Haitian mythology

{{Short description|Folklore of the people of Haiti}}

{{more citations needed|date=September 2014}}

Haitian mythology consists of many folklore stories from different time periods, involving sacred dance and deities, all the way to Vodou. Haitian Vodou is a syncretic mixture of Roman Catholic rituals developed during the French colonial period, based on traditional African beliefs, with roots in Dahomey, Kongo and Yoruba traditions, and folkloric influence from the indigenous Taino peoples of Haiti. The lwa, or spirits with whom Vodou adherents work and practice, are not gods but servants of the Supreme Creator Bondye (pronounced Bon Dieu). A lot of the Iwa identities come from deities formed in the West African traditional regions, especially the Fon and Yoruba.{{citation needed|date=May 2023}} In keeping with the French-Catholic influence of the faith, Vodou practioneers are for the most part monotheists, believing that the lwa are great and powerful forces in the world with whom humans interact and vice versa, resulting in a symbiotic relationship intended to bring both humans and the lwa back to Bondye. "Vodou is a religious practice, a faith that points toward an intimate knowledge of God, and offers its practitioners a means to come into communion with the Divine, through an ever evolving paradigm of dance, song and prayers."{{cite book|last=Vye Zo Komande LaMenfo|first=Mambo|title=Serving the Spirits: The Religion of Vodou|year=2011|publisher=Mambo Vye Zo Komande LaMenfo|location=United States|isbn= 978-0615535241|page=12}}

History and origins of Voodooism in Haiti

{{main|Haitian Vodou}}

Vodou originated from the Animist beliefs of the Yoruba tribes in Benin.{{Cite journal |last=Weber|first=A. S. |date=December 2018 |title=Haitian Vodou and Ecotheology |journal=Ecumenical Review |volume=70 |issue=4 |pages=679–694 |doi=10.1111/erev.12393|s2cid=151028156 }}

File:Voodoo Ceremony in Abomey.jpg

Voudon encapsulates an assortment of cultural elements, including personal creeds and practices, among which is a complex system of folk medical practices. Voudon to some is more than a belief but a way of life, upon which popular proverbs, stories, songs, and folklore are based around.{{Cite web |date=2022-10-12 |title=MYTHOLOGIES OF HAITI |url=https://indigenouspeoplenet.wordpress.com/2022/10/12/mythologies-of-haiti/ |access-date=2023-05-03 |website=Indigenous Peoples Literature |language=en}} Voudon teaches belief in a supreme being called Bondye, an unknowable and uninvolved created god. Voudon believers worship the lwa. There are in total 180 lwa in the Vodou religion, each of them carrying a name and, a specific and exclusive function. For instance, Gede{{Cite journal|last=Scalora |first=Sal |date=March–April 1993 |title=A salute to the spirits |url=https://web.a.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail/detail?vid=13&sid=394b1efc-2811-4285-9e70-4b5206136ac3@sdc-v-sessmgr02&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ==#AN=9304260020&db=a9h |journal=Americas |volume=45 |issue=2 |pages=26}} are the spirit of life and death who is assigned to separate the souls and bodies of people when the time comes and also to watch over their graveyards. Gede also serve the role of connecting the past, present, and future, as well as amalgamating them into one reality.

Mythology in Haiti was used not only for politics but also for the revolution. Myths like: L'Union Fait La Force (Togetherness is Strength), is a story about slaves who rose up on August 22, 1791, in a heroic battle to win their freedom, and is a story about solidarity between two different groups of people to get freedom for the collective.{{cite journal |last1=Laroche |first1=Maximilien |title=The Founding Myths of the Haitian Nation |journal=Small Axe |date=September 2005 |volume=9 |issue=2 |pages=1–15 |id={{ProQuest|195818093}} |doi=10.1215/-9-2-1 |doi-access=free }} Mythical symbols of Voudon and the tradition of the shifting from chaos to collectivity known as the religion of Vodou play a big role in the forming of Haitian mythology. Today, individuals referred to as Alchemists of Memory are the keepers of Vodou history and Haitian mythology, preserving the stories told by their ancestors.{{cite journal |last1=Largey |first1=Michael |title=Recombinant Mythology and the Alchemy of Memory: Occide Jeanty, Ogou, and Jean-Jacques Dessalines in Haiti |journal=Journal of American Folklore |date=July 2005 |volume=118 |issue=469 |pages=327–353 |id={{ProQuest|3030890449}} |doi=10.2307/4137917 |jstor=4137917 }}

Characters

= People =

  • Bokor - The male equivalent of a Vodou witch. They are said to serve the lwa with "both hands" meaning they are practicing for good and evil.
  • Mambo - Haitian priestess who, together with the Houngan, leads the Vodou rituals and invokes the lwa.
  • Ti Malice and Tonton Bouki - A pair of competing tricksters.

= Creatures =

  • Gede - family of spirits related to death and fertility.
  • Kalunderik - A giant bird with brilliant feathers, originally from Africa.{{Cite journal |last=Louis |first=Liliane |date=1999 |title=When Night Falls, Kric! Krac! |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798216034940 |doi=10.5040/9798216034940}}
  • Lwa - Haitian Vodou spirit.
  • Tonton Macoute, a Haitian mythological phrase meaning "bogey man" (literally: "Uncle Bagman")
  • Mermaid - A creature with the upper body of a woman (sometimes man) and the lower body of a fish-like creature. Mermaids are known to lure children to the ocean to take them to their homes and teach them dark magic, or drown them.
  • Petro - aggressive and warlike family of spirits
  • Rada - old, benefic family of spirits.
  • Zombie - A reanimated body without a soul meant to complete or perform tasks by a Bokor.{{Cite web |last=Gandhi |first=Lakshmi |date=December 15, 2013 |title=Zoinks! Tracing The History Of 'Zombie' From Haiti To The CDC |url=https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2013/12/13/250844800/zoinks-tracing-the-history-of-zombie-from-haiti-to-the-cdc |website=npr}}

Lwa Vodou Spirits

{{main|Lwa#List}}

  • Adjassou-Linguetor – Haitian lwa in the form of spring water (goddess).
  • Adya Houn’tò – Haitian lwa of the drums.
  • Agassou – Haitian lwa which guards the Dahomean traditions.
  • Azaka-Tonnerre – Haitian god of thunder, agriculture and farmers.
  • Badessy – Haitian god of the sky.
  • Baron La Croix – lwa of the dead and sexuality.
  • Baron Samedi – lwa of the dead.
  • Damballa – father of the lwa and humankind.
  • Diable Tonnere – Haitian god of thunder.
  • Dinclinsin – Haitian vodou deity feared for his severity.
  • Erzulie Dantor – Haitian vodou goddess of wealth, vengeance, and protection.
  • Obatala – yoruba creator god.
  • Ogoun – Haitian vodou god of fire, iron, politics, thunder and war.
  • Oshun – yoruba goddess of love, also Erzulie Freda (in Vodou).
  • Oya – yoruba warrior goddess.
  • Papa Legba – intermediary between the lwa and humanity.

Related notions

  • Asagwe - Haitian Vodou dancing used to honor the lwa.
  • Lakou - the central location for worship.
  • Mapou tree- A sacred tree that is considered the link between the spirit world and earth. Avalou - ("supplication") Haitian Vodou dance.
  • Coco macaque - Haitian Vodou implement. It is a stick, which is supposed to be able to walk on its own. The owner of a coco macaque can send it on errands. If it is used to hit an enemy, the enemy will die before the dawn.
  • Gangan, Houngan - Haitian priests. They lead the peoples in dancing, drumming, and singing to invoke the lwa.
  • Gede - family of spirits related to death and fertility.
  • Guinee - Haitian afterlife. It is also where life began and the home of their spirits.
  • Paquet congo - charms made of organic matter wrapped in cloth, intended to rouse the lwa.
  • Ville au Camp - ("House in the Fields") the underwater capital of the lwa.

See also

References

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