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Religion in Benin

 
Wikipedia: Religion in Benin
Baptism ceremony of the Celestial Church of Christ in Cotonou, Benin.

According to the 2002 census, 27.1 percent of the population of Benin is Roman Catholic, 24.4 percent Muslim, 17.3 percent Vodun, 5 percent Celestial Christian, 3.2 percent Methodist, 7.5 percent other Christian, 6 percent other traditional local religious groups, 1.9 percent other religious groups, and 6.5 percent claim no religious affiliation.[1]

There are Christians, Muslims, and adherents of traditional local religious groups throughout the country.[1] However, most adherents of the traditional Yoruba religious group are in the south, while other local religious beliefs are followed in the north.[1] Muslims are represented most heavily in the north and southeast.[1] Christians are prevalent in the south, particularly in Cotonou, the economic capital.[1] It is not unusual for members of the same family to practice Christianity, Islam, traditional local religious beliefs, or a combination of all of these.[1]

Contents

Faiths

Christianity

Christianity first reached Benin in 1680, gaining more permanent footing in the nineteenth century. English Methodists arrived in 1843, operating amongst the coastal Gun people.[citation needed] More than half of all Christians in Benin are Catholic.[1] The Catholic hierarchy in Benin consists of the Archdiocese of Cotonou (including the Dioceses of Abomey, Dassa-Zoumé, Lokossa, Porto Novo) and the Parakou (including the Dioceses of Djougou, Kandi, Natitingou, and N'Dali). There are 440 priests and 900 men and women in religious orders.[citation needed] Other Christian groups include Baptists, Methodists, Assemblies of God, Pentecostals, Seventh-day Adventists, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), Jehovah's Witnesses, Celestial Christians, Rosicrucians, the Unification Church.[1] Many nominal Christians also practice traditional local religious beliefs.[1]

Islam

Mosque in Porto-Novo

Islam was brought to Benin from the north by Arab, Hausa, and Songhai-Dendi traders. A large number of Nigerian Muslims migrated to Benin and developed a Muslim community under the leadership of Hasan & Husain from the Yoruba tribe.[citation needed] Nearly all Muslims adhere to the Sunni branch of Islam.[1] The few Shi'a Muslims are primarily Middle Eastern expatriates.[1] Many nominal Muslims also practice traditional local religious beliefs.[1]

Other groups

Other religious groups in Benin include Eckankar and Baha'is.[1]

Among the most commonly practiced local religious beliefs is the animist Vodun system of belief, also known as voodoo, which originated in this area of Africa.[1]

Indigenous religions include local animistic religions in the Atakora (Atakora and Donga provinces) and Vodun and Orisha or Orisa veneration among the Yoruba and Tado peoples in the center and south of the country. The town of Ouidah on the central coast is the spiritual center of Beninese Vodun.

The Tado and the Yoruba Orisha pantheons correspond closely:

  • The supreme deity Mawu (in the Fon language) or Olodumare (also known as Olorun, Eledumare, Olofin-Orun and Eledaa among other names)(in Yoruba)
  • The deity of the earth and smallpox, known as Sakpana (or Sopono, Sakpata), can also be spelt as 'Shakpata, Shopono, Shakpana, and also known as Babalu Aye or Obalu Aye.
  • The deity of thunder and lightning, known as Shango; can also be spelt as Sango, also known as Jakuta, Chango, Xevioso and Hevioso.
  • The deity of war and iron, known as Ogun, also known as Ogoun or Gu.

Freedom of religion

The Constitution of Benin provides for freedom of religion, and the government generally respects this right in practice.[1] The United States government recorded no reports of societal abuses or discrimination based on religious belief or practice during 2007, and prominent societal leaders have taken positive steps to promote religious freedom.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p International Religious Freedom Report 2007: Benin. United States Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor (September 14, 2007). This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

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