20 Fascinating Photos That Separate Fact From Fiction

Posted by Tandra Barner on Tuesday, May 21, 2024
A pilgrim lays on the ground holding candles during the centuries-old annual pilgrimage to the Iglesia De San Lazaro (Church of Saint Lazarus) on the Day Of Saint Lazarus. Rincon, Cuba. December 17, 2002. Sven Creutzmann/Mambo Photography/Getty Images A Santeria practitioner with Tarot cards and cigar for future readings. Havana, Cuba. April 3, 2013. Education Images/UIG via Getty Images Babalawo using rum to bless a shrine. March 9, 2013. In Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images Three men participate in the Cajon de Muertos ceremony. January 2, 2011. Wikimedia Commons A Santeria altar in Cuba. March 17, 2015. Wikimedia Commons Animal sacrifice is an integral part of the rituals. Santeros believe that blood is necessary to release the negative energy and spirits of those involved. The participants of a Santeria ceremony are blessed with the animal before it is sacrificed.In Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images A man is reborn with a different name and for the first year has to wear white. Here, the birthday party of Lazaro Salsita, born 15 years ago in the body of Lazaro Medina Hernandez. Havana, Cuba. January 2, 2011. Wikimedia Commons A couple participate in the Cajon de Muertos ceremony. January 2, 2011. Wikimedia Commons Babalawo (priest) using cowry shells and corn powder to read the fortunes of the people being initiated. March 11, 2013. In Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images Goat head, chicken, feathers, and blood - remnants of a sacrifice held in the home of a Santeria priest just one day earlier. May 14, 2002. Wikimedia Commons A celebration of a Santeria baptism. January 2, 2011. Wikimedia Commons Each of the clay statues is an "Ellegua." Adherents of the practice first have to receive Ellegua, the Oricha that is always summoned first, as he is the one who directly communicates to Olodumare: almighty God. March 9, 2013. In Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images A high priest of the Santeria religion sits in a room used for ceremonies. Arne Hodalic/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images Various religious articles used in Santeria. January 29, 2015. Wikimedia Commons A Santero in Cuba. March 12, 2009. Wikimedia Commons A Santeria temple in Cuba. May 2002. James Emery/Flickr Cups filled with water are often used to serve as a shrine to dead ancestors, and are preferably kept in a quiet part of the home, though not the bedroom. January 25, 2015. Wikimedia Commons A woman shuffles cards on the street in Havana, Cuba. August 2004. Anja Disseldorp/Flickr A temple honoring Yemaya, the powerful Oricha known as the mother of all things. January 25, 2015. Wikimedia Commons An altar inside Templo Yemaya. January 25, 2015. Wikimedia CommonsCajon De Muertos Men Santeria: 20 Fascinating Photos That Separate Fact From Fiction View Gallery

Mysterious to many, and misunderstood by most, Santeria is often incorrectly regarded as a form of witchcraft. A closer look, however, reveals a religion with deep roots embedded in west African culture, and one necessary for survival amid colonial rule during the Atlantic slave trade.

Also known as Regla de Ocha and Lucumí, the practice of Santeria is defined as an Afro-Cuban religion that originated in what is now known as Nigeria and Benin and was brought to the Caribbean via the slave trade.

Many Africans were forced to convert to Catholicism against their will upon arriving in the West, burying age-old traditions and forcing practitioners to maintain their old beliefs only covertly as a means of avoiding religious persecution. This was done by adopting the symbolism of Catholicism, mainly saints, to represent Santeria's Orichas, which are the intermediaries between God and the people of the living world.

Many Afro-Cuban practitioners of Santeria view their religion and Catholicism as parallel to one another, combining terms and concepts from both, resulting in an example of religious syncretism.

Others consider the very term "Santeria" a simplistic way of viewing what was ultimately an attempt at covert preservation of ancient practices in the wake of forced conversion to Catholicism. As stated by Oba Ernesto Pichardo in a 1998 presentation titled “Santeria in Contemporary Cuba”:

“The colonial period from the standpoint of enslaved African people can be defined as a time of perseverance. Their world quickly changed. Tribal kings and their families, politicians, business and community leaders all were enslaved and taken to a foreign region of the world. Religious leaders, their relatives, and their followers were no longer free people to worship as they saw fit. Colonial laws criminalized their religion. They were forced to become baptized and worship a god their ancestors had not known who was surrounded by a pantheon of saints. The early concerns during this period seem to have necessitated a need for individual survival under harsh plantation conditions. A sense of hope was sustaining the internal essence of what today is called Santería, a misnomer (and former pejorative) for the indigenous religion of the Lukumi people of Nigeria. In the heart of their homeland, they had a complex political and social order.”

The primary concern of Santeria is to promote harmonious balance within, both in terms of the individual and society as a whole. Practitioners will often consult with an initiated priest or priestess (Santero or Santera) when their inner experiences conflict with their environment and seek help in overcoming such ills as bad health, financial troubles, troublesome relationships, or other matters of negative energy.

A Santeria ceremony is then usually held to address these problems, where the Santero or Santera consults the orichas, and healing is performed with herbs and divination in rituals often involving the use of music, dance, offerings, trance, and animal sacrifice.

Whether believers are practicing these rituals or observing any of the religion's other rites and customs, today an estimated 75 to 100 million people all over the world practice Santeria.

For more looks at religious practices from around the world, check out the seven most unusual religious rituals and beliefs, and these six interesting religions you may not have heard of.

ncG1vNJzZmiZnKHBqa3TrKCnrJWnsrTAyKeeZ5ufony0rc2tnKuhkWK9qbvTqKo%3D