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voodoo

 
(') pronunciation
n., pl., -doos.
  1. A religion practiced chiefly in Caribbean countries, especially Haiti, syncretized from Roman Catholic ritual elements and the animism and magic of slaves from West Africa, in which a supreme God rules a large pantheon of local and tutelary deities, deified ancestors, and saints, who communicate with believers in dreams, trances, and ritual possessions. Also called vodoun.
  2. A charm, fetish, spell, or curse holding magic power for adherents of voodoo.
  3. A practitioner, priest, or priestess of voodoo.
  4. Deceptive or delusive nonsense.
tr.v., -dooed, -doo·ing, -doos.
To place under the influence of a spell or curse; bewitch.

adj.
  1. Of or relating to the beliefs or practices of voodoo.
  2. Based on unrealistic or delusive assumptions: voodoo economics.

[Louisiana French voudou, from Ewe vodu and Fon vodun.]


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National folk religion of Haiti. It combines theological and magical elements of African religions and ritual elements of Roman Catholicism. Practitioners profess belief in a supreme God but give more attention to a large number of spirits called the loa, which can be identified as local or African gods, deified ancestors, or Catholic saints. The loa demand ritual service and attach themselves to individuals or families. In turn, they act as helpers, protectors, and guides. In ritual services, a priest or priestess leads devotees in ceremonies involving song, drumming, dance, prayer, food preparation, and animal sacrifice. The loa possess worshipers during services, dispensing advice, performing cures, or displaying special physical feats. A well-known aspect of Vodou is the zombie. See also Macumba; Santería.

For more information on Vodou, visit Britannica.com.


from Ewe
This word originated in Ghana

If you bring together the religious practices of dozens of West African cultures, mix vigorously, and season with Catholic Christianity, you will have something like voodoo. That is what happened in Haiti as slaves from Africa were brought to the island to work plantations there, starting in the 1500s. They were baptized as Catholics, but instead of praying to the saints they worshiped their familiar tribal gods, called loa. Their rituals, led by voodoo priests or priestesses, involved offerings to the loa and sometimes possession of the worshipers by the loa. Since the loa were very powerful, some followers of voodoo used rituals to enlist their aid in black magic.

Again and again the Haitian authorities, first Spanish and after 1697 French, tried to suppress all African religions, rightly seeing the potential for defiance and rebellion, but such efforts only strengthened the determination of the slaves to continue their practices in secret. In 1791 it was voodoo priests who instigated and guided the rebellion that eventually led to Haiti's independence in 1804.

Despite opposition from the Catholic Church, voodoo has continued to thrive in Haiti and places to which Haitians have gone, including Louisiana. It is there that we have early attestations in English. A Carolina newspaper reported in 1820 that in New Orleans a house was being "used as a kind of temple for certain occult practices and the idolatrous worship of an African deity, called Vandoo." The form we know in English today, voodoo, appeared in the writing of New Orleans author George Washington Cable in 1880.

Voodoo mixes many African cultures. According to one source, it incorporates elements from "Fon, the Nago, the Ibos, Dahomeans, Congos, Senegalese, Haussars, Caplaous, Mondungues, Mandinge, Angolese, Libyans, Ethiopians, and the Malgaches." The name voodoo also has a number of possible sources, including Fon vodun and Ewe vudu. Since the Ewe form is closest to modern English, we will use it here.

Ewe is spoken by more than one and a half million people in Ghana, about 15 percent of the population, and it is an official literary language there. Nearly a million people in Togo also speak Ewe. It is a member of the Volta-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo language family.

One other contribution to English from Ewe is the obscure and obsolete name John Canoe. In pre-Civil War North Carolina, that name designated the leader of a group of slaves who went from house to house at Christmas time singing and asking for gifts. According to research by Frederic Cassidy, the name came from an Ewe word sounding like John Canoe and meaning "sorcerer-man."



voodoo (') [from the god Vodun], native W African religious beliefs and practices that also has adherents in the New World. Voodoo believers are most numerous in Haiti, where voodoo was granted official religious status in 2003, and in Benin, where the religion has had official recognition since 1996. Similar observances are found in Jamaica, under the name pocomania, and in parts of the United States and in the Guianas. A highly developed voodooistic religion known as candomblé is found in Brazil.

Although the magical aspects of voodoo are related to beliefs and practices found throughout the world, the basic features of voodoo were brought by slaves from W Africa, particularly those from what is now Benin, where the beliefs are still widespread (as many as 60% of the people of Benin practice voodoo). Voodoo contends that all of nature is controlled by spiritual forces which must be acknowledged and honored through offerings and animal sacrifice; ecstatic trances (a means of communicating with the gods and spirits) and magical practices play an important role in its ritual. In the New World, Christian elements were introduced, and the African deities became identified with various saints. At various time attempts have been made to suppress voodoo, but voodoo survived and continues to flourish.

See also magic; Santería; zombi.

Bibliography

See A. Métraux, Voodoo in Haiti (tr. 1959); F. Huxley, The Invisibles (1966).


Random House Word Menu:

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Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier
For a list of words related to voodoo, see:

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Translations:

Voodoo

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Dansk (Danish)
n. - voodoo
v. tr. - udføre voodoo

Nederlands (Dutch)
voodoo (soort tovenarij/religie), tovenaar, betovering, betoverd object, betoveren

Français (French)
n. - vaudou
v. tr. - influencer par le sort du vaudou, jeter un sort
adj. - de vaudou

Deutsch (German)
n. - Wodu, Woduzauber
adj. - Wodu-
v. - durch Woduzauber behexen od. beschwören

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - βουντού, συμπαθητική μαγεία
adj. - του βουντού
v. - κάνω μάγια σε

Italiano (Italian)
vudu, fare il vudu

Português (Portuguese)
n. - vodu (m)
adj. - de ou relativo a vodu
v. - praticar ritual vodu

Русский (Russian)
околдовать, колдовство

Español (Spanish)
n. - vodú, vudú
v. tr. - hechizar, embrujar
adj. - relativo al vudú

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - voodoo
adj. - voodoo-
v. - utöva voodoo

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
伏都教, 伏都教徒, 施伏都巫术迷惑

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 伏都教, 伏都教徒
v. tr. - 施伏都巫術迷惑

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 부두교, 부두교의 마법, 주술
v. tr. - 부두교의 마법을 걸다, 마술을 걸다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ブードゥー教, ブーズー教

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) فودو ( نوع من السحر اصله من افريقيا) (صفه) الشخص الذي يعمل سحر الفودو (فعل) عمل سحر الفودو‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮פולחן כשפים ממקור אפריקאי הרווח באיי הים הקאריבי, כשפי וודו, מכשפ/ת וודו, חפץ הקשור בכשפי וודו, וודו‬
v. tr. - ‮הפעיל כשפי וודו על‬


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voodoo

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Some good "voodoo" pages on the web:


Haitian Mythology
www.pantheon.org
 
 
 
Related topics:
vaudoux
Haitian Mythology (Religion content from Answers.com)
Arthur C. Clarke's World of Strange Powers: The Roots of Evil (1985 Science & Technology Film)

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