Shunned for centuries, Vodou grows powerful as Haitians seek solace from unrelenting gang violence – Carib Vibe Radio
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Shunned for centuries, Vodou grows powerful as Haitians seek solace from unrelenting gang violence

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) โ€” The Vodou faithful sing, their voices rising above the gunfire erupting miles away as frantic drumbeats drown out their troubles.

They pause to swig rum out of small brown bottles, twirling in unison as they sing in Haitian Creole: โ€œWe donโ€™t care if they hate us, because they canโ€™t bury us.โ€

Shunned publicly by politicians and intellectuals for centuries, Vodou is transforming into a more powerful and accepted religion across Haiti, where its believers were once persecuted. Increasingly, they seek solace and protection from violent gangs that have killed, raped and kidnapped thousands in recent years.

The violence has left more than 360,000 people homeless, largely shut down Haitiโ€™s biggest seaport and closed the main international airport two months ago. Basic goods including food and life-saving medication are dwindling; nearly 2 million Haitians are on the verge of famine.

From January to March alone, more than 2,500 Haitians were killed or injured, up more than 50% from the same period last year, according to the U.N.

Amid the spiraling chaos, numerous Haitians are praying more or visiting Vodou priests known as โ€œoungansโ€ for urgent requests ranging from locating loved ones who were kidnapped to finding critical medication needed to keep someone alive.

โ€œThe spirits help you. Theyโ€™re always around,โ€ said Sherly Norzรฉus, who is initiated to become a โ€œmambo,โ€ or Vodou priestess.

In February, she invoked Papa Ogou, god of war and iron, when 20 armed men surrounded her car as she tried to flee the community of Bon Repos.

Her three children and the two children of her sister, who died during childbirth, sat next to her.

โ€œWe are going to burn you alive!โ€ she recalled the gunmen yelling.

Gangs had invaded their neighborhood before dawn, setting fire to homes amid relentless gunfire.

โ€œI prayed to Papa Ogou. He helped me get out of the situation,โ€ Norzรฉus said.

When she opened her eyes, the gunmen signaled that she was free to leave.

Vodou was at the root of the revolution that led Haiti to become the worldโ€™s first free Black republic in 1804, a religion born in West Africa and brought across the Atlantic by enslaved people.

The syncretic religion that melds Catholicism with animist beliefs has no official leader or creeds. It has a single God known as โ€œBondye,โ€ Creole for โ€œGood God,โ€ and more than 1,000 spirits known as the lwa โ€” some that arenโ€™t always benevolent.

During Vodou ceremonies, lwa are offered treats ranging from papayas and coffee to popcorn, lollipops and cheese puffs. A ceremony is considered successful if a Vodouist is possessed by an lwa.

Some experts consider it a religion of the exploited.

โ€œVodou is the system that Haitians have developed to deal with the suffering of this life, a system whose object is to minimize pain, avoid disaster, soften losses, and strengthen the survivors as much as the survival instinct,โ€ Haitian sociologist Laรซnnec Hurbon wrote in a recent essay.

Vodou began to take shape in the French colony of Saint-Domingue during funeral rituals for enslaved people and dances called โ€œcalendasโ€ that they organized on Sunday evenings. It also was practiced by slaves known as Maroons who escaped to remote mountains and were led by Franรงois Mackandal, a Vodou priest.

In August 1791, some 200 slaves gathered at night in Bois-Caiman in northern Haiti for a Vodou ceremony organized by Dutty Boukman, a renowned enslaved leader and Vodou priest. They sacrificed a pig, drank its blood and swore to keep secret an imminent revolt against slavery, according to a surgeon present at the ceremony.

After a 13-year revolution, Haiti became independent, but Vodou remained oppressed.

The countryโ€™s new leaders condemned Vodou worship, as did the Catholic Church.

Catholic leaders demanded parishioners take an oath renouncing Vodou in 1941.

Thousands of Vodou followers were lynched and hundreds of symbolic spaces destroyed in what became the most violent attack in Haitiโ€™s history against the religion, according to journalist Herbert Nerette.

But Vodou persisted. When Franรงois Duvalier became president in 1957, he politicized the religion during his dictatorship, appointing certain oungans as its representatives, Hurbon wrote.

By 2003, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a Salesian priest who became Haitiโ€™s first democratically elected president, recognized Vodou as one of Haitiโ€™s official religions.

Despite the formal recognition, Vodou remains shunned by some Haitians.

โ€œWhen you say you are a Vodouist, they stigmatize you,โ€ said Kadel Bazile, a 42-year-old civil engineer.

Until recently, Bazile was a practicing Catholic. But when he lost his job and his wife left him nearly two years ago, a friend suggested he try Vodou.

โ€œWhat I find here is spirituality and fraternity. Being here is like being with family,โ€ he said while attending a May 1 ceremony to honor Kouzen Zaka, the lwa of harvest.

He identifies the most with Erzulie Dantor, the divinity of love represented by a Black Madonna with scars on her right cheek.

โ€œThat is the spirit who lives in me,โ€ he said. โ€œShe is going to protect me.โ€

As the ceremony started, Bazile smiled and moved to the beat of the drums while dancers twirled nearby, their long earrings swaying to the rhythm.

Vodou is attracting more believers given the surge in gang violence and government inaction, said Cecil Elien Isac, a 4th-generation oungan.

โ€œWhenever the community has a big problem, they come here, because there is no justice in Haiti. You find it in the ancestral spirits,โ€ he said.

When Isac opened his temple years ago in Port-au-Prince, about eight families in the area became members. Now he counts more than 4,000, in Haiti and abroad.

โ€œWe have a group of intellectuals who have joined,โ€ he said. โ€œBefore, it was people who couldnโ€™t read or write. Now it has more visibility.โ€

Credited with that turnaround are thinkers like Jean Price-Mars, whose 1928 book, โ€œThus Spoke the Uncle,โ€ visualized Vodou as a religion, โ€œwithout making the Haitian elites blush,โ€ wrote sociologist Lewis Ampidu Clormรฉus.

โ€œUntil the 1920s, Haitian Vodou was generally regarded as a string of superstitions, witchcraft and ritual cannibalism,โ€ Clormรฉus wrote. โ€œTalking about Vodou constituted a shame for Haitian intellectuals.โ€

Vodou has since become a key ingredient in Haitiโ€™s rich cultural scene, inspiring music, art, writing and dance.

Itโ€™s unknown how many people currently practice Vodou in Haiti, but thereโ€™s a popular saying: โ€œHaiti is 70% Catholic, 30% Protestant and 100% Vodou.โ€

Vodou also has countless lwas, although Ogou Je Wouj โ€” the god of red eyes โ€” has grown more significant to Haitians given the lack of security in the country, said Erol Josuรฉ, a singer, oungan and director of Haitiโ€™s National Bureau of Ethnology.

Ogou Je Wouj is a manifestation of the god of war and is believed to wield a machete.

โ€œThey want power in their body and in their mind,โ€ Josuรฉ said of those who seek the god.

While spirits infuse believers with energy and hope, Vodou priests warn they donโ€™t perform miracles.

โ€œWeโ€™re praying, but weโ€™re also taking precautions,โ€ Isac said. โ€œThere are a lot of lwas to protect you from kidnapping, but if you walk through certain areas, no lwa is going to protect you.โ€

On a recent afternoon, hundreds of Haitians gathered on a steep hill and squeezed into a small church to celebrate St. George, a Christian martyr believed to be a Roman soldier revered by Catholics and Vodouists alike.

They offered him money and prayers in hopes they would make it through Haitiโ€™s deepening crisis.

โ€œItโ€™s very important to be here,โ€ said Hervรฉ Hyppolite, a chef who practices Christianity and Vodou. โ€œYou find force, courage and also protection.โ€

Surrounding him was a sea of people clad in khaki and red, the saintโ€™s colors. Some held candles as a handful of women danced nearby,

โ€œSt. George!โ€ the priest leading the celebration yelled. The crowd shouted in response, โ€œWe need you!โ€

Josuรฉ, the singer and oungan, noted that some young people becoming Vodouists are trying to change traditional prayers or certain practices, but he said oungans and mambos are not embracing the push.

โ€œWe make them understand that those spirits are a symbol of resistance of the Haitian nation,โ€ he said. โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of substance in Vodou that can lead to a renaissance of Haiti.โ€

Associated Press reporter Evens Sanon contributed to this report.

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APโ€™s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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