Florida International University Course Syllabus

RELIGIOUS STUDIES 4730 African Religions

FALL 2012

Instructor: Dr Albert Kafui Wuaku

Office: Room DM 309

Office Hours: Monday, 11-12:30 IN DM 309

Tel: (305) 348-0112
email: wuakua @fiu.edu

Course Description

This course exposes students to the indigenous [African] foundations of the religious

beliefs and practices of African communities living in Africa and the Diaspora. The

course explores the theological ideas and the ritual forms of African communities such as the Ashanti, Ga, Fon, Ewe, Ibo, Yoruba and Mende of West Africa, and the peoples of Central, East and Southern Africa and how these ideas and practices have contributed to the shaping of outside religions that have flowed into Africa. Because the Africans populations forced to migrate to the USA, Caribbean and Latin America as slaves, extended their religious beliefs and practices to their new homes, this course will provide students with insights into the beliefs and practices of such African centered Caribbean and Latin-American religious traditions as Santeria [the lukumi tradition], Vodou, Candomble and some religious forms and expressions of African Americans in the USA. Topics to be covered in this course will include, sources of African Religious beliefs, African theological notions about God, African Religious beliefs about the nature of the human being and the universe, Witchcraft, sorcery and the problem of Evil in African religious thought and practice, Sin and salvation in African religious thought, Illness health and healing discourses and practices in African Religions, African Islam and African Christianity.

Course Objectives

By the end of the semester:

Students will become familiar with the indigenous religious beliefs and practices of selected African ethnic groups and their links with diaspora African communities

Students will be familiar with the various scholarly approaches to the study of African religions, the challenges involved in this area of study, and how to deal with them

Students will gain an understanding of the central role of religion in the past and contemporary lives of African communities globally

Students will develop enough taste for the study of African religions, to be willing to study it at higher levels

Students will be equipped with the scholarly tools they need to articulate their own understandings of African religious realities, verbally and through writing.

Pre-Requisites NO

Books

There is no single text book required for this course. Class discussions and lectures will be based on selected texts and readings from texts listed below, and other relevant sources such as Academic Journals. Students can acquire these sources on their own but they are not required to do so. The readings are all posted on blackboard so students can have access to them and read ahead of class lectures and discussions. The texts are all on reserve in the library. Students can also borrow copies from my personal library.

BOOKS

Ade, Adegbola. Traditional Religion in West Africa, Ibadan: Sefer Books Ltd, 1998.

Amanze James. Traditional Religions and Culture in Botswana. Gaborone: Pula Press, 2002

Asare Opoku Kofi. West African Traditional Religion. Singapore: FEP International Private Limited, 1978

Badejo, Deidre. Osun Seegesi: The Elegant Deity of Wealth, Power and Femininity.

Trenton: African World Press, 1996

Barnes Sandra: Africa’s Ogun: Old and New. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press1997.

Bomgba Elias African witchcraft and otherness: a Philosophical and Theological Critigue of Inter-subjective Relations Albany : State University Of New York Press, 2001

Drewal(ed) Sacred Waters: Arts for Mami Wata and Other Divinities in Africa and the Diaspora

Bloomington &Indianapolis: Indiana University Press

Gyekye Kwame. African Philosophical Thought: The Akan Conceptual Scheme. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1987

Idowu,E.B. Olodumare: God in Yoruba Belief. London,

Longmans, 1962,

Jean and John Comaroff. Modernity and its Malcontents: Ritual and Power in Post-Colonial Africa, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press

Masquelier A. Prayer has Spoiled Everything: Possession Power and Identity in an Islamic Town of Niger. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2001

Mbiti J.S. African Religions and Philosophy. Halley Court, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8EJ: Heinemann Educational Publishers, 1990.

Mbiti J.S. Introduction to African Religion. Halley Court, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8EJ: Heinemann Educational Publishers, 1991

Meyer Birgit Translating The devil: Religion and Modernity Among The Ewe in Ghana Edinburg: Edinburg University Press, 1999.

Modupe Oduyoye. The Vocabulary of Yoruba Religious Discourse, Sefer Books Ltd, Ibadan

Moore and Sanders. Magical Interpretations, Material Realities: Modernity, Witchcraft and the Occult in Postcolonial Africa, London And New York: Routledge, 2001

Murphy Joseph. Working the Spirit: Ceremonies of the African Diaspora. Boston: Beacon Press 1994

Olupona JK Kinship, Religion and Rituals in a Nigerian Community: A Phenomenological Study of Ondo Yoruba Festivals. Stockholm: Almqvist& Wilsell, 1991

Olupona Jacob. African Traditional Religions in Contemporary Society. Minnesota: Paragon House, 1991.

Olupona Jacob. African Spirituality: Forms Meanings and Expressions. New York: The Crossroad Publishing Company, 2000.

Olupona Jacob. Beyond Primitivism: Indigenous Religious Traditions and Modernity. New York and London: Routledge, 2004.

Olupona Jacob. African Immigrant Religions in America, New York, New York University Press, 2007.

Peek Philip. African Divination Systems: Ways of Knowing. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1991

Quarcoopome. West African Traditional Religion. Ibadan: African University Press Pilgrims Books Limited, 1987.

Ray Benjamin. African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community. Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall Upper, 1999

Course Requirements and Expectations

Attendance and Class Participation

10% percent of your final grade depends on your regular attendance and participation in

class discussion. All must attend class regularly and punctually. Only three unexcused

absences will go without penalty. Any additional unexcused absence will cause a drop in

your final grade. A to an A-, an A- to a B+, etc. Habitual lateness will also impact your

grade negatively. If you cannot come to class, let the professor know beforehand via email

and explain why. Note: Attendance will be taken at the beginning of each class.

You are all expected to come to class prepared to contribute to discussions on the

assigned reading material, and to submit all assignments by their due dates.

Assignments, Evaluations and dates

Attendance and Class Participation: 10%

Three exams (45%) (15% each) First exam is on 16th sept / 2nd exam is on Oct 14/ 3rd exam is on December 5th

Book Review 15% [due Sept 30th]

Review of Journal Article 10% [review - a peer reviewed journal article on a Topic related to African Religions] [due October 21]

Analytical paper 20% [due November 20th]

Analytical Paper- Each student must write an analytical paper on topic dealing with an aspect of African Religions in Africa, or their manifestations in the USA, the Caribbean or Latin America.

The following rules must guide you in the writing of this paper.

• Your paper should be between 8-15pages in length [font 12 double space].

• You should provide references and a bibliography.

• Draw on at least 5 good academic sources;[some can be primary sources]

• Be analytical, that is, show evidence of your ability to engage relevant conceptual frames in the exploration of their topics. Students are encouraged to develop frames drawing on some of the indigenous African ideas/beliefs we cover in the course of the semester.

• Choose a topic you can manage successfully, that is, one that is neither too narrow in scope nor too broad to be researched easily.

Plagiarism Policy

Plagiarism is defined as the deliberate use and appropriation of another author’s work

without any indication of the source, and the representation of such work as the student's

own. Students who do not give credit for ideas, expressions or other materials taken from

others sources, including sources from the internet have plagiarized.

A student will score zero if his or her work is found to be plagiarized. The student may

also face disciplinary action for such academic misconduct. All exams are sit-in exams. You will select and answer three out of five essay questions. Exam dates--- will be announced in Class three weeks in advance.

Topics and Readings

Week .1

Introduction- Traditions in the Study of African Religions

Philosophical

Gyekye Kwame. African Philosophical Thought: The Akan Conceptual Scheme. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1987

or

Bomgba Elias African witchcraft and otherness: a Philosophical and Theological Critigue of Inter-subjective Relations Albany: State University Of New York Press, 2001

Phenomenological-

Olupona JK Kinship, Religion and Rituals in a Nigerian Community: A Phenomenological Study of Ondo Yoruba Festivals. Stockholm: Almqvist& Wilsell, 1991 [note that this work demonstrates the use of other approaches too]

Socio-Anthropological

Masquelier A. Prayer has Spoiled Everything: Possession Power and Identity in an Islamic Town of Niger. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2001

Or

Meyer Birgit Translating The devil: Religion and Modernity Among The Ewe in Ghana Edinburg: Edinburg University Press, 1999.

Week 2- Continuation of discussion on Traditions in the Study of African Religions

Week 3.

The nature of Indigenous African Religions and descriptions by Earlier scholars

Readings—

“General Introduction to West African Traditional Religions” by kofi Asare Opoku,

“Religion from An African Perspective” by Amanze James,

“Introduction to West African Religion” by TNQ Quarcoopome

“ Introduction : The invention of African Religions” in African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community.

Week 4

Sources of African Religious beliefs [myths, proverbs, meanings of God’s names, personal theophoric names, everyday speech, pithy sayings, liturgy, songs, non-oral sources-

Readings---Introduction of West African Traditional Religion, by TNQ Quarcoopome

Chapter 3 of Introduction to African Religion by JS Mbiti.

Chapter 1 of African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community, By Ray Benjamin.

Week 5. Understandings of the Universe in Indigenous African Religions

Reading: Chapter 4 of Introduction to African Religions by JS Mbiti

Weeks 6 Sept 28th/30th

The spiritual Universe and the entities- The Supreme Being, gods, ancestral spirits, evil spirits, mystical forces and beings, the nature of the human being

Readings--

Gaba, C. R. 1969. “The Idea of a Supreme Being among the Anlo People of Ghana " The Journal of Religion in Africa 2, no. 1: 64-79.

E. B. Idowu, Olodumare: God in Yoruba Belief. London,

Longmans, 1962,

Metuh E.E The Concept of the ‘High God’ in Traditional Igbo Religion” International Journal of Frontier Missions 2:4 (October 1985): 315-321.

“Divinity and Humanity” in Chapter 2 of African Religions by Benjamin Ray

West African Concept of Man” in Chapter of West African Traditional Religion by Kofi Asare Opoku

Ancestral Spirituality and Society in Africa, by Ogbu U Kalu in chapter 4 of African Spirituality: Forms Meanings and Expressions by Olupona (ed)

Chapters, 5, 6, 7 and 8 of Introduction to African Religion by JS Mbiti

Chapters 2, 3 and 5 of Traditional Religions and Culture in Botswana by James Amanze

“An overview of Yoruba Cosmology” in Chapter 2 of Osun Seegesi by Badejo

“Mami Water in African Religion and Spirituality” in Chapter 9 of African Spirituality by Olupona (ed)

Week 7-The spiritual universe and the entities contd-- evil spirits, mystical forces and beings, the nature of the human being

Week 8

Concepts of health, illness, and healing practices

Readings: “Spirit Beings as agents of Illness” in chapter 7 of African Spirituality: Forms Meanings and Expressions by Olupona (ed) ,

Healing rituals of the Nuer and Ndembu in chapter 3 of African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community by Benjamin Ray.

Magic, Medicine, and Witchcraft in chapter 6 of West African Traditional Religion by Quarcoopome

Movies and class discussions on them: “Healers of Ghana” and “Sorcerers of Zaire”

Week 9

Sin and its removal.

Ritual Dirt and Purification Rites Among The Ibo by Emefie Ikenga Metuh, the journal of Religion in Africa, XV (1) 1985, pp3-24.

Sin and Its Removal in African Traditional Religions, by Awolalu Omosolade in Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 44/2(1976) 275-287

We will watch and discuss selected Movie clips on ritual cleansings posted on Youtube

Week 10

The problem of evil and sources of supernatural harm in African religions [specific focus on witchcraft].

Readings: “Witchcraft and Society” by Bourdillon in African Spirituality: Forms Meanings and Expressions by Olupona. “The Power of evil”[Songhay, Yoruba, Manianga and Azande ] in African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community. [ pges 106-108]

We will watch and discuss selected Movie clips on child witches posted on Youtube

Weeks 11.

Ritual- The place of Ritual, the Categories of Rituals, Ritual Specialists and their roles --Life cycle Rituals, Festivals, Sacrifice, Divination, Spirit Possession Readings: “

The Ghanaian and Death” “Yoruba Death and Egungun” “Minianga Afterlife” in Ray Benjamin. African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community.

Introduction, part 1, 2&3 of African Divination Systems: Ways of Knowing. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1991

Olupona JK Kinship, Religion and Rituals in a Nigerian Community: A Phenomenological Study of Ondo Yoruba Festivals.

Omasade Awolalu J. Sacrifice in the Religion of the Yoruba.

Ibadan : University of Ibadan, 1970

Week 12

Ritual specialists-Priests, Priestesses, Sorcerers

Movie- Love in the Sahel [on Rites of Passage in Sahelian West Africa]

Week 13

Women in African Religions-

Readings “Tswana Religion and Women” in Chapter 16 of Traditional Religions and Culture in Botswana, “Flower in The Garden: The Role Of Women in African Religion” By JS Mbiti in African Traditional Religions in Contemporary Society by Olupona Ed. “The Role of Women in African Religion and Among the Yoruba” by Omoyajawo in African Traditional Religions in Contemporary Society, by Olupona, “Women in African Religions” by Rosalind Hackett, in Religion and Women by Arvind Sharma ( ed)

Week 14. African Islam /African Christianity and expressions of Indigenous religions in Modern Times

Readings: Chapters 13, 14, and 16 of African Spirituality: Forms Meanings and Expressions. Chapter 7 and 8 of African Religions: Symbol, Ritual, and Community.[Movie- Africa’s Triple Heritage] by Ali Mazuri. Chapters 3, 4, 14 of African Traditional Religions in Contemporary Society. Introduction of Modernity and its Malcontents.

Chapter 1 of Magical Interpretations, Material Realities.

Week 15. Extensions of African Religions to the Caribbean, Latin America and the USA,

Murphy, Joseph. Working the Spirit: Ceremonies of the African Diaspora.

“Vodou in Haiti and South-Florida” Guest lecture by Mambo Ingrid Mambo of Halouba Hounfo and Botanica, in Little Haiti, Miami

Guest Lukumi in Miami Lecture by Oba Pichardo of the Church of Babalu Aye in Hialieh, Miami