Google – AFP, 10 January 2013
![]() |
Men take
part in ceremonies for the annual celebration of voodoo in the
village of
Malawi, Benin, on January 10, 2013 (AFP, Benjamin Agon)
|
MALAWI,
Benin — The West African nation of Benin Thursday held sacrifices and
ceremonies for its annual celebration of voodoo, the traditional religion that
spread to the Americas with the slave trade.
Benin is
considered a voodoo heartland, particularly the city of Ouidah, which was a
major slave trading port, and traditional beliefs often mix with Catholicism or
other religions.
While
authorities in the past had sought to put a stop to voodoo, it is now widely
accepted and celebrated as a religion in its own right, and considered a deeply
rooted aspect of the region's culture.
Ceremonies
were held in various parts of Benin Thursday, including in the village of
Malawi near the commercial capital Cotonou, where a shirtless voodoo priest
recited incantations before tearing off the heads of two chickens with his
teeth.
![]() |
Men take
part in ceremonies for the annual celebration of voodoo in the
village of Malawi,
Benin, on January 10, 2013 (AFP, Benjamin Agon)
|
"Voodoo
is not the incarnation of evil as some try to portray it," Francois
Houessou, a local government official, told the crowd of several hundred
afterward.
"Voodoo
represents Benin's cultural richness and cannot be equated with the devil.
Voodoo is happiness, luck, and it helps to protect against evil spirits."
Most of the
country's nine million residents are considered animists of some kind, though
often in conjunction with other beliefs.
When Pope
Benedict XVI visited in 2011, part of his trip included a stop at a Catholic
basilica in Ouidah across the road from the Temple of Pythons voodoo centre,
which houses a few dozens snakes. The python god Dangbe is worshipped in the
region.
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