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Saturday, January 7, 2017

Voodoo and the Laws of Religion

Religion is a hallmark of benevolent society. Many lot define their lives through the riding habit of worship, which is as varied as the elaborations that practice them. Haitian Vodou is practically misunderstood as a malevolent practice establish solely on voodoo dolls, curses and blood sacrifices. In truth, Vodou is a complex and dynamic religion that involves the use of images derived from African mythology, the mutualism of imagery amid Vodou and universality and the use of participation, observation and self-possession as a personal manner for the community to directly carry on to their religious deities.\nDue to the law of similarity of the track in Vodou and Catholicism, and the unmixed reverence Haitians have for this type, many scholars assume the Vodou foil is borrowed from romish Catholicism, but the symbol of the cross is derived from African mythology, one congressman being from the Fon mythology in Benin. jibe to Paul Mercier, the Fon describe the earthly concern as a plain intersected by two planes, caused by the Godhead, Mawu Lisa as she moved to the quaternion cardinal points of the universe, thus creating the adult male (Mercier 1968, 220-21). Mawu Lisa travelled throughout the universe, fish fillet at the quatern lodge of space, which correspond to the four cardinal points of the cosmos (Desmangles, 101). Mawu traveled from west to east, then brotherhood to south, forming a cosmic cross. The symbol of the cross is not circumscribe to one African culture group, but is found throughout Africa, as the Bambara people in addition recount the movements of a cross in their creation myth. The cross, as seen in Vodou and in its master key African mythology, is a symbol of reverence and has great meaning for these groups. The cross is also seen as the symbol of Legba, the keeper of the gates, and as a gateway between the two worlds: That of the profane human world, and the sacred world of the laws who tarry in Vilokan.\ nIn Haitian Vodou there is a dependent relationship between roman print Cath...

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