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African diaspora religions
Religions of the African diaspora
Religions of the African diaspora
African diaspora religions, also described as Afro-American religions, are a number of related beliefs that developed in the Americas in various areas of the Caribbean, Latin America, and the Southern United States. They derive from traditional African religions with some influence from other religious traditions, notably Christianity and Islam.
Characteristics
Afro-American religions share a number of beliefs and practices. Central beliefs include ancestor veneration and include a creator deity along with a pantheon of divine spirits such as the Orisha, Loa, Vodun, Nkisi, and Alusi, among others. In addition to the religious syncretism of these various African traditions, many also incorporate elements of folk Catholicism including folk saints and other forms of folk religion, Native American religion, Spiritism, Spiritualism, Shamanism (sometimes including the use of Entheogens), and European folklore.
Various "doctoring" spiritual traditions also exist such as Obeah and Hoodoo which focus on spiritual health. African religious traditions in the Americas can vary. They can have non-prominent African roots or can be almost wholly African in nature, such as religions like Trinidad Orisha.
African diaspora religions in the present
The nature and composition of the African diaspora have undergone significant changes over time: from the forced migration of African captives of the Old and New Worlds to the voluntary emigration of free, skilled Africans in search of political asylum or economic opportunities; from a diaspora with little contact with the point of origin (Africa) to one that maintains active contact with the mother continent, all culminating in the birth of a unique African who straddles continents, worlds and cultures.
Defining diasporas
There are several conceptual difficulties in defining the African diaspora—indeed, in defining the term diaspora. Contemporary theorizations of the term diaspora tend to be preoccupied with problematizing the relationship between diaspora and nation and the dualities or multiplicities of diasporic identity or subjectivity; they are inclined to be condemnatory or celebratory of transnational mobility and hybridity. In many cases, the term diaspora is used in a fuzzy, ahistorical and uncritical manner in which all manner of movements and migrations between countries and even within countries are included and no adequate attention is paid to the historical conditions and experiences that produce diasporic communities and consciousness—how dispersed populations become self-conscious diaspora communities.
List of religions and spiritual traditions
The Bahamas
- Haitian Vodou
- Obeah
- Rastafari
Belize
- Dugu Obeah
Brazil
- Batuque
- Cabula
- Candomblé
- Candomblé Bantu
- Candomblé Jejé
- Candomblé Ketu
- Jarê
- Omolokô
- Quimbanda
- Tambor de Mina
- Terecô
- Umbanda
- Xangô de Recife
Colombia
- Alabaos
- Colombian Yuyu
- Lumbalú
Cuba
- Arará religion
- Cuban Vodú
- Palo
- Regla de Ocha (aka. Santería)
- Ganga-Longoba
- Espiritismo
Curaçao
- Montamentu
Dominican Republic
- Dominican Vudú
Grenada
- Big Drum Dance (Gwa Tambu)
Guatemala (Garifuna)
- Dugu
Guyana
- Comfa
- Obeah
Haiti
- Haitian Vodou
- Ibo loa
Honduras
- Dugu
Jamaica
- Convince
- Jamaican Maroon religion
- Kromanti dance
- Kumina
- Myal
- Obeah
- Rastafari
- Bobo Ashanti
- Nyabinghi
- Twelve Tribes of Israel
Nicaragua
- Dugu
Puerto Rico
- Sansé Espiritismo
Saint Lucia
- Kélé
- Obeah
Suriname
- Winti
Trinidad and Tobago
- Obeah
- Rastafari
- Spiritual Baptist
- Trinidad Orisha
- Vodunu
United States
- Hoodoo (a set of traditions)
- Louisiana Voodoo
- Spiritual church movement
- Espiritismo
Venezuela
- María Lionza
- Birongo
References
References
- (2011). ["Encyclopedia of African American Religions"]({{Google books). Routledge.
- Fulop, Timothy Earl; [[Albert J. Raboteau. Raboteau, Albert J.]], eds. (1997). ''[https://www.questia.com/library/118508007/african-american-religion African American Religion: Interpretive Essays in History and Culture] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-03-07 ''. London; New York: Routledge. {{ISBN). 0-415-91458-2.
- "Philosophy of African Diaspora Religions".
- (2009). "African Myths and Folk Tales". Dover Publ..
- (1997). ["Routes to slavery: direction, ethnicity, and mortality in the transatlantic slave trade"]({{Google books). Routledge.
- (1995). "Spirits, Blood, and Drums: The Orisha Religion in Trinidad". Temple University Press.
- Hall, Horace R.. (2021-03-25). "African and Black Diaspora as Curriculum".
- "African Diaspora {{!}} Encyclopedia.com".
- (1991). "Directory of African American Relugious Bodies". Howard University Press.
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