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Primal Religious Traditions. Australian Aborigines African Traditions North American Plains Indians Mesoamerican Religion. Primal Religions. Unique forms of religions practiced since prehistoric times. Some are still practiced at present.
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Primal Religious Traditions Australian Aborigines African Traditions North American Plains Indians Mesoamerican Religion
Primal Religions • Unique forms of religions practiced since prehistoric times. Some are still practiced at present. • Religious traditions of non literate peoples who rely on oral tradition rather than scriptures • Tend to be the traditions of tribal peoples, small groups that reside in villages rather than large city populations
Why investigate Primal Religious Traditions? • Primal: • Prehistoric, • Non-literate, oral tradition • Provide insight into mythic and ritual dimensions of religion that are essential sources of knowledge and power for important aspects of life • All religions stem from or are rooted in primal worship
Australian Aborigines • Native people of Australia • Foundation • Dreaming • Period of the ANCESTORS • Still remains in the symbols left behind • Rituals reenact the mythic events • Ancestors • Supernatural beings that gave shape to the formless world • Organized humans into tribes • Allocated land • Left symbols of their presence • Spirit of ancestors left behind
Ritual • Spiritual essences left behind by the ancestors in symbols • Charged with sacred power • Take the same paths originally taken by the ancestors reenacting the mythic events of the dreaming • Cosmology takes a key place in Aboriginal religion- mythic geography • Spiritual essence in humans also. Unborn child is animated by an Ancestor when the mother makes contact with a sacred site. • Totem: the natural form of the ancestor in the dreaming • Totemism: a system of belief and ritual based on totems
Animation • Ancestors continually nourish the natural world, sources of all kinds of life • Human beings associated with a particular ancestor perform rituals to cause the power to flow into the natural world • Reenactment of the myth • Reenacting of the myth recreates the original action • Maintaining the social structure of society • Taboo: things and activities set aside for certain members and forbidden to others • Gender • Training • Maturity • Initiation • Awakens spiritual identity • Death of childhood- birth of adulthood
African Traditions • Several hundred religions among the 400,000,000 inhabitants of the second largest continent, Africa. • Yoruba Religion • Consists of 10,000,000 people and has endured 1,000 years. • Produced artwork that is famous and admired • Resides in Western regions of central Africa • Favor city living • Ife is the center of Yoruba religion • Orishna-nla began world creation here • http://www.genuineafrica.com/yoruba.htm#.TynstWd8Mxc.email
Cosmology • Reality is in two separate worlds • Heaven, the invisible home of the gods and ancestors • Earth, the world of normal experience, visible home of humans; also populated by a deviant form of human beings, witches and sorcerers, who can cause disastrous harm if not controlled • Purpose of the religion • Maintain balance between the human beings of earth and the gods and ancestors of heaven while guarding against the evil deeds of the sorcerers and witches
Heaven • Home of • Supreme god- Olorun • Primary, original source of power in the universe • Distant and remote- not involved in human affairs • People do not worship Olorun; other gods serve as mediators • Other deities- orishas • Lesser than Olorun but truly significant • Are appeased by the rituals carried out by humans • Hundreds of orishas exist • Orisha-nla, created earth • Ogun, god of iron, originally a human, inhabits border between ancestors and orishas • Esu, most complex, contains both good and evil properties, worshipped with all other gods- Trickster figure (can disrupt the normal course of life)
Cont’d • Ancestors: • Deceased humans who have acquired supernatural powers • They can help or harm the living • Worshipped through rituals at sacred shrines • Earned a good reputation, lived to an old age, worshipped only by their own family • Deified ancestors known throughout Yoruba society and worshipped by large numbers of people
Connecting Heaven and Earth • Head of a family: • Worships the family’s ancestors in the home at the family shrine • King or chief of a city: • In charge of annual festivals and performs other religious functions • Priests • Oversee the various rituals carried out at the shrines of each orisha • Diviners • Tells the future since this is important in determining how to proceed with ones life • Mediator • Becomes a living representation of an ancestor by dancing at festivals • Imitates a dead person and delivers a message from the dead • Importance: • Maintains a balance between heaven and earth, boundaries are thin and can be crossed over
North American Plains Indians • Peoples who inhabited the middle section of what is now the USA. • Migrated from Asia over the Bering Strait and spread out over north and south America • Stretched from Canadian Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico, between Rocky Mountains and the Mississippi River. • More than 30 tribes, speaking different languages and forming many cultural groups • Representative of Native American religion in general • Shared some basic beliefs such as the vision quest and the Sun Dance.
Lakota • Inhabited Eastern Montana & Wyoming and the western part of the Dakotas and parts of Nebraska • Reknown for • Custer’s defeat • Massacre at Wounded knee • About 70,000 live on reservations in Manitoba, Montana, and the Dakotas.
Beliefs • Supreme Reality- WakanTanka, the Great Spirit or Great Mysterious • 16 different deities (4x4) • Creation of the world and the arrival of the first human beings are explained in various myths that talk about several supernatural beings • Inktomi, Lakota trickster figure, taught humans their ways and customs. His mistakes and errors of judgment are used to teach children what not to do. • Death & Afterlife • 4 souls depart from body, one journeys on a spirit path encounters an old woman who judges it and directs it to the world of the ancestors or back to earth as a ghost. Others are reborn in unborn children or others new bodies.
Ritual • Vision Quest • Common primal tradition • To gain access to spiritual power that will insure success in different undertakings • Both genders can participate • Supervised by a medicine man or woman • Begins with purification in a sweat lodge • Goes off alone to endure the elements, lack of food and water • Performance of certain rituals • Near the end the quester receives a vision in the form of an animal, object or force of nature. Vision gives a message. • Message is interpreted by medicine man or woman, that interpretation influences the rest of the life of the quester. • Occasionally the quester receives a guardian spirit
Ritual • Sun Dance: • Common to all Plains’ tribes • Benefits the tribe rather than the individual • Part of the New Year celebration • Overseen by a sacred leader (medicine man or a woman of outstanding character), both an honor and a responsibility • Held in a lodge that is carefully constructed and prepared for the celebration • Cotton tree is set upright in a chosen spot as the axis mundi • Connects heaven and earth- represents the supreme being • Around the tree, 28 poles to represent the 28days of the lunar month • Dancing in the direction of the sun accompanied by music and drumbeats • Body mutilation as sacrifice
Populating the Americas • Crossing at Beringia
Mesoamerican Religion • Area includes present day Mexico and extended south to Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica • Natives arrived about 20,000 years ago? • From about 2000 BC to 1500 AD home to Olmecs, Maya, Toltec and Aztec civilizations
Aztecs • Defies the common or general description of primal religions- it was a highly civilized population of about 15,000,000. • Urban dwellers in lieu of rural. Lived in Tenochtitlahn, now Mexico City • Like other primal religions it intertwines ritual and myth, practices of human sacrifice • Pre dated Catholicism of 16th c. Aztec influence can be seen in some modern Mexican religious practices
Toltec Foundation • Toltec god “Quetzalcoatl” the feathered serpent presided over a golden age of brilliance • Prince Topiltzin, a priest-king of the Toltecs, was the role model for Aztec authority figures • Toltec myths and tradition influenced Aztecs • Aztecs believed that Quetzalcoatl created and ordered the world. City of Teotihuancan was origin of the cosmos. “Who will be the sun and bring on the dawn?”
Time and Space • The dawn of the sun was a new age and its destruction the end of that age. The only ;way to delay this destruction was to feed the sun, nourishing it through human sacrifices. • They believed that there had already been 4 suns and theirs was the last one. (center, west, north, south) • Time and space were interrelated. • 4 quadrants with the axis mundi in center. Center connects earthly world with heavenly world.
Human Role • Human condition linked to cosmology • Human is a sort of axis mundi • Human sacrifice was performed about every 20 days. Self sacrifice of the warrior would allow him to enter the highest heaven at his death • Two divine forces • Heart • Was cut out of the chest on a sacrificial altar • Head • Was severed from the body and strung on a skull rack • Many human sacrifices were captive prisoners
Language • Religious power was conveyed through the mastery of language • Spoke Nahuatl, an expressive language with high achievements in poetry • Knowers of things could communicate with the gods and make offerings rather than sacrifice. • Being adept at making or solving riddles meant you came from a good family