Voudou

Keywords: Voudou, Voodoo, Haiti, Religion, Hungan, Hoodoo, Loa, Mawu, Benin

I. Abstract

            This paper discusses the rituals and beliefs of the Voudou religion of Haiti.  Voudou evolved as the fusion of Catholicism and ancestral African religion to produce a religious hybrid.  This religion centers on the worship of small, personal gods through offerings, sacrifices, meditation, ritual and possession.  Their beliefs are generally Christian as they use the Bible, but differences lie in their worship of these smaller gods.  Their knowledge comes, then, either from the Bible or from direct communication with their own chosen gods who are available to them as a connection to the one great God. 

II. Scope and Purpose of the System

The word Voudou comes from vodu, meaning “spiritual forces” in the Fon language (Long, 2001, 37). Voudou, then, is a system of myths and rituals that relate the world of the deities or spirits, the mythological divine entities, to the lives of their followers.  It is a system of beliefs and practices that give meaning to life by giving faith to those devotees who need uplifting, instilling the need for solace and self examination, and giving an explanation for death, which is seen as a spiritual transformation.  Voudou is simply another expression of people searching for their meaning and purpose in life through interaction with the spirits.  It, therefore, involves many cultural elements other than religion, such as having personal creeds and practices, a system of medical practices, and a system of ethics that involves proverbs, stories, songs and folklore, all of which have been passed down through many generations (Desmangles, 1992, 2-3). They worship in the forms of singing, drumming, dancing and by taking up the spirits into their own mortal bodies (http://www.frankenhooker.com/denofiniquity/voodoo/). The followers of Voudou are searching for ultimate connection with their gods through ceremonies and offerings in order to keep the gods content so that they may remain prosperous and healthy (Long, 2001, 247).

The specific system of Voudou under examination evolved in Haiti over the course of the late 18th and 19th centuries, where it still is practiced today.  It encompasses all aspects of the original system which started in Africa several thousand years ago (Metraux, 1972, 25-7).  However, in addition, it has added aspects of the Catholic Church into its ritual and beliefs, altering the general purpose of the system. Voudou has evolved differently in every area so it is very flexible in its beliefs and rituals.  It is this characteristic that made it so easy for the religion to accept some Catholicism (http://www.frankenhooker.com/denofiniquity/voodoo/). Its beliefs continue to center on the spirits that they worship; however, they also worship the Catholic saints and the Catholic God in their religion, as well as including some Catholic ritual (Long, 2001, 248).  They use sacred objects from the church for their superstitious tendencies and consistently mix the sacred of the Church with the profane of their own religion (Desmangles, 1992, 26).  The general aim of the Voudou religion is to connect the Vodouisant to their gods, the loa, through a system of myths and rituals.  This connection is an indirect form of communication with Mawu, the one great god as the loa are extensions of Mawu that he created for his followers to worship.  By communicating with the loa, they are essentially building a relationship with the Creator and will find peace and understanding as well as meaning in life.   This is their central goal in their religion (Desmangles, 1992).

Though Voudou began as an African religion, it has spread to many places from Haiti.  It can be found very prosperously in New Orleans, Miami, Galveston, Charleston, and New York (http://www.frankenhooker.com/denofiniquity/voodoo/). Though many new people are beginning to adopt this religion, it remains, in Haiti, generally a religion for the peasants.  Because of this, it is difficult for those of the upper classes to convert to Voudou as these practicing peasants very rarely allow the conversion. Voudou remains, then, a religion for the lower class (Desmangles, 1992).

III. Authority Structure

    a. Sources and Criteria of Valid Knowledge

        Voudou in Haiti derives its knowledge from the fusion of different systems. It mixes practices from many African ethnic groups as well as Christianity.  The African aspect of Voudou is based on mythology, which is their source of knowledge for the system (Desmangles, 1992, 101). The Benin Africans believed in a supreme God, Mawu, who created all that exists, much like the God of Christianity and Islam.  Because the Africans needed easier access to Mawu, Voudou evolved to give them a closer proximity. Mawu does not interact with immortal humans; he has connections with them through the Vouduns, which are recognized as Mawu’s creatures.  The Vouduns are Mawu’s response to the desire of man to have contact with him. They are, though, very distinct from the Mawu.  The Vouduns are spiritual extensions of Mawu which exist to create a connection between Mawu and his followers.  Mawu created them specifically to communicate with his followers for him.  There is no worship of the Mawu, only the Vouduns because of their closer proximity to man.  The knowledge of the religion comes from direct possession of the person by the Voudun that they have chosen. Once it is time to accept the religion, possession by a Voudun is requested and it is this possession that fills the person with the knowledge of the gods (http://allaboutsikhs.com/religion/vodun1.htm).  Essentially, Vodouisants use meditation with the gods to find truth in their religion.  Divine inspiration is what leads them down different paths in their faith. 

Christian doctrine is the central aspect in the Catholic personality of the system.  They read the bible and find connections with God through the scriptures.  This side of their faith follows that of Catholicism completely.  It is the combination of the mythology that distorts the Christian aspect of their beliefs.  Voudou, then, is the fusion of mythology with Christianity, invoking divine inspiration from the smaller gods as well as following the traditions of the Catholics through the Bible (Desmangles, 1992, 99-108), (http://allaboutsikhs.com/religion/vodun1.htm).

 

   b. Methods of Inquiry

            Voudou uses meditation, ritual and worship to acquire its knowledge of divinity.  On the mythological side of the system, it is ritual in ceremony which provides knowledge.  Each Vodouisant constructs altars all over their houses and work areas for their favorite Vouduns.  They will offer the Vouduns gifts and, on occasion, sacrifices to remain in their favor and continue to have good health and happiness (Davis, 1998).  Offerings and Sacrifices will give strength and power to the gods according to how great these offerings and sacrifices are. Therefore, actions on this level serve to form a connection between the Vodouisant and the Vouduns.   On special occasions, ceremonies are arranged where singing, dancing, and drumming occur in order to evoke possessions of the Vodouisants by the Vouduns.  This is specifically a situation in which the followers are directly asking for interaction with their Vouduns to achieve a sense of knowledge about their own faith (Metraux, 1972, 178).

            Possession is a fundamental aspect of the Voudou religion as it is a central method of contact between the followers and the gods.  A loa will move into the head of an individual, removing the “good big angel”, one of the two souls that everyone has.  As this soul is removed, tremblings and convulsions begin to indicate the beginning of the trance.  Once it is totally evicted, the individual feels totally empty as though they may faint.  The head will whirl and the legs will tremble as the individual becomes an instrument of the god.  All the words and actions from this person from then on will be the works of the gods.  Vodouisants refer to this possession as though the god is “mounting” or “riding” his horse as this is the very nature of the possession.  The loa is in control and using the person simply as a vessel for his message.  These possessions provide the gods with direct contact with the followers.  Therefore, they can give advice, threaten sinners, or prophesy.  Possession, then, is a fundamental way in which the gods direct their desires to the followers.  They are able to communicate demands and instruction to their people by using one person as a vehicle in which to do so.  The Vodouisants will use these instructions as divine information and follow the orders given (Metraux, 1972, 121-3).

            Mostly, the Voudou religion is controlled by the Vouduns.  These gods will appear to people in their sleep; they will possess them or speak to them through every day occurrences.  They directly or indirectly communicate their presence as well as their wishes to the follower or potential Vodouisant.  They will make it known when it is time for someone to be initiated or when a follower must change their actions and make more offerings (Metraux, 1972, Davis, 1998).  The validity in this form of knowledge comes from the feelings of the followers themselves.  The presence of the Gods during ceremonies, the possessions that are witnessed, and the success of proper offerings and sacrifices to the altars of the Vouduns serve to justify the beliefs of the Vodouisants (Davis, 1998).  This is all representative of the mythological aspects of the religion.  Their faith rests on the foundation of personal experience with their Gods, not on the writings of prophets or scholars. 

            On the Christian side of the system, Catholic rituals and worship are intermingled with the mythological features.  The rites of the Catholic Church are preserved in their worship.  They take part in communion and baptism as well as prayer and reading of the Bible (Metraux, 1972).  They acquire their knowledge of God through this prayer and study of the Christian documents.  The validation in these actions comes from the validation of the Christian church and the Bible. 

            The Vodouisants’ knowledge of religion comes from many different places depending on the aspect of their system in question.  It all comes from ritual, possession, prayer, meditation, practice, experience, and study.  It is all valid information to them as they experience their specific way of life first-hand.  On the outside, it seems less valid as there is a definite mystical pattern revealed through the study of true Voudou.

 

c. Institutions and Professional Structure

            Voudou worship is sustained by groups of followers who place themselves under the authority of a priest or priestess.  These authority figures will influence the followers placed under them and have an effect on the direction in which their worship will go. These are referred to as cult groups and their tendencies to develop different ways in which to serve the Vouduns is what has created such diversity in the Voudou religion today  (Metraux, 1972, 61-2).  There are many different levels in the Voudou system, ranging from an inspired peasant who may place an altar to a Voudun in their house, to the great hungan who is the priest or priestess and has the closest relationship with the Vouduns  (Metraux, 1972, 62).  However, the system is a democratic one in that all followers may communicate directly with the Voudun, regardless of their ranks in the hierarchy.  This is an aspect of the system that was not influenced by the Catholic Church (Desmangles, 1992, 3).  The priests and priestesses must be very knowledgeable in the system of Voudou.  They must know all the names of the spirits as well as their emblems, tastes, and liturgies appropriate to ceremony.  They are a healer, soothsayer, exorcizer, organizer and choirmaster as well as a political guide in the public. The process to becoming a priest or priestess is very long and hard.  People are specifically called to do so by the Vouduns or it can be passed down through family (Metraux, 1972, 67).  People who are called do undergo this process spend months or years in training with the priest or priestess who takes them on as their student. There are a few who claim to have gotten their instruction directly from a spirit.  Once ready for the initiation, the candidate must undergo a ceremony of the utmost secrecy where they remain in a sanctuary for 9 days dreaming and meditating.  Once this is done, the process is finished and they are now a practicing hungan (Metraux, 1972, 67-9).

Someone who wants to convert to the Voudou religion must go through a separate initiation.  To go through this process, one must undergo severe financial sacrifice, great efforts in memory, strict observance of moral obligations, absence from occupations, and severe discipline.  Through these sacrifices as well as death and resurrection, the initiate is given the chance to move from their previously profane world into a new life where they are dependent upon the Vouduns. It is a time of contemplation and meditation to evoke the care of the gods.  Once initiated, they are practicing Vodouisants and may choose a hungan under which they will worship as well as offer their private offerings and sacrifices to their Vouduns (Metraux, 1972, 193). 

 

IV. History

            Voudou has been a part of African culture for many years coming mainly from Tongo, Dahoney, Nigeria, and Benin (Long, 2001, 3-5).   Here, the religion was based on a mythology that consisted of a central god, Mawu, that created the universe and all that is in it.  The Africans did not worship Mawu, but worshiped the Vouduns that were under Mawu.  They are smaller gods that were essentially extensions of Mawu were created so that man may have interaction with the central God.  This form of the religion has been in place for thousands of years and was the starting point for the Voudou religion now found in Haiti (Metraux, 1972, http://allaboutsikhs.com/religion/vodun1.htm).

            In the 18th century, many Africans were transported to Haiti to work as agricultural land slaves. With them, they brought their Voudou religion.  When they arrived, most were ordered to be baptized in the Catholic Church as Catholicism was the official religion of Haiti (Metraux, 1972). When the Haitians began to notice the slaves practicing their own religion, they banned any ceremonies or worship services, as they were afraid of the slaves’ religion.  Because of this, the slaves had to practice their Voudou at night to hide their worship, but they also had to begin pretending that they were practicing the Christianity of the country (Desmangles, 1992).  They would carry around holy water and go to Catholic mass in order to appear to be converting to Catholicism.  They eventually, though, began to incorporate this Christianity into their own religion, combining the two to create a new Voudou.  They still worshipped their Vouduns under Mawu, but they were also worshipping the Christian God and following certain Christian ritual. Through this, they developed the different form of Voudou in Haiti (Desmangles, 1992).

            During the revolution of the slaves against the Haitians, their Voudou beliefs inspired revolt and instilled fear in the diplomats.   Because of their strong religion and faith, they won their revolutionary war and were freed (Desmangles, 1992). Over the course of the next century, they spread their religious seeds and before long, the official religion of Haiti was Voudou.  The Catholic Church, at this point tried to reinstate Catholicism, but no priests would take on the challenge of conquering the enormous religion.  Finally, Catholicism was reestablished in Haiti with the invasion of the United States, though significant damage had been done and almost all Catholics were tainted with some form of Voudou.  Through this, the two religions bonded and fused, creating the Haitian form of Voudou which managed to retain their ancestral religion but evolved it to fit the Catholic culture of Haiti (Desmangles, 1992).

V. Representative Examples of Argumentation

            An example of general beliefs in Voudou is seen in the ending lines of a creed:

“I believe in Bondye, the Almighty Father of the sky, who manifests his spiritual nature in me; in a large number of spirits; and in all things visible and invisible” (Desmangles, 1992).  These three declarations all embody a certain aspect of the Voudou religion.  The creed is spoken at worship services and serves as a reminder of what the Voudou aims and rites are.  In this section, there is a mystical tone to the declarations as the gods are referred to as spirits and they mention the invisibles.   The underlying message is that the one great god is manifested in the followers through connections with the spirits, or loa.  The goal of Voudou is to develop relationships with these spirits and gain favor with them in order to be more connected to Bondye.  A criticism of Voudou is that they worship too many gods.  Some people argue that such a “large number of spirits” makes the religion less authoritative and, therefore, less respected.  The followers, though, argue that the one god, Bondye, is too great to be able to worship just him.  The loa are a way in which he can be spread out and better worshiped. The fact that they have so many spirits is indicative of Bondye’s greatness and authority.  Their spirits, then, are central in their worship and communication with Bondye.  To the Vodouisants, a greater the number of spirits, simply increases the opportunities for worshipping Bondye.  This creed is a strong declaration of this belief and practice. 

 

 

 

VI. Suggested Position in Comparative Scales

 

   a. Relative emphasis on traditional authority ----- or the testimony of experience.
         5    The Voudou system of knowledge lies in between traditional authority and experience.  The authority of the hungan remains strong as they are the leaders in the system of thought. Ritual, ceremonies and worship maintain a uniform structure throughout the system, with subtle differences in detail. However, it is the direct experience of the individual with their chosen Voudun which dictates the personality of their faith.

   b. Relative centralization of authority ----- or decentralization.
         8   Authority lies within the cult groups at the hungan level, but there are many cult groups in each sect of the Voudou system. One specific species of Voudou will have a lot of cult groups each directed by a different hungan.  Centralization does occur within these specific cult groups; however, as a whole, there is prominent decentralization.

   c. Relative emphasis on invisible realities ----- or material, earthly ones.
         1   The central feature of Voudouism lies in the presence and existence of spirits    that are never seen.  They revolve their system of knowledge on the fact that there are mythical beings governing their universe that they have never come into contact with.  The only earthy materials that they emphasize are those that have direct connections with their gods. 

d. Mainly spiritual or moral objectives ----- or pragmatic aims (prediction, healing, etc.)
         5    The Voudou systems is a way of life.  Therefore, it embodies not only the spiritual side of life by worshiping gods, but also the pragmatic side.  Certain vodouisants are capable of making predictions for the future and of healing the sick.  Because Voudou is a way in which to live all aspects of life, it emphasizes morality, ethics, religion, but also life and health and living. 

e. Most power or agency reserved for a divine being ----- or realizable in individuals.

          2    Vodouisants worship many divine beings and believe that they govern all that happens on earth.  Their complete faith is given to these gods.  However, there are certain cases in which people have powers to predict the future or communicate more readily with a spirit.  Even in these cases, though, their powers come directly from the spirits. 

 

Annotated Bibliography

PRIMARY RESOURCES:

Desmangles, Leslie. The Faces of the Gods: Vodou and Roman Catholicism in Haiti.  The University of North Carolina Press: Chapel Hill. 1992.

This book was very informative about the history of Haitian Voudou and the development of the fusion of Voudou and Catholicism.  It also explained the ancient ideas of the gods and the cosmos.  I have it as a primary resource because there were quotes included from other primary sources.

 

SECONDARY RESOURCES:

Davis, Rod. American Voudou: Journey into a Hidden World. University of North Texas Press: Denton. 1998.

This book was a great story about a man discovering the Voudou religion.  It incorporates many facts and has great insight into ritual and ceremonial rites. 

 

Long, Carolyn.  Spiritual Merchants: religion, magic, and commerce. The University of        Tennessee Press: Knoxville. 2001.

This book focused mainly on Louisiana Voudou and how it migrated from Haiti.  It did have good information on ritual. 

 

Metraux, Alfred. Voodoo in Haiti.  Schocken Books: New York. 1972.

This book was central in Voudou history and practice.  It is a thorough telling of all the aspects of the religion as well as the way of life.

 

http://allaboutsikhs.com/religion/vodun.htm

This is a great website for discovering the original methods of the Voudou religion in Africa.  It has a lot of information on the practices, initiation, induction and history. 

 

www.mamiwata.com/history.html

This website was central in filling in the gaps for the history of Voudou in America.

 

http://www.frankenhooker.com/denofiniquity/voodoo/

This was a good demonstration of how many people convert to Voudou and was a central pivot point for finding additional resources.