Creole Vodouism

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Creole Vodouism
A Creole is a term used to describe a person or a language. A creole person is a person of mixed European and black descent, especially in the Caribbean. A creole language is a mother tongue formed from the contact of two languages through an earlier pidgin stage. Haiti is an island in the Caribbean that is comprised of two distinct classes characterized by Creoles and people of African descent. Haitian Kreyol was a language that was developed by the slaves of the French colony of Haiti, they wanted to communicate without the French understanding them. Not only is the island of Haiti populated by Creoles that speak Kreyol, they also practice what could be called a “creole” religion. This same desire to communicate freely under …show more content…

This was important because it led to the creation of “Two Haitis.” The official nation of Haiti that was ruled by the government only existed in two main cities, Port-au-Prince and Cap Haitien, and six large seaport towns. Majority of the Haitian people lived on the inland rural areas and tried to stay as far away from “Haiti” and its government as possible. The market place was a buffer zone, free from armies and governmental control. This is where the city met the country and where urban vodou meets rural vodou. Rural vodou is based more on land tenure and ancestral inheritance whereas urban vodou ha another form of familial connection. Urban temples create a sort of extended family in which priest and priestess are called “papa” and “mama.” The initiates refer to one another has “brother” and “sister” – urban vodou is more institutionalized and more elaborate in its rituals that its rural …show more content…

The vodou god Bondye, or “the good god” is identified with the Christian God and spirits are said to have been angels in Lucifer’s army that where cast out of heaven. Vodou does not seek intervention of Bondye, they look to the spirits. Vodou spirits are not evil and work as intermediaries between God and man, much like the saints in Catholicism (Brown 335). Much like it’ catholic influence, Haitian vodou embraces the ideas of honor and respect to God, the spirits, to the family, and to oneself. This religion is very community based, the spirits will punish a person if they are doing something the community sees as bad. For example, in class we watched a film from the National Geographic in which a man in Haiti was acting very strange so they had him seek counsel with a priest. The priests said the spirits were agitating him because he wasn’t taking care of his children. Vodou relies on a relationship with elder to work, this separates the religion from Catholicism because a person without a relationship with the elders may never find guidance of the spirit. This environment of community exists and functions because of vodou. Vodou vales place an importance on acts of generosity which is important in poorer communities because the people are encouraged to

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