island, usually facing the west or northwest. From here the soul goes to Nai Thombothombo, the land of souls located on the Mbua coast, of Vanua Levu."

Myth and legend

The Fijian race origins have many different lines passed down through oral traditional story or in relics of songs and dance, the most practical is found oral history. In myth it is accepted by most Fijians that their origins are found through the Kalou Vu Degei. An alternative tale from times past was published in the first part of the 19th century by Ms. Ann Tyson Harvey. This tells of Lutunasobasoba, supposedly a great ancestral chief and a brother of Degei II, whose people came to settle Fiji. The third story of Fijian origin is muddled in the two stories, but can be found in a local article referred to as the: "NAMATA", or the face. There are variations of this story; some versions state three migrations, some exclude Lutunasobasoba and have only Degei, but they have common themes.

In the writings of Ms. Ann Tyson Harvey (1969) in her paper "The Fijian Wanderers" she writes of Tura, who was a tribal chieftain in a time which pre-dates the era of the great pyramids. He lived near what is known as Thebes in Egypt. Legend speaks that his tribe journeyed to South Africa and settled on Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania, where Tura then Married a Tanzanian woman and then with his tribes, for various reasons, traveled ocean-ward out past Madagascar, through the Asian islands, ending their journey in Fiji; by this time Tura had died and his son Lutunasobasoba was leader. During a storm in the waters of the Mamanuca Island Group, he lost the chest of Mana, or more practically put, he lost the chest containing Fiji’s ancestors' written history before Fiji, including the written language.

Tired, old, sick, and weary, Lutunasobasoba set foot at Veiseisei and from there the early Fijians settled Fiji and his children were Adi Buisavuli, whose tribe was Bureta, Rokomautu whose tribe was Verata, Malasiga whose tribe was Burebasaga, Tui Nayavu whose tribe was Batiki, and Daunisai whose tribe was Kabara. It is believed in this mythology that his children gave rise to all the chiefly lines.

However, it is said that smoke was already rising before Lutunasobasoba set foot on Viti Levu. Villagers of the Province of Ra say that he was a trouble maker and was banished from Nakauvadra along with his people; it's been rumored the story was a fabrication of early missionaries. It is also believed there were three migrations, one led by Lutunasobasoba, one by Degei, and another by Ratu,traditionally known to reside in Vereta, along with numerous regional tales within Fiji that are not covered here and still celebrated and spoken of in story, song and dance.

These history have an important role in ceremony and social polity, as they are an integral part of various tribes' history and origins. They are often interconnected between one tribe and another across Fiji, such as the Fire walkers of Beqa and the Red prawns of Vatulele, to mention but a few. Also, each chiefly title has its own story of origin, like the Tui Lawa or Ocean Chieftain of Malolo and his staff of power and the Gonesau of Ra who was the blessed child of a Fijian Kalou yalo. The list goes on, but each, at some turn, find a common point of origin or link to the other.

Religion in modern Fiji

The term "Modern Fiji" in this article means Fiji after cession to Great Britain.

Christianity in Fiji

 
St John's Catholic Church on the Island Of Ovalau.
 
Wesleyan Chapel, Naivuki, Vanua-Levu, Feejee (September 1853, X, p.96)[9]

Christianity came to Fiji via Tonga, who were more receptive to the European visitors. As Tongan influence grew in the Lau Group of Fiji, so did Christianity under the Tongan Prince Enele Ma'afu. Its advancement was solidified further by the conversion of the emerging Dominant chieftain of Bau, Seru Epenisa Cakobau. The cession of 1874 saw a more dominant role within Fijian society as the old religion was gradually replaced by the new Christian faith. Bure Kalou were torn down and in their place churches were erected. Most influential were the Methodist denomination, which is the majority today, but other denominations such as Catholicism and Anglicanism, amongst other offshoots such as Baptists, Pentecostal and others, are a part of current Fijian religion. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was established in Fiji in the 1950s and currently reports 50 congregations, a technical college, and a Temple.[10] There are over 200 Orthodox Cristians, with 4 churches and one monastery.

Hinduism in Fiji

 
Sri Siva Subramaniya Temple, Nadi

According to the 2007 census, Hindus form the second largest religious group in Fiji, comprising 27% of the population.[11] Hinduism in varying forms was the first of the Eastern religions to enter Fiji, with the introduction of the indentured labourers brought by the British authorities from India.

Islam in Fiji

Muslims in the country are mainly part of the Indo-Fijian community, they form about 6.3 percent of the total population (62,534). The Ba province in Fiji has more than 20,000 Muslims and is the most Muslim dominated area in Fiji.

Other religions in Fiji

Sikhism is also present among the Indo-Fijian population.

Fiji's old religion

While much of the old religion is now considered not much more than myth, some aspects of witchcraft and the like are still practiced in private, and many of the old deities are still acknowledged, but avoided, as Christianity is followed by the majority of indigenous Fijians.

Fiji religion in society and politics

The constitution of Fiji establishes the freedom of religion and defines the country as a secular state, but also provides that the government may override these laws for reasons of public safety, order, morality, health, or nuisance, as well as to protect the freedom of others. Discrimination on religious grounds is outlawed, and incitement of hatred against religious groups is a criminal offense. The constitution further states that religious belief may not be used as an excuse for disobeying the law, and formally limits proselytization on government property and at official events.[12]

Religious organizations must register with the government through a trustee in order to be able to hold property and to be granted tax-exempt status.[12]

Religious groups may run schools, but all religious courses or prayer sessions must be optional for students and teachers. Schools may profess a religious or ethnic character, but must remain open to all students.[12]

Religion, ethnicity, and politics are closely linked in Fiji; government officials have criticized religious groups for their support of opposition parties. In 2017, the Republic of Fiji Military Forces issued a press release stating that Methodist leaders were advocating for the country to become "a Christian nation" and that this could cause societal unrest. Following the press release, Methodist leaders distanced themselves from their previous statements, and other religious leaders also affirmed the nonpolitical nature of their religious movements.[13]

Many Hindus of Fiji emigrated to other countries.[14] Several Hindu temples were burned, believed to be arson attacks, for example, the Kendrit Shiri Sanatan Dharam Shiv Temple.[15][16] While Hindus face less persecution than before, a Hindu temple was vandalized in 2017. Later that year, following an online post by an Indian Muslim cleric visiting the country, a significant amount of anti-Muslim discourse was recorded on Fijian Facebook pages, causing controversy.[12]

Military-church relations

The Military of Fiji has always had a close relationship to Fiji's churches, particularly the Methodist Church, to which some two-thirds of Indigenous Fijians belong.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ . 2007 Census of Population. Fiji Bureau of Statistics. June 2012. Archived from the original on 9 September 2015. Retrieved 7 November 2015. - Percentages are derived from total population figures provided in the source
  2. ^ a b "Religion - Fiji Bureau of Statistics". www.statsfiji.gov.fj. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  3. ^ "International Religious Freedom Report for 2015". www.state.gov. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  4. ^ "Fiji Government Online Portal - 2017 FIJI PUBLIC HOLIDAYS". www.fiji.gov.fj. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  5. ^ "Fiji: The Constitution of Fiji 1997". www.wipo.int. Retrieved 8 June 2018. Section 35(1),(2)
  6. ^ "Fiji: Constitution of the Republic of Fiji 2013". www.wipo.int. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  7. ^ "A Sleeping Buri, Built at Vewa, For the favourite little son of Namosemalua, Feejee" (PDF). The Wesleyan Juvenile Offering: A Miscellany of Missionary Information for Young Persons. Wesleyan Missionary Society. IX: 108. October 1852. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  8. ^ Whonsbon-Aston, Charles William (8 August 1970). "1". Pacific Irishman: William Floyd inaugural memorial lecture. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  9. ^ "Wesleyan Chapel, Naivuki, Vanua-Levu, Feejee". The Wesleyan Juvenile Offering: A Miscellany of Missionary Information for Young Persons. Wesleyan Missionary Society. X: 96. September 1853. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  10. ^ "Religion – Fiji Statistical Profile". Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  11. ^ "International Religious Freedom Report Fiji" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ a b c d International Religious Freedom Report 2017 § Fiji US Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.
  13. ^ International Religious Freedom Report 2017 § Fiji US Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor.
  14. ^ Sussana Trnka (2002), Foreigners at Home: Discourses of Difference, Fiji Indians and the Looting of May 19, Pacific Studies, Vol. 25, No. 4, pp. 69-90
  15. ^ "Another Arson attack on Fiji's Hindu Temples", ABC Radio Australia, 17 October 2008
  16. ^ "Time to speak up", Fiji Times, 17 October 2008

References

  • Fiji and the Fijians, by Thomas Williams and James Calvert, chapter 7 (reference to Fijian old religion Myth and legend, their intertwining nature, and also to the emergence of Christianity.) page 248-249 (has detailed reference to Dranikau as Fijian witchcraft and details of the practice.) page 229 (has reference to the Dautadra or professional dreamer).
  • Early Sociology of Religion, by Turner B. S. Staff, pages 218-219. (Details on Fijian religion and mythology.)
  • "The Waimaro carved human figures - carvings from cachalot whale teeth in Fiji", The Journal of Pacific History, Sept 1997, by Aubrey L. Parke. (Discusses many aspects of Fiji's old religion.)
  • A Feejeean and English Dictionary: With Examples of Common and Peculiar Modes of Expression, by David Hazlewood. (Details on Fijian deities, provides detailed definitions.)
  • The Cyclopedia of Fiji: A Complete Historical and Commercial Review of Fiji, published 1984, R. McMillan, Original from the University of Michigan, Digitized Apr 3, 2007. (Reference to Degei, amongst other details of religion in Fiji.)
  • The Journal of the Polynesian Society, by Polynesian Society (N.Z.), published 1967 (Reference to Degei.)
  • Memoirs, by Polynesian Society (N.Z.), published 1945, Indian Botanical Society. (Reference to Degei and also Lutunasobasoba and aspects of Fijian religion.)
  • The Islanders of the Pacific: Or, The Children of the Sun, by Thomas Reginald St. Johnston, published 1921, T.F. Unwin Ltd, pages 64, 70 and 161. (Details of Ratumaibulu and his role as a Fijian deity, also other details on Fijian deities or Kalou.)
  • Vah-ta-ah, the Feejeean princess, by Joseph Waterhouse (Details on Fijian religion and deities of the old religion, and details of early Christianity and its missionaries.)
  • Oceania, page 110, by University of Sydney, Australian National Research Council, 1930. (Details on Lutunasobasoba.)
  • Young People and the Environment: An Asia-Pacific Perspective, page 131, by John Fien, David Yencken, and Helen Sykes. (Reference to Lutunasobasoba.)
  • History of the Pacific Islands: Passage through Tropical Time, by Deryck Scarr, published by Routledge. (Reference to Fijian religion and mythology, details on various deities and religious practices and beliefs of pre-Christian Fiji.)
  • The Fijians: A Study of the Decay of Custom, by Basil Thomson, published 1908 by W. Heinemann. (Details on Fijian legend and mythology, details on Lutunasobasoba and his children, details of the great migration.)
  • Environment, education, and society in the Asia-Pacific, page 167, by John Fien, Helen Sykes, and David Yencken. (Reference to Lutunasobasoba and the great migration.)
  • 'Viti: An Account of a Government Mission to the Vitian Or Fijian Islands, in the Years 1860-61, by Berthold Seemann. (Details on the Fijian belief system before Christianity and the introduction of Christianity.)
  • The Years of Hope: Cambridge, colonial administration in the South Seas and cricket, by MR Philip Snow, page 31, (reference to Draunikau as Fijian Witchcraft).
  • Dreaming and Storytelling, by Bert O. States, page 6. (Reference to the Fijian dream experience.)
  • Body, Self, and Society: the view from Fiji, page 104, by Anne E. Becker, 1995. (Reference to dreams from a Fijian perspective as a form for spirits to communicate with the living.)
  • Neither Cargo Nor Cult: Ritual Politics and the Colonial Imagination in Fiji, by Martha Kaplan, pages 49, 73, 150, 186 and 193. (References to dreams from a Fijian standpoint.)
  • The Fijian Wanderers, by Ann Tyson Harvey, with assistance of Joji Suguturaga, 1969, Oceania Printer Suva Fiji. (Full tale of Tura, Lutunasobasoba and Degei and the great migration from Egypt.)
  • Natural and Supernatural, by A. M. Hocart, Man, vol. 32, March 1932, pages 59–61 doi:10.2307/2790066 JSTOR 2790066. (Reference to the term Mana and its use.)
  • "The Kalou-Vu (Ancestor-Gods) of the Fijians", by Basil H. Thomson, The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, vol. 24, 1895, pages 340-359, doi:10.2307/2842183. (Details on Lutunasobasoba, Degei and other Kalou Vu of Fiji.)
  • A History of Fiji, by Ronald Albert Derrick, published 1946, Original from the University of Wisconsin - Madison, Digitized 23 Aug 2007, pages 7–8. (Details on Lutunasobasoba.)

Translations and transliterations

  • Say it in Fijian, An Entertaining Introduction to the Language of Fiji, by Albert James Schütz, 1972.
  • Lonely: Planet Fijian Phrasebook, by Paul Geraghty, 1994.
  • Spoken Fijian: An Intensive Course in Bauan Fijian, with Grammatical Notes and Glossary, by Rusiate T. Komaitai, and Albert J. Schütz, Contributor Rusiate T. Komaitai, published 1971, University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 0-87022-746-7.

External links

  • Statistics on current belief systems in .
  • Details on Fijian Mythology.
  • Details on Fijian Mythology and origins
  • Newspaper article on Blogspot with reference to Lutunasobasoba
  • Fiji Times Newspaper article with reference to Lutunasobasoba also another article with reference to Lutunasobasoba[1]
  • Oceania publications article describing the term Mana.
  • Web article with reference to Fiji Religion and the term Mana

religion, fiji, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, religiousl. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Religiously Fiji is a mixed society with most people being Christian 64 4 of the population with a sizable Hindu 27 9 and Muslim 6 3 minority according to the 2007 census 2 Religion tends to split along ethnic lines with most Indigenous Fijians being Christian and most Indo Fijians being either Hindu or Muslim 3 Religion in Fiji 2007 1 Methodism 34 6 Anglicanism 0 8 Catholicism 9 1 Assemblies of God 5 7 Adventism 3 9 Other Christian 10 4 Hinduism 27 9 Sikhism 0 3 Islam 6 3 Other 0 3 No religion 0 8 A bure kalou a pre Christian Fijian religious building Aboriginal Fijian religion could be classified in modern terms as forms of animism or shamanism traditions utilizing various systems of divination which strongly affected every aspect of life Fiji was Christianized in the 19th century Today there are various Christian denominations in Fiji the largest being the Methodist church Hinduism and Islam arrived with the importation of large numbers of people from South Asia most of them indentured in the late 1800s and early 1900s Fiji has many public holidays as it acknowledges the special days held by the various belief systems such as Easter and Christmas for the Christians Diwali for the Hindus and the Eid al Adha for the Muslims 4 Contents 1 History 2 Demographics 3 Law 4 Ancient religion 4 1 Gods temples and magic 4 2 Aspects and practices of the old religion 4 3 Myth and legend 5 Religion in modern Fiji 5 1 Christianity in Fiji 5 2 Hinduism in Fiji 5 3 Islam in Fiji 5 4 Other religions in Fiji 5 5 Fiji s old religion 6 Fiji religion in society and politics 6 1 Military church relations 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 9 1 Translations and transliterations 10 External linksHistory EditFijian religion prior to the 19th century included various forms of animism and divination Contact from the early 19th century with European Christian missionaries especially of the Methodist denomination saw conversion of dominant chiefs such as Octavia and thus also the people they controlled Cession of the islands to Great Britain in 1874 saw great change in all aspects of life including religious practice Christianity became the dominant faith Hinduism Sikhism and Islam were introduced as minority migrant communities came to work in Fiji Demographics EditComparison of 1996 and 2007 census results 2 Religion 1996 1996 2007 2007 Anglican 6325 0 8 6319 0 8 Assembly of God 31072 4 0 47791 5 7 Catholic 69320 8 9 76465 9 1 Methodist 280628 36 2 289990 34 6 Seventh day Adventist 22187 2 9 32316 3 9 Other Christians 39950 5 2 86672 10 4 Hindu 261097 33 7 233414 27 9 Sikh 3067 0 4 2540 0 3 Muslim 54323 7 0 52505 6 3 Other Religion 1967 0 3 2181 0 3 No Religion 5132 0 7 7078 0 8 Total Christian 449482 58 0 539553 64 4 Total 775068 100 837271 100 1996 Data Religion Indigenous Fijian Indo Fijian Others TOTAL393 575 338 818 42 684 775 077 Methodist 261 972 66 6 5 432 1 6 13 224 31 0 280 628 36 2Roman Catholic 52 163 13 3 3 520 1 0 13 637 31 9 69 320 8 9Assemblies of God 24 717 6 2 4 620 1 4 1 735 4 1 31 072 4 0Seventh day Adventist 19 896 5 1 572 0 2 1 719 4 0 22 187 2 9Anglican 2 508 0 6 1 208 0 4 2 609 6 2 6 325 0 8Jehovah s Witness 4 815 1 2 486 0 1 801 1 9 6 102 0 8CMF Every Home 5 149 1 3 269 0 1 255 0 6 5 673 0 7Latter Day Saints 2 253 0 6 633 0 2 589 1 4 3 475 0 4Apostolic 2 237 0 6 250 0 1 106 0 2 2 593 0 3Gospel 618 0 2 514 0 2 222 0 5 1 354 0 2Baptist 695 0 2 382 0 1 219 0 5 1 296 0 2Salvation Army 628 0 2 251 0 1 110 0 3 989 0 1Presbyterian 105 0 0 90 0 0 188 0 4 383 0 0Other Christian 12 624 3 2 2 492 0 7 2 969 7 0 18 085 2 3All Christians 390 380 99 2 20 719 6 1 38 383 89 9 449 482 58 0Sanatani 551 0 1 193 061 57 0 315 0 7 193 927 25 0Arya Samaj 44 0 0 9 493 2 8 27 0 1 9 564 1 2Kabir Panthi 43 0 0 73 0 0 2 0 0 118 0 0Sai Baba 7 0 0 52 0 0 1 0 0 60 0 0Other Hindu 219 0 1 57 096 16 9 113 0 3 57 428 7 4All Hindus 864 0 2 259 775 76 7 458 1 1 261 097 33 7Sunni Islam 175 0 0 32 082 9 5 94 0 2 32 351 4 2Ahmadiyya 18 0 0 1 944 0 6 14 0 0 1 976 0 3Other Muslim 131 0 0 19 727 5 8 138 0 3 19 996 2 6All Muslims 324 0 1 53 753 15 9 246 0 6 54 323 7 0Sikh 0 0 0 3 076 0 9 0 0 0 3 067 0 4Bahaʼi Faith 389 0 1 25 0 0 149 0 3 563 0 1Confucianism 8 0 0 21 0 0 336 0 8 365 0 0Other religions 61 0 0 314 0 1 664 1 6 1 039 0 1No religion 1549 0 4 1 135 0 3 2 448 5 7 5 132 0 7 Includes atheists and agnostics Source Population by Religion and by Race 1996 Census of Population Fiji Islands Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original on 16 September 2008 Retrieved 5 August 2017 See also Demographics of FijiLaw EditFiji had traditional law prior to becoming a colony After cession laws that governed Britain were also applied to its colonies and religion developed under the Westminster system Freedom of religion and conscience has been constitutionally protected in Fiji since the country gained independence in 1970 In 1997 a new constitution was drawn up It stated Although religion and the State are separate the people of the Fiji Islands acknowledge that worship and reverence of God are the source of good government and leadership but also guaranteed every person 35 1 Every person has the right to freedom of conscience religion and belief 2 Every person has the right either individually or in community with others and both in public and in private to manifest his or her religion or belief in worship observance practice or teaching 3 The right set out in subsection 2 extends to the right of religious communities or denominations to provide religious instruction as part of any education provided by them whether or not they are in receipt of any financial assistance from the State 4 The right set out in subsection 2 may be made subject to such limitations prescribed by law as are necessary a to protect i the rights or freedoms of other persons or ii public safety public order public morality or public health or b to prevent a public nuisance 5 Except with his or her consent or in the case of a person under the age of 18 the consent of a parent or guardian a person attending a place of education is not required to receive religious instruction or to take part in or attend a religious ceremony or observance if the instruction ceremony or observance relates to a religion that is not his or her own or if he or she does not hold any religious belief 6 A person must not be compelled to take an oath or to take an oath in a manner that is contrary to his or her religion or belief or that requires him or her to express a belief that he or she does not hold 5 The 1997 Constitution was suspended in 2009 and replaced in 2013 This constitution states in chapter 1 6 4 1 Religious liberty as recognised in the Bill of Rights is a founding principle of the State 2 Religious belief is personal 3 Religion and the State are separate which means a the State and all persons holding public office must treat all religions equally b the State and all persons holding public office must not dictate any religious belief c the State and all persons holding public office must not prefer or advance by any means any particular religion religious denomination religious belief or religious practice over another or over any non religious belief and d no person shall assert any religious belief as a legal reason to disregard this Constitution or any other law The 2013 Constitution also explicitly allows people to swear an oath or to make an affirmation when legally necessary Ancient religion EditThis article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource April 2008 The term ancient religion in this article refers to the religious beliefs and practices in Fiji prior to it becoming a Colony A bure kalou A sketch done in the early 1800s A Sleeping Buri Built at Vewa For the favourite little son of Namosemalua Feejee October 1852 p 108 7 Gods temples and magic Edit Fijian religion myth and legend were closely linked and in the centuries before the cession of 1874 it was considered part of everyday life Of the traditional religion in Fiji Basil Thomson 1908 111 writes The religion of the Fijians was so closely interwoven with their social polity that it was impossible to tear away the one without lacerating the other Religion was a hard taskmaster to the heathen Fijian it governed his every action from the cradle mat to the grave In the tabu it prescribed what he should eat and drink how he should address his betters whom he should marry and where his body should be laid It limited his choice of the fruits of the earth and of the sea it controlled his very bodily attitude in his own house All his life he walked warily for fear of angering the deities that went in and out with him ever watchful to catch him tripping and death but cast him naked into their midst to be the sport of their vindictive ingenuity Myth was very much reality in the years preceding and following cession For example in Taveuni their god Kalou Vu root god is named Dakuwaqa Back boat In Levuka and Kadavu Islands he is known as Daucina Expert Light due to the phosphorescence he caused in the sea as he passed Daucina however has a different connotation as a Kalou yalo deified ancestors in other parts of Fiji Dakuwaqa took the form of a great shark and lived on Benau Island opposite Somosomo Strait He was highly respected by the people of Cakaudrove and Natewa as the god of seafaring and fishing communities but also the patron of adulterers and philanderers In the book Pacific Irishman the Anglican priest Charles William Whonsbon Ashton records in Chapter 1 Creation 8 When I came to Fiji the famed fish god the Dakuwaqa was very much a reality The Government ship the Lady Escott reached Levuka with signs of an encounter with the great fish while the late Captain Robbie a well known tall and very erect Scot even to his nineties told of the sleepy afternoon as his cutter was sailing from his tea estate at Wainunu under a very light wind with most of the crew dozing A great fish which he described as near 60 feet in length brown spotted and mottled on its back with the head of a shark and the tail of a whale came up under his ship almost capsizing it The crew instantly awake and concerned followed the ancient pattern pouring a strong libation of kava into the sea which it would seem was just the right idea for placating fish gods the monster slowly submerged the breeze gradually gathered the cutter away its keel dragging along the monster s back making the skin pale To the Fijian crew this was the Dakuwaqa in the twentieth century what must have been the effect in the tenth As late as 1957 R A Derrick 1957 13 states Many Yavusa still venerate a bird e g kingfisher pigeon heron an animal e g dog rat or even man a fish or reptile e g shark eel snake a tree especially the ironwood or Nokonoko or a vegetable claiming one or more of these as peculiarly their own and refusing to injure or eat them The relationship is evidently totemic and it is probable that each totemic group originally recognized a complete series of three totems manumanu living creature whether animal bird or insect fish or vegetable and tree The Gods and their templesTraditionally Fijian religion had a hierarchy of gods called Kalou or sometimes in the western dialect Nanitu In 1854 an early Methodist missionary Rev Joseph Waterhouse stated It is impossible to ascertain even the probable number of the gods of Fiji for disembodied spirits are called gods and are regarded as such But the natives make a distinction between those who were gods originally and those who are only deified spirits The former they call Kalou vu root gods the latter Kalou yalo deified mortals Of the former class the number is great but the latter are without number There were various ranks amongst the Kalou vu according to the extent of their territory and the number of their worshippers Thus some gods were universally known throughout Fiji others were local gods of large or small territories while some were simply gods of particular families Basil Thomson 1908 113 suggests that Groups in Fiji who are tauvu or kalou vata i e worshippers of the same god have a common origin The Fijian gods Kalou Vu Kalou Yalo and numerous lesser spirits were generally not made into any form of idol or material form for worship apart from some small objects used in ceremony and divination However it was more prevalent that certain places or objects like rocks bamboo clumps giant trees such as Baka or Ivi trees caves isolated sections of the forest dangerous paths and passages through the reef were considered sacred and home to a particular Kalou Vu or Kalou Yalo and were thus treated with respect and a sense of awe and fear or Rere as it was believed they could cause sickness death or punish disobedience Others would provide protection Thomas Williams and James Calvert in their book Fiji and the Fijians writes Idolatry in the strict sense of the term he seems to have never known for he makes no material attempts to fashion material representations of his gods The main gods were honoured in the Bure Kalou or temple Each village had its Bure Kalou and its priest Bete Villages that played a pivotal role in the affairs of the Vanua had several Bure Kalou The Bure Kalou was constructed on a high raised rock foundation that resembled a rough pyramid base and stood out from other bures because of its high roof which formed an elongated pyramid shape Inside a strip of white masi cloth hung from the top rafters to the floor as conduit of the god More permanent offerings hung around the wall inside Outside of the Bure Kalou plants with pleasant aromas were grown which facilitated spiritual contact and meditation Many of the gods were not celebrated for their sympathetic ear to man or their loving natures rather they were beings of supernatural strength and abilities that had little concern for the affairs of man Peter France 1966 109 and 113 notes Local gods were plentiful but were celebrated in legend and song more for the wild obscenities of their sylvan antics than for their influence in human affairs The old tales told of gymnastic encounters in bathing places which celebrated with hilarious ribaldry the sexual prowess of ancestor gods First and foremost among the Kalou vu was Degei who was a god of Rakiraki but was known throughout most of the Fiji Group of islands except for the eastern islands of the Lau group He was believed to be the origin of all tribes within Fiji and his power was superior to most if not all the other gods He was often depicted as a snake or as half snake and half stone R A Derrick 1957 11 says In these traditions Degei figures not only as the origin of the people but also as a huge snake living in a cave near the summit of the mountain Uluda the northernmost peak of the Nakauvadra Range Earth tremors and thunder were ascribed as his uneasy turnings within the cave He took no interest in his people s affairs his existence was no more than a round of eating and sleeping By association with him snakes were honoured as the Offspring of the origin The snake cult was generally throughout the group Other gods recognized throughout the Fiji group were Ravuyalo Rakola and Ratumaibulu Rokola was the son of Degei and was the patron of carpenters and canoe builders while Ratumaibulu assured the success of garden crops Ravuyalo would stand watch on the path followed by departed spirits he would look to catch them off guard and club them His purpose was to obstruct their journey to the afterlife Bulu Aspects and practices of the old religion Edit Consulting the godsThe different gods were consulted regularly on all manner of things from war to farming to forgiveness The Bete Priest acted as a mediator between the people and the various Gods R A Derrick 1957 10 and 12 notes The gods were propitiated to ensure favourable winds for sailing fruitful seasons success in war deliverance from sickness In times of peace and prosperity the Bure Kalou might fall into disrepair but when drought and scarcity came or war threatened the god was remembered his dwelling repaired its priest overwhelmed with gifts and attention Rev Joseph Waterhouse 1854 404 reports on the types of worship offered to the gods The temple worship of the gods consists of the lovi an act of propitiation the musukau an act of covenant or solemn vow the soro and act of atonement for sin and the madrali an act of thanksgiving The first fruits of the earth are invariably presented to the gods As a medium of the god the Bete relied on dreams and when inspired fell into trances His body trembled as he was possessed and in a strange voice he announced the message of the god Laura Thompson 1940 112 speaking of the situation in Southern Lau states with regard to the Bete The priest had charge of the worship of the clan s ancestor gods Kalou vu He was the intermediary for the people and the god Since he was influential in securing mana from the god he was feared and respected He controlled the activities of the people in warfare in times of famine and in sickness receiving offerings from the people and presenting them to the god according to the sevusevu ceremonial pattern The principal offerings were first fruits kava and cooked feasts including human sacrifices As a small offering wreaths were presented The priest prayed to the god who presently took possession of him and spoke through him or revealed his will by means of a sign or omen When a priest was possessed his whole body shook in convulsions and his flesh twitched The people gave a loud cry as the god took possession of the priest When the god finally left the Bete was served with Yaqona After the ceremony the priest and his clan consumed the sacred offerings Rev Joseph Waterhouse 1854 404 405 notes All the offerings to the gods refer to the present life The Fijians propitiate the gods for success in war offspring deliverance from danger and sickness fruitful seasons fine weather rain favourable winds etc etc but their religious ideas do neither extend to the soul nor to another world The influence of the priest over the common people is immense although he is generally the tool of the chief Indeed these two personages most usually act in concert WitchcraftConsulting the spirit world and using them to influence daily affairs were part of the Fiji religion Using various specially decorated natural objects like a conch shell bound in coconut fibre rope or war club it was a form of divination and was not only in the realm of priests It was referred to as Draunikau in the Bauan vernacular and the practice was viewed as suspicious forcing the practicers to do it stealthily R A Derrick 1957 10 and 15 writes The Fijians attributed all unexplained phenomena to gods spirits or to witchcraft Sickness and insanity were the work of malignant spirits and food gardens wilted under their spells In such cases sorcery was assumed and steps were taken to find the sorcerer and counter his spell with another more potent A M Hocart 1929 172 claims That Ba was considered to be the home of witchcraft and that Moala Mualevu and Matuku also have a bad reputation for witchcraft DreamingDreams were also viewed as a means by which spirits and supernatural forces would communicate with the living and communicate special messages and knowledge A dream where close relatives were seen conveying a message was termed Kaukaumata and was an omen warning of an approaching event that may have a negative impact on the dreamer s life R A Derrick 1957 15 16 Special knowledge could be gained through dreams and while dreaming people could be told to do certain things even murder Bert O States in his book Dreaming and Story Telling states They believe dreams are real experiences of the wandering soul released by sleep In some instances there was also a person whose sole purpose was to interpret dreams He or she was referred to as the Dautadra or the dream expert Martha Kaplan in her book Neither Cargo Nor Cult Ritual Politics and the Colonial Imagination in Fiji notes Seers Daurai and dreamers Dautadra could predict the future communicating with deities either in a trance or a dream Mana Mana could be loosely translated as meaning magic or power or prestige but it is better explained by anthropologist Laura Thompson 1940 109 when she writes The concept of mana associated with the ancestor cult is strong in the native pattern of thought According to this concept mana is the vital force or potency which gives supernatural significance to persons or things Its presence in a person or thing is not attributed to power inherent in the thing itself but to some spiritual force lodging in it The first born of each noble clan was the temporary repository of the mana of the clan s ancestral forefathers The chiefs had the strongest forefathers and the high chief was the most sacred because theoretically they received mana from the most powerful ancestor gods Ana I Gonzalez in her web article Oceania Project Fiji writes Mana is a term for a diffuse supernatural power or influence that resides in certain objects or persons and accounts for their extraordinary qualities or effectiveness In Melanesia a stone having mana may be buried in a garden to increase the crops Mana may also be attached to songs dreams or ideas Mana is not the same as a personal power or influence It is an arbitrary uncontrollable force that may come or go without explanation In modern Fiji while the term is still used in a traditional sense it has a more generalized use and with the introduction of the Fijian Bible it is used to describe miracles The term Mana when used in ceremonial speech can be interpreted as it is true and has come to pass AfterlifeAt death it is believed that the spirits of the dead would set off on a journey to Bulu which is the home of the dead sometimes described as a paradise Immediately after death the spirit of the recently departed is believed to remain around the house for four days and after such time it then goes to a jumping off point a cliff a tree or a rock on the beach At that point the spirit will begin their journey to the land of spirits Vanua Ni Yalo The spirit s journey would be a dangerous one because the god Ravuyalo would try to obstruct and hinder it on its travels to Vanua Ni Yalo Anthropologist Laura Thompson 1940 115 writes The dominant belief is that when a man dies his soul goes to Nai Thibathiba a jumping off place found on or near each island usually facing the west or northwest From here the soul goes to Nai Thombothombo the land of souls located on the Mbua coast of Vanua Levu Myth and legend Edit The Fijian race origins have many different lines passed down through oral traditional story or in relics of songs and dance the most practical is found oral history In myth it is accepted by most Fijians that their origins are found through the Kalou Vu Degei An alternative tale from times past was published in the first part of the 19th century by Ms Ann Tyson Harvey This tells of Lutunasobasoba supposedly a great ancestral chief and a brother of Degei II whose people came to settle Fiji The third story of Fijian origin is muddled in the two stories but can be found in a local article referred to as the NAMATA or the face There are variations of this story some versions state three migrations some exclude Lutunasobasoba and have only Degei but they have common themes In the writings of Ms Ann Tyson Harvey 1969 in her paper The Fijian Wanderers she writes of Tura who was a tribal chieftain in a time which pre dates the era of the great pyramids He lived near what is known as Thebes in Egypt Legend speaks that his tribe journeyed to South Africa and settled on Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania where Tura then Married a Tanzanian woman and then with his tribes for various reasons traveled ocean ward out past Madagascar through the Asian islands ending their journey in Fiji by this time Tura had died and his son Lutunasobasoba was leader During a storm in the waters of the Mamanuca Island Group he lost the chest of Mana or more practically put he lost the chest containing Fiji s ancestors written history before Fiji including the written language Tired old sick and weary Lutunasobasoba set foot at Veiseisei and from there the early Fijians settled Fiji and his children were Adi Buisavuli whose tribe was Bureta Rokomautu whose tribe was Verata Malasiga whose tribe was Burebasaga Tui Nayavu whose tribe was Batiki and Daunisai whose tribe was Kabara It is believed in this mythology that his children gave rise to all the chiefly lines However it is said that smoke was already rising before Lutunasobasoba set foot on Viti Levu Villagers of the Province of Ra say that he was a trouble maker and was banished from Nakauvadra along with his people it s been rumored the story was a fabrication of early missionaries It is also believed there were three migrations one led by Lutunasobasoba one by Degei and another by Ratu traditionally known to reside in Vereta along with numerous regional tales within Fiji that are not covered here and still celebrated and spoken of in story song and dance These history have an important role in ceremony and social polity as they are an integral part of various tribes history and origins They are often interconnected between one tribe and another across Fiji such as the Fire walkers of Beqa and the Red prawns of Vatulele to mention but a few Also each chiefly title has its own story of origin like the Tui Lawa or Ocean Chieftain of Malolo and his staff of power and the Gonesau of Ra who was the blessed child of a Fijian Kalou yalo The list goes on but each at some turn find a common point of origin or link to the other Religion in modern Fiji EditThe term Modern Fiji in this article means Fiji after cession to Great Britain Christianity in Fiji Edit St John s Catholic Church on the Island Of Ovalau Wesleyan Chapel Naivuki Vanua Levu Feejee September 1853 X p 96 9 Christianity came to Fiji via Tonga who were more receptive to the European visitors As Tongan influence grew in the Lau Group of Fiji so did Christianity under the Tongan Prince Enele Ma afu Its advancement was solidified further by the conversion of the emerging Dominant chieftain of Bau Seru Epenisa Cakobau The cession of 1874 saw a more dominant role within Fijian society as the old religion was gradually replaced by the new Christian faith Bure Kalou were torn down and in their place churches were erected Most influential were the Methodist denomination which is the majority today but other denominations such as Catholicism and Anglicanism amongst other offshoots such as Baptists Pentecostal and others are a part of current Fijian religion The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints was established in Fiji in the 1950s and currently reports 50 congregations a technical college and a Temple 10 There are over 200 Orthodox Cristians with 4 churches and one monastery Hinduism in Fiji Edit Sri Siva Subramaniya Temple Nadi Further information Hinduism in Fiji According to the 2007 census Hindus form the second largest religious group in Fiji comprising 27 of the population 11 Hinduism in varying forms was the first of the Eastern religions to enter Fiji with the introduction of the indentured labourers brought by the British authorities from India Islam in Fiji Edit Further information Islam in Fiji Muslims in the country are mainly part of the Indo Fijian community they form about 6 3 percent of the total population 62 534 The Ba province in Fiji has more than 20 000 Muslims and is the most Muslim dominated area in Fiji Other religions in Fiji Edit Sikhism is also present among the Indo Fijian population Fiji s old religion Edit While much of the old religion is now considered not much more than myth some aspects of witchcraft and the like are still practiced in private and many of the old deities are still acknowledged but avoided as Christianity is followed by the majority of indigenous Fijians Fiji religion in society and politics EditThe constitution of Fiji establishes the freedom of religion and defines the country as a secular state but also provides that the government may override these laws for reasons of public safety order morality health or nuisance as well as to protect the freedom of others Discrimination on religious grounds is outlawed and incitement of hatred against religious groups is a criminal offense The constitution further states that religious belief may not be used as an excuse for disobeying the law and formally limits proselytization on government property and at official events 12 Religious organizations must register with the government through a trustee in order to be able to hold property and to be granted tax exempt status 12 Religious groups may run schools but all religious courses or prayer sessions must be optional for students and teachers Schools may profess a religious or ethnic character but must remain open to all students 12 Religion ethnicity and politics are closely linked in Fiji government officials have criticized religious groups for their support of opposition parties In 2017 the Republic of Fiji Military Forces issued a press release stating that Methodist leaders were advocating for the country to become a Christian nation and that this could cause societal unrest Following the press release Methodist leaders distanced themselves from their previous statements and other religious leaders also affirmed the nonpolitical nature of their religious movements 13 Many Hindus of Fiji emigrated to other countries 14 Several Hindu temples were burned believed to be arson attacks for example the Kendrit Shiri Sanatan Dharam Shiv Temple 15 16 While Hindus face less persecution than before a Hindu temple was vandalized in 2017 Later that year following an online post by an Indian Muslim cleric visiting the country a significant amount of anti Muslim discourse was recorded on Fijian Facebook pages causing controversy 12 Military church relations Edit Main article Military church relations in Fiji The Military of Fiji has always had a close relationship to Fiji s churches particularly the Methodist Church to which some two thirds of Indigenous Fijians belong See also EditCulture of Fiji Indo Fijians Fijian mythologyFootnotes Edit Population by Religion and Province of Enumeration 2007 Census of Population Fiji Bureau of Statistics June 2012 Archived from the original on 9 September 2015 Retrieved 7 November 2015 Percentages are derived from total population figures provided in the source a b Religion Fiji Bureau of Statistics www statsfiji gov fj Retrieved 5 August 2017 International Religious Freedom Report for 2015 www state gov Retrieved 5 August 2017 Fiji Government Online Portal 2017 FIJI PUBLIC HOLIDAYS www fiji gov fj Retrieved 5 August 2017 Fiji The Constitution of Fiji 1997 www wipo int Retrieved 8 June 2018 Section 35 1 2 Fiji Constitution of the Republic of Fiji 2013 www wipo int Retrieved 8 June 2018 A Sleeping Buri Built at Vewa For the favourite little son of Namosemalua Feejee PDF The Wesleyan Juvenile Offering A Miscellany of Missionary Information for Young Persons Wesleyan Missionary Society IX 108 October 1852 Retrieved 24 February 2016 Whonsbon Aston Charles William 8 August 1970 1 Pacific Irishman William Floyd inaugural memorial lecture Retrieved 3 April 2020 Wesleyan Chapel Naivuki Vanua Levu Feejee The Wesleyan Juvenile Offering A Miscellany of Missionary Information for Young Persons Wesleyan Missionary Society X 96 September 1853 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Religion Fiji Statistical Profile Retrieved 19 April 2019 International Religious Freedom Report Fiji PDF a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d International Religious Freedom Report 2017 Fiji US Department of State Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor International Religious Freedom Report 2017 Fiji US Department of State Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor Sussana Trnka 2002 Foreigners at Home Discourses of Difference Fiji Indians and the Looting of May 19 Pacific Studies Vol 25 No 4 pp 69 90 Another Arson attack on Fiji s Hindu Temples ABC Radio Australia 17 October 2008 Time to speak up Fiji Times 17 October 2008References EditFiji and the Fijians by Thomas Williams and James Calvert chapter 7 reference to Fijian old religion Myth and legend their intertwining nature and also to the emergence of Christianity page 248 249 has detailed reference to Dranikau as Fijian witchcraft and details of the practice page 229 has reference to the Dautadra or professional dreamer Early Sociology of Religion by Turner B S Staff pages 218 219 Details on Fijian religion and mythology The Waimaro carved human figures carvings from cachalot whale teeth in Fiji The Journal of Pacific History Sept 1997 by Aubrey L Parke Discusses many aspects of Fiji s old religion A Feejeean and English Dictionary With Examples of Common and Peculiar Modes of Expression by David Hazlewood Details on Fijian deities provides detailed definitions The Cyclopedia of Fiji A Complete Historical and Commercial Review of Fiji published 1984 R McMillan Original from the University of Michigan Digitized Apr 3 2007 Reference to Degei amongst other details of religion in Fiji The Journal of the Polynesian Society by Polynesian Society N Z published 1967 Reference to Degei Memoirs by Polynesian Society N Z published 1945 Indian Botanical Society Reference to Degei and also Lutunasobasoba and aspects of Fijian religion The Islanders of the Pacific Or The Children of the Sun by Thomas Reginald St Johnston published 1921 T F Unwin Ltd pages 64 70 and 161 Details of Ratumaibulu and his role as a Fijian deity also other details on Fijian deities or Kalou Vah ta ah the Feejeean princess by Joseph Waterhouse Details on Fijian religion and deities of the old religion and details of early Christianity and its missionaries Oceania page 110 by University of Sydney Australian National Research Council 1930 Details on Lutunasobasoba Young People and the Environment An Asia Pacific Perspective page 131 by John Fien David Yencken and Helen Sykes Reference to Lutunasobasoba History of the Pacific Islands Passage through Tropical Time by Deryck Scarr published by Routledge Reference to Fijian religion and mythology details on various deities and religious practices and beliefs of pre Christian Fiji The Fijians A Study of the Decay of Custom by Basil Thomson published 1908 by W Heinemann Details on Fijian legend and mythology details on Lutunasobasoba and his children details of the great migration Environment education and society in the Asia Pacific page 167 by John Fien Helen Sykes and David Yencken Reference to Lutunasobasoba and the great migration Viti An Account of a Government Mission to the Vitian Or Fijian Islands in the Years 1860 61 by Berthold Seemann Details on the Fijian belief system before Christianity and the introduction of Christianity The Years of Hope Cambridge colonial administration in the South Seas and cricket by MR Philip Snow page 31 reference to Draunikau as Fijian Witchcraft Dreaming and Storytelling by Bert O States page 6 Reference to the Fijian dream experience Body Self and Society the view from Fiji page 104 by Anne E Becker 1995 Reference to dreams from a Fijian perspective as a form for spirits to communicate with the living Neither Cargo Nor Cult Ritual Politics and the Colonial Imagination in Fiji by Martha Kaplan pages 49 73 150 186 and 193 References to dreams from a Fijian standpoint The Fijian Wanderers by Ann Tyson Harvey with assistance of Joji Suguturaga 1969 Oceania Printer Suva Fiji Full tale of Tura Lutunasobasoba and Degei and the great migration from Egypt Natural and Supernatural by A M Hocart Man vol 32 March 1932 pages 59 61 doi 10 2307 2790066 JSTOR 2790066 Reference to the term Mana and its use The Kalou Vu Ancestor Gods of the Fijians by Basil H Thomson The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland vol 24 1895 pages 340 359 doi 10 2307 2842183 Details on Lutunasobasoba Degei and other Kalou Vu of Fiji A History of Fiji by Ronald Albert Derrick published 1946 Original from the University of Wisconsin Madison Digitized 23 Aug 2007 pages 7 8 Details on Lutunasobasoba Translations and transliterations Edit Say it in Fijian An Entertaining Introduction to the Language of Fiji by Albert James Schutz 1972 Lonely Planet Fijian Phrasebook by Paul Geraghty 1994 Spoken Fijian An Intensive Course in Bauan Fijian with Grammatical Notes and Glossary by Rusiate T Komaitai and Albert J Schutz Contributor Rusiate T Komaitai published 1971 University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 87022 746 7 External links EditStatistics on current belief systems in Fiji Details on Fijian Mythology Details on Fijian Mythology and origins Newspaper article on Blogspot with reference to Lutunasobasoba Fiji Times Newspaper article with reference to Lutunasobasoba also another article with reference to Lutunasobasoba 1 Oceania publications article describing the term Mana Web article with reference to Fiji Religion and the term Mana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religion in Fiji amp oldid 1145857954, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.