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Authors: Rod Davis

Tags: #Body; Mind & Spirit, #General, #Religion, #Ethnic & Tribal, #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #African American Studies, #test

American Voudou: Journey Into a Hidden World (59 page)

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Page 358
ing from the North. Here and there, the slave preachers decided to do something about it. In virtually every major revolt in the antebellum South, a black preacher, or the folk equivalent, was the organizational cadre.
It is easy to see the progression that led Du Bois to observe in 1939, through what Stuckey termed "a leap of intuition based mainly on concrete experiences," (Stuckey, p. 255) that as "the slave preacher replaced to some extent the African medicine man ... gradually, after a century or more, the Negro Church arose as the center and almost the only social expression of Negro life in America" (W. E. Burghardt Du Bois,
Black Folk Then and Now: An Essay in the History and Sociology of the Negro Race,
1939, p. 198). Ultimately, this would affect American political life in a massive way, in which the critical role of the black preacher in, for example, the civil rights struggle, was as remarkable as the strange denial of the African religion which pre-figured it. By 1963, old line theorists of the "Negro Church" were insisting, as did E. Franklin Frazier (
The Negro Church in America
, 1963), "It is impossible to establish any continuity between African religious practices and the Negro Church in the United States. In America the destruction of the clan and kinship organization ... plunged Negroes into an alien civilization in which whatever remained of their religious myths and cults had no meaning whatever.... It is our position that it was not what remained of African culture or African religious experience but the Christian religion that would provide the new basis of social cohesion" (p. 13).
The overwhelming evidence, however, points to African culturenot European Christianityas the most potent link among African slaves, and the extension of Christianity a purposeful fifth column designed to co-opt revolutionary ideology. "The inescapable conclusion [is] that the nationalism of the slave community was essentially African nationalism, consisting of val-

 

Page 359
ues that bound slaves together and sustained them under brutal conditions of oppression," Stuckey argued in
Slave Culture
(p. ix). The point I offer beyond that is that "nationalism" was far less a factor than "values that bound slaves," which were values outside relatively modern concepts of nationhood. The values were those of a common religiosity, and it wasn't Christianity.
Why else the tremendous suppression? If Christian worship itself was restricted among slaves out of fear of its potential for providing the leadership and communication networks for insurrection, consider the "disappearing," to use another New World term of political repression, of voudou. Allowing African worship to be practiced among slavesin any formcame to have only one meaning for white colonial and antebellum government and society: Bloodshed and apocalypse, exactly what came to pass in Haiti. On many plantations, voudou was banned outright. In Louisiana, to use but one example, "planters felt they had to be especially alert for 'voudous,' who used fetishes and special ceremonies to conjure evil and instill fear in other slaves" (Touchstone, pp. 52, 54). Christian slaves were potential trouble enough; slaves beholden to gods that could in no way be reconciled to the theological gymnastics of their masters were the very stuff of a planter's nightmares.
Not surprisingly, government, church and economic elites became allies in an unrelenting warmartial law, statute law, exorcisms, intellectual dismissalagainst any overt form of voudou practice in the United States. It would be entirely missing the point, as many historians have, to see this pogrom as the by-product of oppression. It was the chief aim. "Religion was probably the greatest acculturalizing force which worked upon the plantation slave," observed Tulane historian Blake Touchstone. "The social control supposedly instilled by religious instruction was meant to be a deterrent to slave revolts and abolitionist inroads.... [Plantation owners] only thinly disguised

 

Page 360
the fact that they favored religion for the reason Karl Marx said capitalism shouldas an opiate which would help black bondsmen to endure a most difficult and degrading experience" (pp. 52, 54).
Genovese observed, regarding the failed Muslim and voudou (Yoruba and Hausa)-led revolt in Bahia in 1835, a point closer to my own:
Where religious movements could take such non-Christian forms the slaves were being called to arms by a deep commitment that, by its very nature, divided master from slaves and black from white. It had to be immeasurably more difficult to win slaves to a purely revolutionary cause, the ideological and emotional content of which actually linked them to their masters on some levels while separating them on others.
In the hands of a skillful anti-Christian leader the religious cry could be made to separate the slaves totally from the white community and thus transform every rising into a holy war against the infidel. When master and slave appealed to the same God, the same book, the same teachings, the task of the Nat Turners became much more difficult.... The difference came not with the abstract character of the Christian tradition but with the reduction of revolutionary potential inherent in the deeper separation of religion from class and especially ethnicity. (p. 32)
Every law aimed at baptism, at forbidding dancing and singing and drumming (integral parts of voudou worship), at gatherings, and, by extension to even Christianized worship, and

 

Page 361
Baptist preachers, was an overt attack, covertly coded, against the belief system and culture of the African slaves, i.e., voudou, and the insurrectionary potential therein contained. The very fact that the attack did not even dignify its target with the legitimacy even the Nazis afforded Judaismat least acknowledging its theological existenceonly attests to the scorched earth intensity of the strategy.
But it should never again be possible not to see the destruction of voudou as the lynchpin of African subjugation in the United States. As for the compensating role of Christianitythose for whom an alien religion became a substitute were not saved, and, if sociological data is correct, are yet to be liberated on this earth. What they were was brainwashed. Purposely, systematically, profitably, and under duress equal to that of concentration camp or gulag. They were converted all right. Literally and figuratively, into disposable machines of the productive process. That's what happened to voudou in America.

 

Page 363
GLOSSARY OF VOUDOU TERMS
[Note: accent marks and precise renderings of African words and voudou terminology into standard English or Spanish varies considerably among adherents and scholars. These renditions appear to be among the most commonly used.]
A
AláfiaYoruba greeting, a wish of peace, or good health.
Alagbachief of the Egungun Society, the society of the ancestral dead.
Ashéalso aché; sacred power from the spirits. In santeria usage:ocha.
Apatakia parable used in explaining readings in Ifa divination.
Awothe mysteries, another way of referring to the spirits.
B
Babalawofather (baba) of the mysteries (awo); highest form of priest in the Ifa system of divination.
Babalorishafather of the spirits (orisha); a male priest below the rank of babalawo. Babalocha in santeria.

 

Page 364
Babalu Ayeor Babaluaye, or Babaluaiye; the orisha associated with illnesses and terrible diseases. Also known as Shokpona or Sonponna. Syncretized with St. Lazarus and planet Saturn.
Bimbéor bembe; ceremonial party.
Botanicastrictly speaking, a store selling herbs, but in practice a store which sells a variety of religious supplies and implements, including those for voudou or santeria.
C
Cowriessmall seashells at one time used as monetary units in West Africa. Sixteen are used in a form of Ifa divination. Known as the caracoles in santeria, where the sixteen-shell method is called the dilogun.
Creoleoriginally, New World born; subsequently has been widely used to mean of mixed African and European race.
D
Dambada-Wedoor Damballa-Hwedo, Damballah-Wedo; serpent god entwining the earth. Mate of Aida-Wedo.
E
Ebosacrifice.
Egunspirits of the dead ancestors.
Egunguncostumed figure representing the egun; also the name of the festival for the ancestors.
Elegbaalso Esu, Eshu; powerful orisha considered the guardian of the crossroads of the Yoruba spirit world. Syncretized with St. Michael, St. Peter or St. Martin de Porres, and with the planet Mercury. Baron Samedi or Papa Legba in Haiti. Elegua or Elleggua in santeria.
Elekebeaded necklace, in various colors, worn by voudou initiates.
F
Florida watergeneric name for an herbal, slightly perfumed clear liquid toilet water commonly sold in botanicas. Used by Catholics as well as voudous.
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