Santeria: A Religion of Divination, Magic and Animal Sacrifice
By Donald T. Moore
When the U.S. Supreme Court struck down an ordinance that prohibited animal sacrifices, the Court legalized the practice as a result. The sect known as Santeria thus gained a victory for its bloody rites.
What is Santeria? It is an Afro-Caribbean religion that combines animism, pantheism, ancestor worship, and Roman Catholicism. It is a syncretistic religion that combines its belief in the Orishas - the gods of the Yoruba and Bantu pantheons of southwest Nigerian origin-with the Catholic saints.i
Santeria consists of myths, stories, and legends (or patakí) that provide a basis for its customs and ceremonies. Although more than 400 deities exist, only 16 are actively worshipped. Those deities that form the foundation of the religion are Obatalá, Oshún, Yemaya (or Yemalla), Oyá, and Changó (or Shango). The four warriors are Elegguá, Oggún, Ochosi, and Osun. It is around these foundational and warrior Orishas- or head guardians-that rites of initiation, divination, and magic are celebrated.
In essence, Santeria offers its believers (known as santeros) the means of acquiring predictive knowledge of the world, as well as access to the principal sources of power. Its practice is supposedly limited to white magic and excludes any black witchcraft. Those who observe Santeria worship Olofi - also called Olodumare and Olorún - their almighty god and supreme being. Santeros believe that it is in the forces of nature where the Orishas manifest Olofi's will.
The santero's central goals are to worship the saints (Orishas), observe feasts, obey orders, and carry out rites. In exchange for total submission, believers are promised supernatural powers and protection from evil-including health, influence, position, and the ability to see and modify the future.
How did Santeria arise? During the colonization of Cuba, Brazil, Haiti, and Trinidad-thousands of Yoruba natives were transported there as slaves. These slaves remained attached to their religious practices and African traditions, even though they were forced to adjust to the environment of the New World. However, due to Catholic persecution in Cuba, they were unable to practice their religion openly. So the slaves assimilated the symbols of the Roman Catholic Church, the only legal religion in Cuba, with their own. Because of the similarities between the Catholic saints and the Orishas, they gave their deities Catholic names. Thus, when celebrating their rituals, the slaves appeared to be believing Catholics. In reality, they were secretly worshiping the Yoruba Orishas.
Over several centuries, this process of adaptation meant that the Nigerianii Yoruba practices were modified to resemble other African tribal customs and religions.With the mass exit from Cuba after the 1959 communist revolution, this faith in Orishas was exported to Puerto Rico,iii Panama, Venezuela, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic. It was also introduced to different urban centers in the United States-including Miami, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and New Jersey.
About the time I get on my high horse, Jesus comes riding in on a donkey.