Talk:African diaspora religions

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Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment

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  This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 24 August 2021 and 14 December 2021. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Mouna6.

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Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment

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  This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 24 August 2020 and 16 December 2020. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Lechuga271. Peer reviewers: Caerozades, Aliyaa97.

Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 13:32, 16 January 2022 (UTC)Reply

Title

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Just wondering, but is there a reason this isnt listed as "African-American Religion"??? I'm just not familer with the term "afro-american"... american's with afro's? I think the page should be moved to African-American, but then again since I'm not sure and unfamiler with the term I thought it should be brought up here for discussion.--MacGyver07 11:54, 21 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

African American is a US-specific term. The Afro- prefix, like the Euro-, Sino- or Anglo-, is perfectly acceptable and widely used (see Afro-Guyanese, Afro-Latin American, Afro-Trinidadian); in this context "American" refers to the Americas, not the US. Guettarda 12:17, 21 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Deleting changes made to Afro-Religious pages

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We have made what we believe are important changes to the Afro-Religions pages, yet they are automatically deleted (reverted) without cause. We have added one of the most basic cosmologcial concepts and divine tenents ineherent in all African traditional and Diaspora religions which is Ancestral Veneration, yet it was deleted without cause.

We have added

. . . New World traditions often masked for their survival . . . However, many in the Diaspora are resorting back to the traditional orthodoxy of their ancestral religions no longer finding a need to mask them.

Which was delete without cause.

We have included the other African traditional religious practices in the Diaspora such as:

Mami Wata Vodoun Ifa Orisha Akhan Kemet (Ausar Auset) Santería Rastafarianism Spiritual Baptist Islam/Black Muslims

All of the above were delete without cause.

Wikipedia has invited others to expand this "stub" yet it is being reverted back without cause. Please explain why these changes are not acceptable and how they are in violation of Wikipedia's three pillars neutral point of view, verifiability, and citing sources. Thank you Anagossii--MWHS 12:40, 17 July 2006 (UTC)

The reason, explained in the edit summary, was that you were disrupting the article by breaking good links. It's good that you try to follow the wikipedia policies. Now try to respect the Manual of style too. Please use the "show preview" function instead of frequent "save page", and always add an edit summary (just look at the article's history. Regarding the disruptions of links (which you did again, thus breaking the 3 revert rule), you have changed replaced good link Arará with red lnk Arará (West African Vodoun). Changed U.S. Southern states with red lnk Across the United states (whatever enciclopedic meaning that may have), changed Nation of Islam (which, indeed, would not belong here) with Islam/Black Muslims. You added links that would qualify as self pomotion. You overpopulated the list by duplicating entries to a level of detail that is simply not justified by the purpose of the list (of course there are a few people practising Santeria in the US, but Santeria is specifically Cuban, it suffices if it shows up under Cuba in the list). Normally even sloppy edits are corrected, not reverted, but when they are combined with self promotion, lack of explanations and persistance in error, straith reverting is much more likely to be applied. Finaly, please don't overemphase the talk, it only makes it more difficult to read, and sign using four tildas:~~~~. Again, please read the manual of style, fill in edit summaries, don't disrupt previous edits. Qyd 13:54, 17 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
PS: FYI, Ghana is not on the American continents, so it shouldn't show up in this list. Qyd 14:09, 17 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Respecting and reading the Wikipedia Style manual, which I have done, is a process that is best perfected through direct experience. Meaning that I (as you and others have), make mistakes as I am learning. I also take strong issue with your accusations of “self-promotion.” Your justification for excluding “Santeria” and the other African Diaspora religions from the United States category does not make sense. All Diaspora based religions originated in Africa, that does not exclude them from being noted for their development, and expansion in the New World. African Americans (their “insignificant” numbers notwithstanding) must also be recognized as active participants in the various Diaspora religions and this list must reflect this. The NOI (Nation of Islam) as you originally listed is not an African Diaspora religion, and the majority of the African-American population are not adherents. Further, if you do not want an "oveemphasis on talk," then assure that you own information is accurate and supported by verifiable sources. Perhaps another means other than exclusion should be created to reflect this historical fact.Losing patience and condescending to personal attacks and less experience in manipulating the mechanics of Wikpedia will not accomplish this goal. I will still continue (mistakes and all) to contribute if the situation warrants. Anagossii --MWHS 14:41, 17 July 2006 (UTC)

Very well. You could start by fixing the red links that i pointed out (as you could see, I haven't reverted your edits once the discussion started). Self-promotion: I meant adding Mami Wata as a separate religion, when it is just a part of (probably) Voudou. Moreso in [your edits] to Ifá, a clear spamlink which you add persistantly. And believe me, there's no loss of patience on my side, on the contrary. Frustration yes, sometimes when I see you ignoring advices (add edit summary, use a sandbox instead of multiple sucessive edits, don't break 3 revert rule, etc) (click blue links for more info). - Qyd 15:07, 17 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
PS: the discussion about anything othe than the article should best be taken to your or my userpage, I will leave this here for now, as I see you read this.

Fair enough. I am still working on understanding (not ignoring) the sand box, advice page, and other resource pages. Wikipedia is a bit complex to follow, vision problems not withstanding. FYI: Mami Wata is a separate and distinct religion period. One can be initiated to Mami Wata and not the Vodou. The reverse is also true. Women are the dominate clergy in that they initiate the men,but the reverse is not true. Also, adding the Vodoun and other websites to the Ifa page is not a spamlink. It is critical to actually include as many of the Diaspora religions whose divinatory systems depend upon Afa/Ifa as possible. The intent is to change the all prevailing misperception that Orunmila only speaks to the Orisha and Egun of the Yoruba. There is considerable controversy as well as to its actual origins in West Africa. Although the "Yoruba" are (rightly) credited with its introduction, there is questions of what groups have been excluded that originally made-up the now "Yoruba" clans. Finall, there is no need to "spam." West African Vodoun does not recruit nor proselytize. As many are turned away as are called. It is a tradition of strict orthodoxy which is not for everyone. There simply is no need to "pimp" the religion. However, there is a great need to understand it, even amongst the different practitioners of the various tradition, who (unadmittedly) believe prevaling Hollywood stereotypes. We honor and respect our religions and our only goal is to present them accurately and from our own perspective, as much as possible, as is accorded other groups.

Mami Wata is a separate religion?

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"Mami Wata is a separate and distinct religion period"

On that I can't agree. Does it have a different cosmology? Differnt gods? Different belief system? It is simply a different church, and this kind of dissemination is common in many Afro-American religions. Where would we get if every umbanda church or Candomblé Temple for example would claim a place for as a distinct religion. And please don't tell me you are unbiased. Your user name, Mwhs, stands for Mami Wata Healer Society. I can understand that your religion is very important to you, but try to understand the greater purpose of this encyclopedia. What I'm trying to avoid here is having an obscure movement taking over the focus of articles. That's my point of view, and I would appreciate if you tried to understand it. Qyd 20:31, 17 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

New additions to article

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Anagossii (MWHS), I appreciate that we all make mistakes when getting familiar with wikipedia, and I'm happy to try to explain some things you may find a bit tricky. Ask a question about this article here, or a general question on my talk page if you like. However, Qyd is right — some aspects of your editing style are likely to annoy other editors if you continue in the same vein. Especially when you are new to editing, listening to other editors is vital. Discussion and consensus on the talk page should precede any controversial changes, and is more likely to achieve lasting results than continually reverting back to your preferred version (also known as edit warring). Please use edit summaries (the little box above the "save page" button) so that other editors know what you are changing.

As for the content, I have to agree with Qyd that Ghana is not Afro-American and does not belong in the list. I also think that is it enough to list the countries where these religions developed and predominate. i don't think an extensive list of religions in the US section is helpful. Immigrant communities worldwide may practise these religions, but it is counter-productive to list every country. To give an analogy, the Portuguese language is also spoken in the US, but to list the US in the list of countries where Portuguese is spoken would be misleading. ntennis 02:28, 18 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

I am still working on the summary issue. It is a bit confusing for me. In fact, when I view the summary instruction page, it is actually blank. If you can offer an example of what I would place in the box, I will get-it. The section on Ghana I agree should be removed. However, I do not agree at all that the categories in the US section should be changed. The subject heading is "Afro-American Religions," which includes all of the Afro-Diaspora religions not where they originated, but where they are currently being practiced which includes the USA. African religions are the birthright of the African-American Diaspora, and many are returning to these traditions in record numbers. This section must reflect this current reality. The African-American community can no longer be omitted or excluded as if their presence does not count. This is both a travesty to their ancestors and a denial of the many who have returned to their ancestral religions, many are even stronger in their commitment because of the history in America of their suppression. I will remove the Ghana category. It does not belong. Thank you for your civility. Anagossii--MWHS 04:26, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

If you click on the "history" tab (next to the "edit this page" tab), you will see a list of edits, and next to each is the summary that the editor gave. I noticed you are now doing this so I guess you got it! :) On another technical note, wikipedia is case-sensitive — ancestor veneration will work but Ancestor Veneration will not. I'm not sure what you were attempting with the Togo link, but currently, you have linked the text "Southern Ghana, Burkina Faso" to the Togo page. I assume this was not deliberate, but please don't continue to restore this edit after other editors have cleaned it up for you. In addition, there are some problems with punctuation and sentence structure. I urge you to seek agreement here (on the talk page) before making changes to the article that have already been challenged by others. Your continual reverts to your version (with errors) will acheive far less than a vigorous discussion here and will put editors off-side.

I see your point about the page title implying all religions practised by African-diaspora communities in the Americas. However, the lead section describes religions which involve divine spirits/orishas/loas etc. I think it's worth grouping these together, and distinguishing them from other traditions like Nation Of Islam and Rastafarianism. If these are to be included, then to be fair, all Christian churches with significant number of black adherents should also be included — not to mention other religions like Buddhism and Judaism. ntennis 05:02, 18 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

P.S. If you see a red link, it's worth trying it in the "search" box on the left column. You will find there are pages on Kemetic Reconstructionism and the Ausar Auset Society. Again, I feel these faiths need to be distinguished from those spiritual traditions that were brought by communities from Africa to the Americas and maintained since that time. ntennis 05:20, 18 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thank you for the feedback. You are correct concering serveral points. Namely adding Rastafarianism and other religious traditions not brought over by Africans to America. You can revert the page. I will clean-up the additions that I have made, and present them here for discussion, and the correct way to include them. Anagossii--MWHS 13:59, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

Thanks :) ntennis 00:22, 19 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Proposal

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How about replacing the list with a cross-referenced table like this:

Afro-American Religions
Religion Developed in Roots Also practiced in Remarks
Candomblé Brazil Yoruban Orishas   Some elements of Dahomey loa and Kongo nkisi
Also called Batuque
Umbanda Brazil Yoruban Orishas Uruguay Indigenous elements added (Preto Velho, Cabolho)
Quimbanda Brazil Yoruban Orishas   Veneration of spirits called Exus
Santería Cuba Yoruban Orishas USA, Mexico Catholicism syncretism
Regla de Arará Cuba Dahomey loa  
Regla de Palo Cuba Kongo nkisi Puerto Rico Also called Palo Mayombe, Regla de Congo, Palo Monte
Vodou Haiti Dahomey loa USA
Obeah Jamaica Dahomey loa Trinidad and Tobago
Spiritual Baptist Trinidad and Tobago Yoruban Orishas Jamaica, USA Protestantism syncretism
Hoodoo USA Dahomey loa   mostly in southern USA


It would be easier to read and understand the connections (in my opinion). - Qyd(talk)19:50, 19 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Looks good to me. I think it makes sense to list the religion first, as you have done, rather than the country, as the article has done previously. Perhaps the column headed "country of origin" could be renamed as "developed in", as some could argue that they originated in West Africa? Also, perhaps we could lose Macumba from the list, or put a Macumba link in the comments section of the Afro-Brazilian religions? And Santería is also practised in Mexico and elsewhere?
What are your thoughts on other movements? e.g Santo Daime and Vale do Amanhecer in Brazil have some elements of African spiritual traditions. What about other religions that are primarily practised in the Americas by African-diaspora communities, as discussed above (e.g. Rastafarianism), but can't claim a continuous tradition from Africa? What about reconstructionist religions like Kemetic Reconstructionism? I suggest these are mentioned in the text but not in the table, if only to distinguish them. ntennis 03:49, 20 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for the input. Made te changes suggested re heading, agree, Macumba should not show up in the list, but probably mentioned in the text (maybe as origin of Umbanda, Candomble and Quimbanda?). There probably should also be a short reference to the connection of music and rituals, and the fact that some terms are used for both religion and music (batuque, tambor).
Rastafarianism and NOI: I personally don't think they should be included here, as they are not in line with the definition given in the leading paragraph (and would belong to "African-American religions" rather than "Afro-American Religions"). Santo Daime (and União do Vegetal?) is mainly indigenous, and Vale do Amanhecer... well, UFO, so shouldn't be in the list. But yes, that's a very good ideea to have a paragraph listing them as

religeous movements influenced by Afro-American religions. (I'm not sure if Hoodoo would fall in this cathegory: is it an offspring of Vodou or was it developed separately?) I've no clue what to do with the egiptian ones, but they are certainly worth mentioning. Qyd 04:56, 20 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think the table is a wonderful idea and is more user friendly. More importantly, it is not exclusionary. The table can also allow for the expaning growth and morphing off of other African-based traditions, such as Vodoun which is non-syncretic, and more orthodox, vs. Haitian Vodou and New Orleans Voodoo. For the question below: The word "loa" is not used in Benin to describe the Vodou. That is used in Haiti as well as the Creole word "Lwa." In Benin, the word for Vodou is "vodou" with a small-case "v." The Vodou of Benin is also not blended with other outside elements. African religions came to the New World as complete traditions. The use of saints, and other ethnic blends was largely for its surivival. As far as adding religeous movements influenced by Afro-American religions, This might could be sub-headed under a US Afro-religions. Thank you Anagossii--MWHS 16:39, 21 July 2006 (UTC)

Now i'm going to exopse my ignorace, as I am merely an interested dabbler, but I have some more questions that perhaps you or Anagossii can answer. You classified Haitian Vodou as a Dahomeyan tradition. I thought it also had Yoruba and Kongolese roots? Major families of loa include the Rada (Rada is a cognate of Arará, a Dahomeyan tradition) and Nago (another name for the Yoruba language and people). Also, i noticed Anagossii changed "loa of Dahomey" to "Vodou of Dahomey", which I suspect is a better term. I thought the word loa/lwa was a Yoruba word, and in Benin, "divine spirits" are known as vodun? If so, the table should probably be modified there too. I would like to look at a good reference text if anyone knows of one? ntennis 05:51, 20 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
Loa/lwa is probably a fon word (but I can't back that up); "Vodun" shound also describe those spirits, but it has the major disadvantage of being too close to Vodou/Voodoo, and sofar Vodun redirects to Vodou instead of describing the families of spirits; I believe Voudou is mainly of Dahomeyan origin, although many deities (especialy Rada) have orisha equivalents. "Vodou of Dahomey" is used to describe the religion of Benin (as to differenciate it from Haitian Voudou). This BBC article is a clear and concise reference, and has links to more indepth sites. Qyd 12:07, 20 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
Thanks, both of you, for the information. Qyd, do you have evidence that the word loa/lwa is used in Benin? If not I think we should stick to "vodou" in the table for accuracy, as per Anagossii's suggestion. I did come across several websites that suggested the origin of the word is actually French creole (from lois - "law"), although the voodoo article has it as a Kikongo term (but no reference for this claim). I also think you are incorrect about Rada (please put me straight if I'm wrong); the word Rada refers to a Dahomeyan tradition, not a Yoruba one (Orishas), which is identified with the word "Nago". The Voodoo#Haitian Vodou page states that "Haitian Vodou also has strong elements from the Bakongo of Central Africa and the Igbo and Yoruba of Nigeria...", and gives the three most important families of loa as Rada (Dahomey), Nago (Yoruba) and Lemba (Kongo). The Haitian mythology page also states that its roots are in "Yoruba, Kongo and Dahomey mythology". So I think the three should be listed as "roots" of Haitian Vodun unless I am missing something. Thanks for the link to the BBC site, but I was actually looking for a published source that we could cite, in part to address these issues. I'll have a look on google scholar when I have a moment.
Also, I'm surprised to see Spiritual Baptist listed as having roots in Catholicism. As far as I know the christian roots are protestant (Baptist). ntennis 01:38, 23 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

The way I understood it (and I might be wrong), is that haitian voudou spirits are grouped in 3 families: Rada (with roots and strong similarities to west african traditions), petwo (the aggresive loas, specific to the new world traditions) and ghede (spirits of the ancestors). Yes, rada loas have dahomeyan roots; what I meant was that those dahomeyan roots have yoruba equivalents (papa legba=eshu, ogoun=gu=ogun). Rada loas, while being strongly dahomeyan in origin, are closer to yoruba traditions when compared to Petwo and Ghede.
You're right about spiritual baptism being a protestan sincretysm, that was just a wrong copy-paste.--Qyd 04:18, 23 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for making the table. It looks great. ntennis 06:02, 24 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Loas or voudou

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I would like to change the word "loa" in the table to vodou (as "loa" seems to be primarily a Haitian thing, and for other the reasons cited above). Qyd, you rightly pointed out that the word "vodou" may be confusing, as the word links to the religion, rather than to spirits. However the article does explain in the lead section that the word can refer to "individual spirits or deities". Will you accept the change from loa to vodou? Perhaps you have other proposals/modifications to help clarify it? ntennis 06:02, 24 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

I got bold and made the change for now. Am very open to changing it again! ntennis 06:48, 24 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
I was worried that the links to either vodun or loa would be misleading, having them in unlinked form is a great solution. --Qyd 12:38, 24 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
Congratulations! The table looks great, and it is inclusive of all the ATRs in the Diaspora. I know this must have been a challenge and we commend you. However, there is one historical point that I would like to make. The category for Vodou's origination lists Dahomey and Mythology. I am not sure what the Mythology represents for the religion, and do not believe that it is appropriate. The Dahomean government (Benin) has historically made exclusive claims as the home of the Vodou religion for political and economic reasons which are too detailed for this discussion. However,the Vodou religion is one of the original indigenous religions of Africa, and is estimated to be as old as 10,000 years. This clearly predates the existence of Dahomey, who in truth are not the sole “originators” of the Vodou religion. As an ancient “un-syncretize” religion, the Vodou is indigenous to many countries in West Africa to include, Togo, Southeastern Ghana (Anlo-Ewe), Burkina Faso, Sierra Leon, Senegal, and many other regions. These regions are also where many Africans were taken and enslaved in the New World, and should be included. I (or you) can include them to offer a more comprehensive and accurate portrayal of the Vodou religion. I also think that the countries courrent name “"Benin should be used and “former Dahomey” placed in parenthesis. Thank you for the hard work you are doing. Anagossii--MWHS 22:42, 25 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Vodou origins

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We have made what we believe are some important historical changes to the Vodou origin section of the table. The first being replacing Haiti as a primary origin of Vodou's evelopment. Haitian Vodou is a syncretize Diaspora religion developed in the New World. It is another branch and/or root religion of its mother religion of Vodou in West Africa. Secondly, the Vodou religion developed throughout many regions in Africa. There is evidence that the Vodou religion merely migrated to West Africa with its adherents from the Sudanic regions. Nonetheless, to the chagrin of other nations in West Africa, Benin (former Dahomey) continues to lay claim to being the home of the Vodou religion. Unfortunately, reinforced by western anthropologists, this claim is believed to be more for economic and political reasons than any attempt at historical accuracy. Lastly, we have found no historical evidence that the Yoruba had a hand in the development of the Vodou religion in West Africa. We are aware that the religioustolerance.org page continues to attribute the development of the Vodou religion to the Yoruba, however, this is an error that we are working to correct. One of the earliest homes of the Ewe and Fon groups was ancient Ketu and other regions in Nigeria. They are believed to have migrated to this region from the east as early as the 11th century. It was only with the expansion of the growing Oyo empire in competing for land to expand, that these Vodou groups were forced to migrate southwesterly. Any remnants of the Vodou religion that existed in the region may be a result of their earlier presence. Currently, there are what are know in Benin as Nago, meaning Yoruba worshipers of the Vodou religion in some parts of southern Benin. However, it is known by the locals that they descend from populations of either warrior families, or early immigrants to that region, especially during the infamous Dahomean wars with the Oyo empire. There, one might find a mixture of both the Orisa, Gelede, and traditional Vodou deities being honored. --MWHS 01:48, 30 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
Please read the title of the list, it's about religions of african origin transfered onto the american continent. Where and how the religions originated on the african continent is well beyond the purpose of this list; instead, it focuses on the apparition and distribution in and throughout North and South America. --Qyd 05:42, 30 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
Not a problem. However, we have re-added Togo,and Ghana to the list of Vodou's historical origins. Dahomey geographically, only encompasses the country ofBenin, which is where the Fon originated. However, the Fon are an ethnic sub-group of the Ewe who inhabit Togo, and the Anlo-Ewe of southwestern Ghana. They along with many other African ethnic groups i.e., Mina, Kabye, etc., brought the Vodou religion to the New World. Inclusion of this historical information offers a more comprehensive perspective on Vodou's diverse ethnic origins, and is especially useful in aiding the Diaspora in re-tracing their ancestral and spiritual lineages.--MWHS 09:37, 30 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
Since the chart is delinating New World development of African religions, then we have added Brazil to the list of Vodou's development.The Arara (Dahomean), Ewe(Jeje), and the Mina (Miha) groups of Togo were very prominent in the development of the Vodou religion in Brazil.--MWHS 09:52, 30 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
Under the remarks section for Candomblé, it refers to the deities of Dahomey as Loa. In Benin (former Dahomey) this appellation is not used. Loa sometimes creolized as Lwa are of Haitian origin. In Benin, just as in Togo, the deities are referred to as simply "vodou" with small caps. The religion proper is capitalized. Either you or we can make this correction.--MWHS 15:21, 30 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
Again, what happens in Africa is not within the scope of this article. Rearding your addition to "roots", the listing is incomprehensible now, as you mixed countries, deities and mythologies. Why is it so hard to keep things simple? Regarding you remarks to Hoodoo, making the distinction between religion and folk magic, should be well documented in the hoodoo article, but has no place here. --Qyd 17:02, 31 December 2006 (UTC)Reply
The historical information about Africa that we include in our argument, is not necessarily for your personal information. It is mainly for the historical record for the Diaspora, and others who are still attempting to untangle decades of misinformation concerning their ancestral religions and African ancestry written from a foreign perspective. It is they, and perhaps others, who respect the Diaspora's world view, who might find this knowledge useful. Also, we are not certain what your argument is regarding "mixing". You have made no particular reference to any specific country, nor justified with any historical information why the changes we have made are not appropriate. Lastly, we do not find the chart complex at all. It might prove helpful to keep in mind that your particular understanding of simplicity may be interpreted as a serious historical omission by many in the Diaspora. If you can offer us more than generalities laced with fairness of tone, indicating to us your respect for our cultural point of view, we will be happy to offer more clarity for you. In the meantime, we will continue to offer our contributions.--MWHS 22:57, 1 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
You included a list of present day countries to "ancestral roots" of religions formed in the 17-18th century, when the countries listed didn't even exist. The roots of those religions are african mythologies, not countries that have emerged since. I appologise if my frustratin became apparent, it's all due to your well mannered stubornness (please note that this frustration is directed to you as a wikipedia editor, not to a group, a culture or a dispora?). --Qyd 15:56, 3 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
The way that the chart is prepared, it delineates each religions supposed country of origins, which would logically be its ancestral origins, since they are ancestral religions. The idea that African religions are somehow new to their current regions (i.e., Dahomey) is largely the result of western anthropological speculation, which goes against both the historical and spiritual-physical evidence known to its heirs and lineage practitioners. Meaning that many African/Diaspora priests of the Vodou (for example) can chronicle their ancestry and their tutelary deities to remote regions that pre-date its current alleged "country of origin". We simply do not see the conflict in making these long overdue corrections. In deference to you, we have reverted the wikilinks back to Dahomey Mythology, although we do not agree with this classification. However, in noting that all of the so-called major religions are also categorized this way, we will accept this classification. Lastly, we thank you for your clarification concerning your demeanor. We also apologize for our persistence in wanting to make certain that our ancestral religions are presented from our Diaspora world view, which has been historically omitted. In doing so, especially with editors who may not be accustomed to working with the Diaspora, or who do not respect their contributions and persistence, things can become heated. However, make no mistake about it, our intention is only to present our historical and religious world view with as little confrontation as possible. We are only concerned that our world view regarding our ancestral religions is not again lost to the pen of modern day revisionists. We can assure you that as the tone of some of these editors become more amicable, ours will as well. --MWHS 15:29, 4 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
Good to hear that. Now let's try to make sure we're on the same page: this article is about religions developed in The Americas in the 17th-18th century. Do we agree on that? --Qyd 15:52, 4 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
Although it doesn't state a specific time-table, we believe the chart is attempting to delineate African religions brought to the Americas by Africans arguably as early as the 14th century when the first group were reported to have been imported. Agree? --MWHS 18:51, 5 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Mythologies vs countries

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Very good. Now as the roots are as old as 500 years, can we agree that those roots are not set in countries that didn't exist in those times? --Qyd 20:57, 5 January 2007 (UTC)Reply
We have already stated this fact above. However, there is universal agreement that a point of origin must be attributed to these ancestal traditions, and that point of origin is usually the last geographical location from which they were taken and transported to the New World. the countries that we have listed did exist during that period, and the Africans enslaved in the New World brought the Vodoun religion with them.--MWHS 16:14, 6 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

First and most important: no, those countries did not exist in that era. Second, the root of a religion should not be the "point of origin" (that's elusive, hard to pinpoint and even harder to demonstrate), but another religion, the "ancestral" one. That's why I preffered to list mythologies/african religions as roots, and not some political entities. If we could agree on this aproach, it would help the reader a great deal (by keeping apples and oranges appart). --Qyd 17:24, 6 January 2007 (UTC)Reply

Candomblé
Candomblé Ketu Candomblé Jeje Candomblé Bantu
Yoruba mythology, Orisha Dahomey (Fon) mythology, Ashanti mythology, Vodun, don´t have Loa Bantu mythology (Angola,Congo), Nkisi

End Umbanda only use the name of Orishas.Jurema Oliveira (talk) 22:32, 14 February 2008 (UTC)Reply


Afro-Brazilian religions are all religions that originated in African traditional religions, which were brought to Brazil by slaves.

Jurema Oliveira (talk) 19:30, 15 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Connection to Afro-Asiatic wudu

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Just encountered on this apparent similarity with Arabic Wudu, the Islamic procedure for cleansing parts of the body? Does anybody know good lecture on this?

moved

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I've moved the US material in 'Voodoo' to Louisiana Voodoo (which was supposed to be the main article - I didn't merge it, just pasted it), and moved the rest, including the article history, to Haitian Vodou. I've been making minor edits for years in the hope that someone more knowledgeable would clean them up, but that never happened. Voodoo itself now redirects here. Maybe not ideal, but I'm hoping names less ambiguous than simple 'Voodoo' will help bring some clarity to these chronically neglected articles. kwami (talk) 09:54, 19 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Also, Vodou and Dahomey mythology should probably be merged. kwami (talk) 10:22, 19 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Rastafari

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Rastafari is a afro-american religion? 189.25.172.157 (talk) 03:07, 20 August 2013 (UTC)Reply

Hoodoo is not a religion

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Hoodoo is nut a religion and does not belong in this article. See any book on anthropology for conformation, e.g. Puckett, Hyatt, Anderson, the documentation of 19th and 20th articles at http://southern-spirits.com ... etc. 24.130.186.73 (talk) 16:04, 6 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Etymological insights on Hoodoo and Voodoo

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Is there any possibility we can get etymological insights? Any lecture? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Magic Finn (talkcontribs) 18:36, 9 June 2021 (UTC)Reply

THE ARTS, The Medieval Era, The Tarot, The Raccoons, The Finest Inventions of mankind came to this place too and now that youve got it all to yourselves

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I will no longer be available to help, assist, aid, give, portray, indefinitely. I will be doing whatever I want, feel like, desire, except seedier intentions of the common law like, or enjoying a visit with another person, or meeting somebody i can be intimate with, or reltying upon another for anything other than being assaulted, robbed, and the like, i will be doing whatever I feel like but driving over to Carl's Jr and buying a homeless man a burger with Joe's Dad's money, filling my gastank up in DHS for super unleaded is so expensive in the city harold matzner pays. lays

this world is so messed up, i cant think of one thing to say when i approach the situation open like a book. but, i always remember this too. i have been set free, by all of your greed, so,, let me enjoy the area ive been dumped off at, which is a dump by the way. and i understand the things i do are so offensive its awful. those are the reasons ive been dumped off here without one cent to my name, to still further destroy my repytation and my followers chances of ever leaving again I had faith in your structure, i thought somebody someplace else would have enough sense and then enough power in this place to take care of things i couldnt. ui thought the people using the finances would be able to handle it. until it became apparent to me that the reasons nobody can do anything is because of the ways religious corruption effects mankind. blackmagic, voodoo, wicca, witchcraft, these are common knowledge to my childhood lives after abduction. Libby, whitey, and Carmen depict who i am after abduction and life rearrangement. t=you stole me from another guy. he hadnt used me yet, i was time in a bottle. there isnt anything in your world good enough for me to stay on like this here, i am amusing myself and if for some reason i state or seem to give the impression that i am working on it, i am. i need to leave these customs are so vaguely horrible and there is nothing i can do about homeless lifestyles for me, as black magic, voodoo and the like still operate in prisons, army unitsand now add city destablishments. i am to be the only living member of a congregation depicting women as the sectsixth social circle prior to going to to see a man .. the morongo casino guy again. the one that stole my dad from his kitchen in the desert. you do know i am waiutuing for those people as well with a proud attitude. that i should be so lucky to have something wanting me needing me having me in mind for something special is an event in itself far underrated. what could i do. it was the orders of the law to keep whiteys meth in the hands of the state at all costs, just as getting everybody a new household at any costs was the . plus. if somebody in the states doesnt get it down in its own environment, it will be used to take up the entire craft.

see the cults santa monica had prior to me being bertsch late though. those places kept every single idea, friendship, anything i had remembered experienced in my own intelect after you got horny all over my life. when i stripped down and let you ugly sick perverts take over my worlds, where the money came from, the boss of you also took away all my peers via me not speaking about my own life

so , there you have it. i wont be soeaking about nay of you because, alas, hyour all just a wierd freaky tweekiy late night delusion i am having,

oh what do you think i can do about it? those old timers are keeping people broke here becase its the only thing they can do, and their scared. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2605:E000:F180:6C00:E4E4:F31A:A5F3:4C63 (talk) 10:53, 20 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

No Mexico?

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There are some African decendents in Mexico. Santeria is found in Mexico too

~~Ed~~ 2607:FEA8:4A2:4100:C4AB:804B:20D3:AA43 (talk) 09:24, 16 April 2023 (UTC)Reply