THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

Monday, June 26, 2017

THE CHARACTERISTICS OF AFRICAN RELIGIOUS CULTURES TRANSPORTED TO BRAZIL


* Indication of biography about this matter for personal deepening:
. BASTIDE, Roger. As religiões africanas no Brasil. 3. ed., São Paulo: Biblioteca Pioneira de Ciências Sociais, 1989.
. BERKENBROCK, Volney. J. A experiência dos Orixás: um estudo sobre a experiência religiosa no candomblé.        Petrópolis: Vozes, 1997.
. CHIAVENATO, Júlio J. 13 de maio, outra mentira. Sem Fronteiras, São Paulo, n. 159, p. 20-23, maio de 1988.
. CINTRA, Raimundo. Candomblé e Umbanda: o desafio brasileiro. São Paulo: Paulinas, 1985.
. CELAM. Texto conclusivo da V Conferência do Episcopado Latino-americano e caribenho (DAp.). São Paulo: Paulinas, 2008.
. FREITAS, Décio. O escravismo brasileiro. 2. ed., Porto Alegre: Mercado Aberto, 1982.
. GARAEIS, Vitor Hugo. A história da escravidão negra no Brasil. Disponivel em http://sorvitorhugo.blogspot.it/2012/07/historia-da-escravidao-negra-no-brasil.html Acesso em     11 de junho de 2017.
. MATTOS, Regiane Augusto de. História e cultura afro-brasileira. São Paulo: Contexto, 2011.
. MATTOSO, Kátia de Queirós. Ser escravo no Brasil.São Paulo: Brasiliense, 3. ed., 1990.
. REHBEIN, Franciska C. Candomblé e salvação. São Paulo: Loyola, 1985.
. TOLEDO, Roberto Pompeu de. À sombra da escravidão. in. Veja, ano 29, n. 20, 15 de   maio de 1996. 


      Afro-Brazilian cultures descend from essentially religious people who find in the exercise of this dimension the meaning of their existence. We will first focus at their characteristics from the experience in Africa, and then we will fix our attention on the dramatic way in which the whole wealth of values of these cultures was transposed into Brazil.

      The scope of our research refers to Sub-Saharan Africa, divided into three major regions: Western, Central Western and Eastern.[1] In these areas, powerful kingdoms practiced mining activities, agriculture, commerce, and slavery. The slaves, as in the case of the kingdom Haússa (Nigeria), worked as servants, artisans, soldiers, porters, public workers and farmers.[2] Some, as in the case of the Songai slaves, had duties of trust; were eunuchs, and members of the great cavalry.[3] Most of these people “practiced domestic slavery to increase the number of family or lineage members.”[4] This situation of slavery has always characterized the lives of these kingdoms, but it does not compare to the one, which occurred in Latin America from the sixteenth century.[5]

       It is also worth mentioning the figure of the king who, among the Yoruba people, “had a sacred power, originating from the Orishas, to which he would unite after his death.”[6] Among the Charanga, people of Bantu origin, the kings were known as monomotapa, considered a divine king, for having the power to communicate with God through mediums.[7] This way of seeing the ruler was due to his religious experience. The system of government exerts influence in the formation of a religious system of mediation: the king with his intermediary ministers and his subjects. Thus, we have the Supreme Being with many ancestral spirits and the human beings.[8] Another aspect that seems to be common in these societies is the existence of the Council and listening to the elderly, according to the author R. A. de Mattos: “... All African societies were organized around lineages and council of elders, in which great importance was devoted to the elderly in the community and to the dead ancestors.”[9]

    Several African societies professed only the traditional religions, while others were influenced by Islam due to commercial exchanges.[10] It is important to emphasize that the presence of Islam in many African cultures did not prevent traditional religions from maintaining their identity. There are situations where kings and nobles have adhered to Islam, but a majority of the population remained adept of traditional religion, offering sacrifices to their ancestors and attending rituals to obtain fertility and rain. In these cases, the kings cultivated the double belonging, because, in order not to lose the power, they also practiced the traditional rituals.[11]

      There are other cases in which certain cultures were able to resist at first, but after some time, they had to adhere because of the power of another tradition. This was the case of the Songai kingdom, that “their religious traditions were preserved until the end of the fifteenth century, when the military and Muslim clerics dominated power,”[12] forcing the entire population to follow Islam. There is, however, a record of conflicts among the Haússa, since their rulers adhered to Islam, while the subjects remained faithful to traditional beliefs.[13]

     There was a certain rivalry between these people, which was motivated, among other causes, by necessity of extension of territories. This is one of the causes of the existence of slaves, because “the subjugated people became tributaries and subjected to bondage.”[14] When the European colonizers arrived on African soil, they were already aware of this situation and they even contributed to increase rivalries. They nourished the tribal conflict[15] and, above all, they strongly shook these social and cultural groups, making certain traditions disappear, such as the “Extended family”.[16] The Portuguese began their commercial transactions in the gulfs of Benin and Biafra, from the second half of the XV century.[17] They usually bought slaves who were already exchanged for gold on the Coast of the Mine and who were generally prisoners of war or criminals.[18]

       Trafficking, which began in the sixteenth century, came to an end only in the nineteenth century (1815), when it was banned by the Congress of Vienna, although Portugal had signed an agreement with England in 1810, committing itself to extinguish trading of slaves in Africa.[19] Before embarking on the tumbeiros (derived from tomb) ships, Africans received baptism[20] and were marked with initials or symbols of the owners.[21] It is not precisely known how many were shipped to Brazil, although more than four million people were estimated, corresponding to 40% of transportation to Latin America. The author, P. Calmon, speaks of 6 million, while A. de Taunay, reduces it to 3.6 million.[22] The author P. Calógeras, cited by R. Cintra, estimates more than 15 million, based on calculations on the capacity of ships and sea travel.[23] There is no consensus, in fact; what is known is that not everyone came alive. Regarding the classification of these people, R. Cintra usually divides into three large groups, corresponding to the different cycles of the slave trade:

1) Sudanese cultures, represented mainly by the Yoruba peoples of Nigeria (Nagô, Ijêcha, Egbá, Ketu, Ibadan, Ijebú) and Dahome (Gêge or Ewe, Fon or Efan) by the Mina group of the Gold Coast (Fanti, Ashanti ), By smaller groups from Gambia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Malagueta Coast, Ivory Coast (Krumano, Agni, Zema, Teminí, Gós, Tehis, etc.); 2) Islamized Guinean-Sudanese cultures, represented primarily by the Peuhl (Fulah, Fula), then by the Mandinga (Solinke, Bombara), the Haussa of northern Nigeria and smaller groups such as Tapa, Bornu, Gurunsi, Kanuris and others; 3) Bantu cultures, formed by numerous tribes of the Congo, Angola and Contra-Cost (Cabindas, Benguelas, Macuas, Angicos, Caçanges, Rebolos, Muxincongos).[24]

       By this time, the Portuguese colonizers, without realizing, were introducing in this land, people of traditions, very different from each other, and of much diversified religiosity; people whom in meeting each other could have destroyed reciprocally because of their rivalry among them.[25] But this did not happen, because before the destruction caused in their lands and in their lives, it was left to join the forces and to survive in the new situation, seeking to recover the values ​​of their traditions.

       In fact, the colonizing project of preventing communication between African families did not achieve the expected success, for, just as the traffic did not cease, the continuous renewal of the “sources of life” did not cease as well, establishing permanent contact between the former slaves or their children and newcomers, opening new horizons, revitalizing hopes. The group was often joined by spiritual leaders, diviners and medicine-healers throughout the slave period, which enhanced a rejuvenation of religious values.[26]

    Africans and their descendants, individually or in groups, searched to cultivate their intimate relationship with the spirits of the ancestors to live meaningfully, despite the situation that had been imposed upon them. They had no more hope of returning to geographic Africa, but brought back into their lives the “ancestral Africa,” spiritual and religious, to which they would return after death. In their own way, they pursued to keep alive their roots and their sense of belonging, which the captivity and the whole situation of sorrow and suffering could not get out of their lives.

       As we all know, this entire slavery process was legitimized by “religious and racist ideas that affirmed the superiority and privileges of the white people minority.”[27] During the celebrations of the five centuries of evangelization, this big mistake was remembered and repaired with gestures and requests for forgiveness made by major ecclesiastical authority. Recently, Afro-descendant cultures have been recognized for their “corporeal expressiveness, their family roots and the sense of God” (DA 56), which have contributed greatly to an ever more dynamic and committed process of evangelization. The engagement of many Afro-descendants in the various social struggles and their just demands does not make opposition to faith, but expresses it concretely and coherently. That is why such characteristics, typical of the black cultures present in much places of the world, find great conformity with the Christian proposal of a dignified life for all.

Author: Josuel dos Santos Boaventura PSDP - Fr Ndega
Theological review: ThD Fr Luis Carlos Susin
English review: EdM Mary Kung'u





[1] Cf. MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 15.
[2] Cf. Ibid., p. 35.
[3] Cf. Ibid., p. 25.
[4] Ibid., p. 57.
[5] The America, having been invaded, at the end of the fifteenth century (1492) and Brazil in particular, in the early 16th century (1500) the thirst for riches, economic greed and cultural disrespect led the colonizers to explore the vast interior of Brazil, organizing expeditions in search of precious metals. What this land could offer them at first was some medicinal plants, Brazil wood, multicolour parrots and fun little monkeys. Natives without clothes had thousands, but none of this attracted much interest in exploitation. With the advance of other European nations and fearing to lose all this, Portugal begins, from 1530 such a devastation that has its remnants to the present day. As labour, he transported people from Africa as slaves, since his plan to enslave indigenous people did not work very well (see BASTIDE, R., Op cit, pp. 47-48). Among the reasons for the failure of indigenous slavery, the author D. FREITAS mentions the aboriginal state of life habituated to nomadism and the deaths caused “by the deadly contagion with European diseases” (FREITAS, D. Op. cit., p.23).
[6] MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 45.
[7] Cf. Ibid., p. 49.
[8] REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., p. 30.
[9] MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 57.The author R. Cintra presents other characteristics of these cultures: “The Bantu of Congo and Angola seem to be the most primitive. They lived in the forests or plains near the coast, in small agglomerations or tribes. The dwellings were thatched huts or round conical roof huts. The clothing was rudimentary (...) There was a great variety of races and languages, according to the groups located to the North, to the South or to the Center. They devoted themselves to grazing or to rudimentary agriculture with wood hoes (Artur Ramos). The most civilized were the Sudanese, Yoruba, Nigerian, or Dahomean. They were tall, burly and active. They lived in cities and had stations with boats. The Portuguese treated their chiefs as kings. They knew the weaving and negotiated with the foreigners “cloths of the coast”. There were blacksmiths and artists in copper, gold, and wood. They created large and medium-sized animals: horses, cattle, goats, sheep. They had adobe dwellings and built fortifications. The Islamized Sudanese Haussas, Malians knew the progress of Arab culture. They had better weapons. The Fanti and Ashanti, as well as the inhabitants of the Gold Coast and the Gulf of Guinea (...) They traded gold with the Portuguese and knew how to work metals. The most powerful, particularly the Regulos of Dahome and Lakes, practiced barter with the Portuguese (…), exchanging slaves for a roll of smoke (12 rolls of smoke in exchange for a slave). Brandy, sugar, cassava flour, coarse farm, oriental trinkets, gunpowder, and weapons were also goods used in the exchange” (CINTRA, R.Op. cit. p. 32).
[10] MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 57. It is also convenient to quote an excerpt from the same author on page 18: “Trans-Saharan trade also provided contact with Islam, a monotheistic religion, founded by Mohammed (570-632) and based on the Koranic scriptures. In many Sudanese kingdoms, especially among kings and elites, Islam was well received and attracted many adherents, having reached the African savannah region, probably before the 11th century, brought by the Arab-Berber family of the Kunta.”
[11] Cf. MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 32. Here, the author refers to the peoples Sereres and Jalofos, inhabitants of Senegambia, which is the area between Sahara desert and the equatorial forest in the basins of the Senegal and Gambia Rivers. 
[12] Ibid., p. 24.
[13] Cf. Ibid., p. 35.
[14] Ibid., p. 65.
[15] This idea is reinforced by V. Berkenbrock: “In their majority, the slaves were war prisoners or products of hunt with the enslaver goal. The Traficant of slaves provoked enmities between the African chefs, increasing thus the wars and consequently the number of people made available to slavery” (BERKENBROCK, V. J. Op. cit., p. 69).
[16] The extended family was composed by wife or wives, father, sons, cousins, uncle, aunt, grandparents, etc. (see MATTOSO, K. de Q. Op. cit., p. 27).
[17] “The most accepted thesis is that in 1538, Jorge Lopes Bixorda, tenant of brazil-wood, would have trafficked to Bahia the first African slaves” (GARAEIS, V. H. Op. cit).
[18] Cf. MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 74.
[19] Cf. Ibid., p. 95.
[20] Granting the baptism to the Africans, before departure, was linked to the idea that “the black people had no soul”, thus were reduced to the level of the animals. Then, having no soul, they could be enslaved, but in this situation of no soul, they could not enter “Land of Saint Cross” (Brazil) as “pagan”. The Baptism was also a kind of “act of charity,” for if they died during the journey they could go straight into heaven (see CHIAVENATO, J. J. Op. cit., pp. 20-23). In fact, the expression “receiving baptism” is inadequate. What really happened was an imposition of baptism.
[21] Cf. MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 100s.
[22] Cf. BASTIDE, R. Op. cit., p. 50s.
[23] CALÓGERAS, P. A política exterior do império, p. 283s apud CINTRA, R. Op. cit., p. 24. Some details of this trip we can find in TOLEDO, R. P.de. Op. cit., p. 59. Veja também em GARAEIS, V. H. Op. cit.
[24] CINTRA. R. Op. cit., p. 32. See correspondent and complementary data in BASTIDE, R. Op. cit., p. 67. About the destination of all these people, the statement that R. CINTRA makes is significant: “(...) The Sudanese, particularly the Yorubas were more in Bahia and in the Northeast, the daomeanos, particularly the Gêges, went to Maranhão. There are also representatives in Bahia and Pernambuco. The Haussas, Malês and Mandingas, spread throughout the Northeast, were the main responsible for the Quilombos; the Bantos, spread more or less throughout the Brazil, are more numerous in Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais and the southern States” (Ibid., p. 32s).
[25] Cf. BASTIDE, R. Op. cit., p. 68.
[26] Cf. Ibid., p. 69.
[27] GARAEIS, V. H. Op. cit. (Digital text). 

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