Pénétrer le monde des morts

This article aims to show how Palo Monte ritual identity is created, by focusing on the processes that allow a person to be considered a rightful initiate. Palo Monte is a Cuban religion of Bantu influence whose origin is attributed to the arrival of African slaves on Cuban soil. The main Palo Monte...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Katerina Kerestetzi
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative 2013-07-01
Series:Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/9357
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832578629661360128
author Katerina Kerestetzi
author_facet Katerina Kerestetzi
author_sort Katerina Kerestetzi
collection DOAJ
description This article aims to show how Palo Monte ritual identity is created, by focusing on the processes that allow a person to be considered a rightful initiate. Palo Monte is a Cuban religion of Bantu influence whose origin is attributed to the arrival of African slaves on Cuban soil. The main Palo Monte supernatural agents, and the ones with whom worshippers interact daily, are certain spirits of the dead with exceptional powers, named nfumbis. Believing that these spirits have the ability to influence human matters, practitioners try to make them their allies, by making ritual pacts with them. The stronger the alliance and higher the degree of intimacy with the nfumbis, the more the palero (the worshipper) gains magical efficacy. Therefore, some practitioners prefer spending a large portion of their time with the dead, sometimes neglecting the company of the living. In this article, we will see that in order to establish the alliance with the nfumbis and to gain their favour, the candidate undergoes an initiation, which transforms him or her ontologically. Specifically, some of the sequences performed during the ritual enable an ontological conversion between the person and the spirit; they assimilate the initiate to the spirit by imbuing him or her with some of its properties. This ontological proximity establishes the basis for true intimacy between worshipper and spirit. Next, we will see how this intimacy and proximity are developed in everyday life. The dead is actually materialized, in a cauldron, the nganga. This ritual, individualized object, which is the embodiment of the spirit, is displayed in the worshipper’s home. This cohabitation enables the worshipper to interact and communicate with the spirit on a daily basis. The practitioner visits the spirit’s material envelope every day to ask advice and benefit from its divinatory gifts; worshippers believe that the spirit, and metonymically the nganga, have the power of prescience. This article shows that these daily interactions create proximity and intimacy between the officiant and his/her spirit in true affection, or ‘love’, to use a Palo Monte term. This ‘love’ for the dead is a keystone of Palo Monte and the foundation on which paleros ritual identity is built.
format Article
id doaj-art-425d92108bd647fd97bafee7925f2410
institution Kabale University
issn 2117-3869
language fra
publishDate 2013-07-01
publisher Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative
record_format Article
series Ateliers d'Anthropologie
spelling doaj-art-425d92108bd647fd97bafee7925f24102025-01-30T13:41:57ZfraLaboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie ComparativeAteliers d'Anthropologie2117-38692013-07-013810.4000/ateliers.9357Pénétrer le monde des mortsKaterina KerestetziThis article aims to show how Palo Monte ritual identity is created, by focusing on the processes that allow a person to be considered a rightful initiate. Palo Monte is a Cuban religion of Bantu influence whose origin is attributed to the arrival of African slaves on Cuban soil. The main Palo Monte supernatural agents, and the ones with whom worshippers interact daily, are certain spirits of the dead with exceptional powers, named nfumbis. Believing that these spirits have the ability to influence human matters, practitioners try to make them their allies, by making ritual pacts with them. The stronger the alliance and higher the degree of intimacy with the nfumbis, the more the palero (the worshipper) gains magical efficacy. Therefore, some practitioners prefer spending a large portion of their time with the dead, sometimes neglecting the company of the living. In this article, we will see that in order to establish the alliance with the nfumbis and to gain their favour, the candidate undergoes an initiation, which transforms him or her ontologically. Specifically, some of the sequences performed during the ritual enable an ontological conversion between the person and the spirit; they assimilate the initiate to the spirit by imbuing him or her with some of its properties. This ontological proximity establishes the basis for true intimacy between worshipper and spirit. Next, we will see how this intimacy and proximity are developed in everyday life. The dead is actually materialized, in a cauldron, the nganga. This ritual, individualized object, which is the embodiment of the spirit, is displayed in the worshipper’s home. This cohabitation enables the worshipper to interact and communicate with the spirit on a daily basis. The practitioner visits the spirit’s material envelope every day to ask advice and benefit from its divinatory gifts; worshippers believe that the spirit, and metonymically the nganga, have the power of prescience. This article shows that these daily interactions create proximity and intimacy between the officiant and his/her spirit in true affection, or ‘love’, to use a Palo Monte term. This ‘love’ for the dead is a keystone of Palo Monte and the foundation on which paleros ritual identity is built.https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/9357Afro-Cuban religionsthe deadPalo Monteinitiationinitiatory subjectsontological transformations
spellingShingle Katerina Kerestetzi
Pénétrer le monde des morts
Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Afro-Cuban religions
the dead
Palo Monte
initiation
initiatory subjects
ontological transformations
title Pénétrer le monde des morts
title_full Pénétrer le monde des morts
title_fullStr Pénétrer le monde des morts
title_full_unstemmed Pénétrer le monde des morts
title_short Pénétrer le monde des morts
title_sort penetrer le monde des morts
topic Afro-Cuban religions
the dead
Palo Monte
initiation
initiatory subjects
ontological transformations
url https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/9357
work_keys_str_mv AT katerinakerestetzi penetrerlemondedesmorts