THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

THE BLACK PEOPLE CULTURES

Sunday, August 20, 2017

THE THEOLOGICAL-COMMUNITY DIMENSION OF AFRO-BRAZILIAN RELIGIOUS CULTURES


* Indication of biography about this matter for personal deepening:
. ALTUNA, Raul Ruiz de Asúa. Cultura tradicional banto. Luanda: Secretar. Arquidiocesano de Pastoral, 1985.
. AWOLALU, J. Omosade. Yoruba sacrificial practice. In: Journal of Religion in Africa 5 (1973), p. 81-93.
. BASTIDE, Roger. As religiões africanas no Brasil. 3. ed.São Paulo: Livraria Pioneira, 1989.
. BERKENBROCK, Volney J. A experiência dos orixás. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1995.
. BOAVENTURA, Josuel dos Santos. Negritude e experiência de Deus. Disponível em: http://revistaseletronicas.pucrs.br/ojs/index.php/teo/article/viewFile/2702/2053 Acesso em 26 de julho de 2017.
. BÍBLIA SAGRADA. Brasília: Ed. CNBB.
. CINTRA. Raimundo. Candomblé e umbanda. São Paulo: Paulinas, 1985.
. FABBRI, Romeo (per conto della Campagna Chiama l’Africa). Le religioni tradizionali d’Africa. Disponível em: http://www.consolata.org/new/index.php/mission/missioneoggiarchi-2/15341-le-religioni-tradizionali-d-africa. Acesso em 26 de julho de 2017.
. KIPOY Pombo. Introduzione alle religioni tradizionali e ai valori universali del pensiero africano. Disponibile em
. L’ESPINAY, François. A religião dos Orixás, Outra palavra do Deus único?In: Revista Eclesiástica Brasileira, Petrópolis, n. 47/187, p. 639-650, set. 1987.
. LODY, Raul. O povo do santo: religião, história e cultura dos orixás, voduns, inquices e caboclos. Rio de Janeiro:    Pallas, 1995.
. MATTOS, Regiane Augusto de. História e cultura afro-brasileira. São Paulo: Contexto, 2011.
. NKEMNKIA, Martin Nkafu. La teologia africana oggi. (convegno ‘Africa: Continente in cammino’ (Roma,  13-15 marzo 2015).Disponível em: http://www.comboni.org/contenuti/107609-la-teologia-africana-oggi. Acesso em 26 de julho de 2017.
. OBORJI, Francis Anekwe. L’ecclesiologia africana della ‘Chiesa-come-famiglia’: Implicazionimissiologiche. Disponivel em http://www.foborji.org/files/L-ecclesiologia-africana-della-Chiesa-come-Famiglia.pdf. Acesso em 26 de julho de 2017.
. PIRES, José Maria. O Deus da Vida nas comunidades afro-americanas e caribenhas. Disponível também em: http://atabaque-cultura-negra-e-teologia.blogspot.com/2009_12_01_archive.html. Acessoem: 24 de jul. de 2017.
. PONTIFICIO CONSIGLIO PER IL DIALOGO INTER-RELIGIOSO. Attenzione pastorale alle Religioni tradizionali: Lettera del Presidente del Pontificio Consiglio ai Presidenti delle Conferenze Episcopali dell’Asia, America e Oceania, in: L’Osservatore Romano, n. 2,de 21 jan. de 1994.
. PRANDI, Reginaldo. Deuses africanos no Brasil contemporâneo. In: Horizontes antropológicos, Porto Alegre, ano 1, n. 3, p. 10-30, 1995.
. REHBEIN, Franziska C. Candomblé e salvação. São Paulo: Loyola, 1985.
. SANTOS, Juana Elbein dos. Os nagô e a morte. Petrópolis: Vozes, 1976.
. SILVA, Antônio Aparecido da (Org.). Existe um pensar teológico negro? São Paulo: Paulinas, 1998.
. ______. SANTOS, Sônia Querino dos (Orgs.). Teologia afro-americana. II Consulta Ecumênica de Teologia e Culturas Afro-Americana e Caribenha. São Paulo: ATABAQUE-ASETT - Paulus, 1997.
. SOUZA Jr., Vilson Caetano de. As raízes das religiões afro-brasileiras. in: Sem fronteiras, número especial, São Paulo, p. 5-20, jul. de 1994.


Introduction

         As we said in the previous text, the traditional African religions in the Brazilian context, after retrievals, adaptations and resignifications, became Afro-Brazilian religions. We also said that this system of mediation bears a resemblance to the African system of government, that is, there is the king with his intermediaries and his subjects. Thus, we have a Supreme Being with innumerable ancestral spirits and human beings.[1] In this part of our study, we want to consider briefly the theological dimension of these religions from their African roots. For this study, we will make use of some elements of African theology. There are two ways of approaching the African theological question, which are, The African Christian Theology and The Theology of African Religious Experience.[2] When one speaks of religious experience in Africa, one understands “the traditions, the religious rites, the ceremonies, the songs, the prayers, the dances, the many gestures directed to approach the community to God Creator, Father, Mother and Eternal Life where the Ancestors already live for ever.”[3] One of the institutions, which have contributed greatly to preserve this common theological heritage of all African people, is the “African Traditional Religions” - ATR. Of course, our focus is Black Africa,[4] for historical and contextual reasons in its diversity and unity at the same time.


1 Questions Concerning the terminology “Traditional African Religions” - ATR[5]

        Africa is unitary in its monotheistic conception of God, but diversified in the particular experiences of his presence. Generally speaking, in each tribe and in the traditions, the religious structures that have been established over time are preserved and the worship of God through the ancestors is still practiced. According to the theologian M. N. Nkemnkia, “it is because of these aspects that it is still possible to study, understand, and communicate African religious experience.”[6] Religions of African origin are called traditional, not because they are primitive or savage, “outmoded” (anti-modern), but because they refer to the context of these cultures. They are religions of the African context. “If there is a reference to an inheritance of the past, it does not exclude a constant restructuring due to historical challenges and circumstances.”[7]

          Those who criticize Afro-Brazilian religions for realizing in Brazil something “ancestral” and that in Africa does not exist anymore, need to be better informed, since the ATR are very alive in Africa as the Afro-Brazilian religions are in Brazil and there are constant exchanges between these two groups and their researchers. The position of dedicated African writers stands as a parameter so that we can change our way of thinking about these religions. African religions are contemporary with the modern African human being and these “constitute a privileged place, a real and central element of African culture.”[8] Still about this matter, it is important to mention an official pronouncement of Catholic Christianity:

By traditional religions, we mean those religions that, unlike the world religions that are widespread in many countries and cultures, remain in the socio-cultural context. The word “traditional” does not refer to something static or immutable, but refers to this localized matrix. There is no agreement on what expressions to use when referring to these religions. Some names (eg. paganism, fetishism) have a negative meaning and furthermore do not actually describe the content of themselves. (...) While in Africa these religions are generally called “African Traditional Religions”, in Asia they are called “Folk Religions” in America “Indigenous Religions and Afro-American Religions” (Native Religion And Afro-American Religions) and in Oceania “Indigenous Religions”.[9]

         This text is revealing of a mature and respectful stance that repairs the great mistake of the first colonizers and missionaries when they arrived in African lands, believing that they had no soul. Truly, it was a dramatic encounter because these foreigners, “when they did not deny the existence of any religious manifestation, minimized or ridiculed.”[10] Their reference to the Holy Scriptures to speak about the divine revelation completely ignored the rich revelatory experience that the African people received as inheritance from their ancestors through oral tradition and the current significant events of their communities. Their revelations “came about through dreams, presages, divinations, visions, and mediumistic possessions, and for that Europeans believed in their diabolical origin.”[11] The situation was not different in Brazil, especially from the 18th century. These religions were considered “magic practices”, “witchcraft” and “coarse superstition”. During the Estado Novo, in 1930, the persecutions against them were intensified, because they were judged to be against public morality, especially because they made animal sacrifices.


2 Common theological principles of African and Afro-Brazilian religious experience

        Like all traditional African religions, Afro-Brazilian religions express themselves through symbols, gestures, myths, rites, dances and formulas - words and prayers. The oral tradition finds here central place, because all the teachings are preserved and transmitted by the word: “spoken word, sung word and word sound. Sound added by gesture, look, body expressions, reinforcements of other sounds emitted by the body itself or by other means like musical instruments and other unconventional methods.”[12] Through ceremonies, sacrifices and offerings are made to the Ancestors, recognizing their importance as an integral part of the community and their influence on living.

    Most of the feasts, such as birth, initiation into adulthood, funeral rites, sowing, harvesting, raining, etc., involve religious practices. For the faithful of these religions, the way of life is moulded by religious experience, according to which one must live in harmony with everything that exists, because reality is part of the human being and the human being is part of it. Therefore, these religions seek to maintain the balance of life, rescuing the unitary dimension of the world. The actions of care for nature and everything that exists is one of the concrete proposals as a contribution to maintaining the balance and harmony of the universe. Through worship, the person expresses his/her insertion in the world and his/her dependence on God.[13]


a) Monotheism

        Diverse are the African peoples and diverse is also the way to express the faith in God, but there is a consensus among the scholars and among the Africans themselves that their religions are monotheistic.[14] In all of Black Africa the sense of a single, universal God, creator of all things, has always been conceived. God is recognized as the first cause of all that exists. This conception makes the African people realize their activities impregnated with the religious sense.[15] When one affirms “God exists,” he does not want to refer to a philosophical statement, but it is a cry of thanksgiving full of love, demonstrating a deep filial relationship. Many Bantu tribes, for example, use the expression Nzambi to turn to God, and although it is common to call the Father God – Tatá Nzambi - in some groups, He appears as Mother - Mama Nzambi. As they are able to unite the notion of Father or Mother to God, usually, when referring to Him, they show an exceptional affection to consider he is full of tenderness and solicitude for the creation.[16]

       Africans believe in a unique, uncreated and creative God who is beyond us and has strength and power for himself. It is he who gives existence and growth to all beings. For Yoruba, He is the Supreme God Olorum[17] - lord or owner of the Orum - who lives in heaven, but who assures life, the earth and everything in it. He does not need to act directly in the world, for he has given the Orishas the responsibility and the strength to do so.[18] They believe that, because He is infinitely large, God does not diminish to the point of intervening in people’s lives. No homage is addressed to him; there is not a single house of worship consecrated to him and no regular worship is done in his honor. There is only some mention of his name in some ejaculatory expressions. He is thus a distant and inaccessible god to human manipulation and there is no image about him.[19]

In Africa, there are many fetish statues depicting humans, animals and spirits, but none portrays the Supreme Being. It can only be the object of speech, and the African peoples have reserved a myriad of names to try to assimilate their face and determine his nature. The term Zambe, for example, occupies with slight variations (Zamba, Nyame, Nzambi, Anzambe) a geographical area that extends from the Ivory Coast to Botswana. The pygmies call the Supreme Being Epilipilia (Lord of the hunt), the bushmen, Raggen (Father), the hotentotes, Tsuri-Goab (Creator of the visible world). Other widespread names are, Mungu-Midunga (the One in the sky), Yankompon (the Great Friend) of the ashantes, who consider the sky as their resplendent face, Aforun (the one who is by himself) of the Yoruba, and Ngai (the Rain) of the masai.[20]

        It is interesting that although all the African peoples see the Supreme Being as distant, at the same time they can feel Him present in the quotidian of their lives and provident before their needs. To understand better the apparent paradox of the distant and near God, some proverbs - another age-old spontaneous production of these peoples - are useful: “‘Nyamuzinda does not forget his own’ (bashi); ‘There is no such valley alone that the Supreme Being does not see’ (Madagascar); ‘The Sun does not forget any village’ (Congo).”[21] According to the yoruba of Nigeria, although distant, Olorum does not abandon the creation nor the human being, sending the Orishas, who are a sign of his presence, care and protection, as wisely reported the author F. de l'Espinay: “The Orishas is essentially oriented towards the good of the human being: therefore he loves. How can we not believe in a God-Love who creates and sends the Orisha? The conviction grows that God follows all the steps of his children as a mother.”[22]


b) African understanding of existence with an emphasis on the Yoruba’s experience

         It is about an understanding that is based on the fundamental unity of all things, for the whole is within each part, just as each part is in the whole. Something very deep connects all beings and makes them interdependent. We are talking about all levels of the cosmos: visible and invisible, sensitive and insensitive. The whole visible world is seen in a spiritual way, as an extension of the invisible world and with it forms one and the same universe.[23] In this unitary view of life, some particular aspects deserve attention. Everything that exists takes place on two levels: the Orum and the Aiye. Nothing can exist outside of them. They do not correspond to spaces or places, but are forms of existence, which do not oppose, but exist in parallel, but without equating. The Orum is the invisible, unlimited and spiritual reality, while the Aiye is the physical, material, visible reality, the earth.

        The beings of the Aiye are called Ara-Aiye, to whom humanity and the inhabitants of the world correspond in general. The beings of the Orum are called Ara-Orum or Irunmale,[24] corresponding to the Orishas and the dead - Eguns.[25] Besides these, also “every individual, every tree, every animal, every city, etc., possesses a spiritual and abstract double in the Orum (...) or, on the contrary, everything that exists in the Orum has its material representations no Aiye.”[26] It is this reality that gives the existence a dimension so unified and totalizing.

        It is good to make it very clear that the fact of being parallel levels of existence does not mean that Aiye exists outside the Orum. The Orum, in fact, covers the totality of existence, and can be anywhere, even in the Aiye. The author V. J. Berkenbrock uses the illustrative image of “a limited uterus in an unlimited body.”[27] Thus, the Orum and the Aiye are separated, but not totally disconnected. They are in a very close and harmonious relationship. The harmony of existence as a whole depends on the harmony that exists between them. However, it is not a relationship between equals. The Orum governs the Aiye, material existence in general and also individual. The Ara-Orum, especially the Orishas can enter the Aiye, but the same does not happen from the other part. As the Orishas are spiritual realities, their appearance in the visible world is only possible through the body of their sons and daughters.[28]


c) The force of existence

         As the part is in the whole and the whole is in the part, the dynamics of life comes from an energy, present in all things - the life force (the yoruba people call it Axé). This force seems to be the central element to achieve what is the ideal of existence - the harmony of all things. As the reality is seen from this force, everything that the human being does can conserve, increase, restore or diminish this vital force. It is this vital force that provides or blocks the good relationship between the visible and the invisible world, between human beings and spiritual beings. The source of this energy is Supreme Being. The life force that flows from God reaches all directly or through the intermediary spirits, the ancestors, the leaders.[29]

        Everything that exists has vital energy and at the same time transmits it. Without this force, the existence would be paralyzed and devoid of any possibility of realization.[30]Rites, sacrifices and offerings are performed in order this vital force may be constantly renewed and developed. The lack of these celebrations can lessen the vital energy and even prevent its flow. Therefore, rites, sacrifices and offerings are celebrated to reinforce the vital energy of the community and contribute to the harmony of the universe.[31] It is a system of exchange, that is, giving and receiving: the human being makes this celebrations and receives the renewal of the life force. Sacrifice is the rite par excellence. According to some authors, the animal sacrifice refers to a time when the victim was a human person, including among the yoruba people.[32]


d) The centrality of the community

        As an integral part of the universe, the human being is called to live in harmony with everything that exists. He finds one of the foundations of living conceiving the earth as a living, maternal, and fruitful being.[33] But this harmony is only possible if he/she is integrated into a family, a community. This experience characterizes his/her identity in a very original way, because for the bantu people, NZambi when created the human being, did him/her in a communitarian way. In one act only, he created the entire family-community: man, woman and children. Therefore, in addition to be the oldest institution, the family is also the founding concept for understanding the origin and destiny of the world and the people. For yoruba people, it is no different: Olorum created the man and the woman at once. He created them together, making the community the center of their experiences.[34]
Afro-Americans retain this characteristic very much, “because for them the God of life is a communal God. God calls and saves not only the individual, but all the people. In this case, the fundamental role remains the family, as a basis for community building and understanding.”[35] Life, therefore, only makes sense if it is in community, if the human being feels multiplied in the other members and helped by them. Here we also refer to the meaning of extended family in Africa.[36] The sense of the community-family is very present in the theological reflections of the black people, as pointed out by A. A. da Silva:

The community is therefore the point of reference in life and death: ‘Who lives communally, never dies - At the end of his/her days, he/she remains in the community as an ancestor.’ On the contrary, 'one who lives in an exclusive way, selfishly, dies and becomes nothing more than a corpse.[37]

         The community is then the point of interchange between the living and the dead; it is the encounter of the visible world with the invisible. Every person needs to be supported, to feel the warmth and solidarity of the group, without which they would feel lost and without horizons to walk and to realize themselves. The vital force is only possible in community; Outside of this, the life loses its meaning, that is, its flow. What is pursued in community is always the ideal of existence, as V. Berkenbrock recalls, “Only in this condition of belonging to the community can the process of integration of the Orum forces present in a person be generated. ‘The state of being a person, of being human, can only be achieved in community.’”[38] In other words, the development of human potential is only possible through community experience. In Nigeria and Benin, this involvement in the community is strongly provided by the confraternities. This is expressed by F. REHBEIN:

These confraternities or communities, also known as ‘famílias-de-santo’, constituted a system of alliances, ranging from simple ‘brotherhoods’ to the most complex hierarchical organization; in this way is established a mystical community-kinship with ties and similarity of the African lineages. ‘Pais’ and ‘mãe-de-santo’, the spiritual leaders of these communities, play the role of heads of families; In this, the 'sons' belong to different ethnicities, from the pure Africans to the most varied mestizos. All are part of a whole, ‘inbreed’ members by ties of initiation, also linked to the ancestors of the community.[39]

        In this sense, when the Africans speak about community, they do not think only the living, those who are visible, but also the ones who are not seen and who are perceived as present in the life of the community. Truly, when a person dies, his/her vital energy does not disappear rather it strengthens the vital energy of the community. Thus, it is understood that death is not an absolute end, but only a passage to the Orum form of existence. If the person has been linked to a family and to a community, he/she becomes an ancestor.[40] The worship directed to him/her is the certainty that life goes on.[41] Therefore, the community is made up of the living and the dead. This expression ‘dead’ is inadequate, for they consider alive not only the visible people but also the invisible ones. The author F. A. Oborji says that the family-community “is not limited only to those who are still alive in the flesh. The invisible ancestors and the members who are about to be born are also part.”[42] That is why they prefer the expression visible and invisible.

         All this leads us to conclude with an extract from the experience of father F. L'Espinay who agreed to be initiated into one of these communities of yoruba tradition. Among the important aspects of his experience, he vibrantly highlights these aspects of unity and respect for the ancestors, who continue participating in the life of the community and even any celebration does not happen without remembering them well. This is how F. L’Espinay expresses himself: “The sacred wheel never begins without each and every one making a greeting first to the door: it is in fact the beyond, the ancestors, the dead. Each terreiro de candomblé, as small as it is, even symbolically, is always divided into two parts: the living and the dead,”[43]that is, the living visible and the invisible ones. This communion reminds us of a Scripture that says, “Let us praise the famous men, our ancestors through the generations. Your gestures of kindness will not be forgotten. They remain with their descendants. Their bodies will be buried in peace and their names will endure through the generations. The people will proclaim their wisdom, and the assembly will celebrate their praise (Eclo 44: 1. 10-11. 14-15).”

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





[1] About the yoruba, the author F. Rehbein says: “As there is only one king in the earth, there is only one God in the universe as well. As the king communicates with his subjects through the intervention of mediators, in the same way the Supreme God, Olorum, can entre in contact with the human beins through (…) Orishas (REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., p. 30).” 
[2] Cf. Nkemnkia, M. N. Op. cit. p.2.
[3] Ibid., p.2.
[4] The consensus reached here is what P. Kipoy calls a “unitary vision”, based on authors who have already been consecrated in researches related to traditional African religions. According to the author, “despite the diversity of the religious expressions typical of the different tribes present in black Africa, one fact is certain: this diversity does not change the unity of Black Africa. This is demonstrated by the researches of eminent scholars such as: Cheikh Anta Diop, V. Mulago, J. Mbiti, E. Mveng, A.T. Sanon, Bimwenyi, L.-V. Thomas, J. Jahn, G. Guthrie, Hampate Ba, D. Zahn, etc. (KIPOY P. Op. cit., p. 4).”
[5]In a meeting that took place in Abidjan (Ivory Coast) in 1961 on ‘African religions’, all participants considered that the most appropriate terminology for defining religious experience in traditional Africa is not that of animism but that of ‘Traditional African Religions’(cf. Ibid. Op. cit., p. 6).”
[6] Nkemnkia, M. N. Op. cit. p. 4.
[7] Cf. BANLENE GUIGBILE, D.  –ERNY, P., Vie, mort et ancestralité. p. 29. Apud KIPOY, P. Op. cit., p. 4.
[8] KIPOY, P. Op. cit., p. 3.
[9] PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR THE INTER-RELIGIOUS DIALOGUE.  Attenzione pastorale alle Religioni tradizionali. Letter of the Pressident of this Council to the Presidents of the Bishop’s Conferences of the Asia America and Oceania”, in L’Osservatore Romano del 21 gennaio 1994, n. 2.
[10] KIPOY, P. Op. cit., p. 5.
[11] MATTOS, R. A. de. Op. cit., p. 84. The Federal Constitution safeguards the right of worship of these religions, but the prejudice is so ingrained in the society that it has become common to invade terreiros and the destruction of sacred objects by members of other religious movements. What these religions most expect from Brazilian society is to be respected as alterity and difference.
[12] LODY, R. Op. cit., p. 38.
[13] Cf. PRANDI, R. Op. cit., p. 17.
[14] Cf. PIRES, J. M. O Deus da Vida nas comunidades afro-americanas e caribenhas. In: SILVA, A. A. da., QUERINO, S. (Orgs). Teologia afro-americana. Op. cit., p. 23. He also says on the same page: “Theologians and shephards would do a good service to Christian communities if they help them to understand that there is no polytheism in African religious culture. The Black People from Africa weren’t polytheists. They believed in a supreme Being, creator of everything. Even that the peoples of Nagô-Yorubá culture call him by the name of Olorum (The Inaccessible) as the Hebrews called him Elohim, even the Bantos call him Nzambi (the one who says and does) or Kalunga (the one who gathers) or Pamba, Or Mandau, as the Greeks called him Theos or we call him God and the Indigenous Tupan, he is always the supreme, the unreachable, Lord of heaven and earth.”
[15] Cf. ALTUNA, R. R. de A. Op. cit., p. 389.
[16] Cf. Ibid., p. 398. . In Brazil there are news of Black people of Bantu origin who formed some religious groups around Rio de Janeiro. They were Africans and their descendants from Angola, Mozambique and Congo. They cultivated faith in a superior Being, creator of the world. They used various names to designate this Being: Nzambi or Zâmbi (in Angola), Nzambiam-pungu or Zambi-ampungu (in Congo), Marimo, Reza, Molungo (in Mozambique). They invoked, above all, the spirits of the deceased and ancestors.
[17] Olorum is derived of o-ni-orun, that means “The One who is or possue the Orum”. He is also called Obá-Orum, ‘King of Orum’ (cf. SANTOS J. E. dos. Op. cit. p. 56 e 72).
[18] Cf. Ibid., p. 59s.
[19] Cf. REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., p. 28.
[20] FABBRI, R. Op. cit., p. 2.
[21] Ibid., p. 3. “The African religions knew how to conciliate distance and proximity, absolut trancendence and absolut presence” (Ibid., p. 2).
[22] L’ESPINAY, F. Op. cit., p. 646.
[23] REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., p. 25.
[24] This expression is used by the author J. E. dos Santos.
[25] These are natural ancestors of humans. When they have finished their days in the Aiye, what remains of them remains at the level of Orum (see BERKENBROCK, Op. cit., p. 24). The author J. E. dos Santos presents some aspects that differentiate these Ancestors from the Orishas: “For the Nagô, the Orishas are not Eguns. They are two very differentiated liturgical practices, two types of organizations and institutions, two priesthoods: the cult of the Orishas and the cult of the Eguns (...) The cult of the Orishas crosses the clan and dynastic barriers. The Orisha represents a value and a universal force; The Egum, a value restricted to a family group or to a lineage (SANTOS, J. E. dos. Op. cit. p. 103s).”
[26] SANTOS, J. E. dos. Op. cit. p. 54.
[27] BERKENBROCK, V. J. Op. cit., p. 180s.
[28] Cf. Ibid., p. 182s.
[29] FABBRI, R. Op. cit., p. 2.
[30] Cf. REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., p. 24.
[31] “The offering has the purpose of regenerating the individual and group life force. In general it is done to ancestors and spirits, to whom the life force is not constant because they have no life of their own as the Supreme Being, because by giving it they lose it, their forces diminish and they need to regenerate it” (FABBRI, R. Op. cit.p. 4)
[32]In the footnote, the author F. C. Rehbein quotes the African author J. O. Awolalu, describing how the atoning sacrifice was done using human victims: “Formerly, human sacrifice was considered the highest form of sacrifice, done with the conviction that it is better to sacrifice a life for the good of the community than to let all perishing. Human sacrifice was done in times of national crises and disasters, with the purpose of appeasing the deities and making them propitious, and of purifying the community. Where the sacrifice had the propitiatory and substitutive meaning, the victim was carried through the towns or villages, and the men placed their hands on him/her, asking for the forgiveness of their sins and the blessings of the gods, since this one was considered as representing the community before the higher powers, to submit their requests. Generally, after the human sacrifice, the priests in charge of the rite did penance for seven days, abstaining from joys and asking the deities to accept the sacrifice and to grant the forgiveness of their sins (AWOLALU, J. O. Yoruba sacrificial practice, p. 81-93. Apud REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., p. 55s).”
[33] Cf. REHBEIN. F. C. Op. cit., p. 40.
[34] Cf. SILVA, A. A. da. Jesus Cristo luz e libertador do povo afro-americano. In: SILVA, A. A.da. Existe um pensar teológico negro?, p. 50; see also REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., p. 43. “Among Africans, the emphasis on the concept of family is not about legality, but about being together, about communion, about respect for traditions and about the uncontested acceptance of what the ancestors did, sanctioned and Established as a mode of behavior due. From this point of view, we can here reaffirm that the accent is on the community. Community life is the soul of all African traditional society” (OBORJI, F. A., Op. cit., p. 14).
[35] SILVA, M. R. da. Caminhos da teologiaafro-americana. In: Silva, A. A. da. (Org.). Op. cit., 22s.
[36] REHBEIN. F. C. Op. cit., p. 43: “The family, the most well-characterized social group, is the basis of African coexistence and solidarity, covering father, mother, grandparents, uncles, cousins, all consanguines and the like, and blood relatives.”
[37] SILVA, A. A. da. Jesus Cristo, luz e libertador do povo afro-americano. In: SILVA, A. A. da. Op. cit., p. 50.
[38] BERKENBROCK, V. J. Op. cit., p. 293.
[39] REHBEIN. F. C.Op. cit., p.  72.
[40] “The ancestors (called undead) are alive in a particular way. Death has not changed their personality; only the way of life is changed. They continue being part of the community of the living (FABBRI, R. Op. cit., p. 4).
[41] Cf. REHBEIN, F. C. Op. cit., ps. 47-53.
[42] OBORJI, F. A., Op. cit., p. 12.
[43] L’ESPINAY, F. Op. cit., p. 647.

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