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Vodou
(redirected from vodoun)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.

Vodou

 or voodoo

National folk religion of Haiti. It combines theological and magical elements of African religions and ritual elements of Roman Catholicism. Practitioners profess belief in a supreme God but give more attention to a large number of spirits called the loa, which can be identified as local or African gods, deified ancestors, or Catholic saints. The loa demand ritual service and attach themselves to individuals or families. In turn, they act as helpers, protectors, and guides. In ritual services, a priest or priestess leads devotees in ceremonies involving song, drumming, dance, prayer, food preparation, and animal sacrifice. The loa possess worshipers during services, dispensing advice, performing cures, or displaying special physical feats. A well-known aspect of Vodou is the zombie. See also Macumba; Santería.



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The Place Congo is famous for the Vodoun rituals performed there.
Continuing forward in a clockwise path, the left wall has several reconstructed shrines--a Haitian vodou altar (installed by Phil Cope), a "Mammi Wata" vodoun shrine from Benin (installed by Keith Nicklin and Jill Salmons), and a Brazilian candomble altar for Ogun (installed by Tania Tribe).
But her association with anthropologist and choreographer Katherine Dunham--whose engagement with Haitian music sparked Deren's subsequent interest in Vodoun ritual (culminating in her famous study Divine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti [1953])--is more telling with regard to Poledna's interest in her work.
 
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