Adorcism
In the sociology of religion, Luc de Heusch coined the term adorcism for practices to placate or accommodate spiritual entities in a possessed person or place. Unlike exorcism, the relationship with the entities is potentially positive. This is sometimes used as initiation into a spirit cult.[1]
Jean-Michel Oughourlian defines adorcism as "voluntary, desired, and curative possessions".[2]
Occurrence
[edit]Adorcism is found in Afro-American Voodoo,[3] the Zār rites of Northeast Africa and West Asia,[4] the Hausa's Bori rites,[5] Tunisian Jewish Stambali, in parts of Southeast Asia,[6] Moroccan Hamadsha, Egyptian "ghost riders",[7] and other religious practices. It is generally common among African spiritual traditions, whether adherents are Christians, Muslims, or belong to a traditional religion.[8]
Like the zār spirits, the ghosts in the "ghost rider" tradition sometimes cause illnesses to communicate with the living about their desires. However, their demands often relate to their tombs and the specifics of their mourning, as opposed to the jewelry and clothes of the zār.[7]
Some scholars think the general tradition of adorcism and possession-healing practices with music may be thousands of years old, due to how widespread it is. Janzen argues Ngoma, a Bantu healing practice that prominently features the ngoma drum, may be 2,000 years old.[9]
Adorcism also describes the oracular practices found in Greece, which may have come from Egypt's Per-Wadjet oracle. In Book II (Euterpe), Herotodus relates that the priestesses of Dodona said that two black doves came from Thebes in Egypt to them and Libya, and both told the people there to establish oracles. He analyzes this as a mythologization of Egyptian women coming to both places and bringing the rites of an oracle with them. The doves are black because many Egyptians had darker skin than Greeks, and they are doves because at first the women would not have been able to speak Greek, and Egyptian to the Greek ear may as well be the speech of an animal, but once they had learned Greek they would be speaking in a "human voice". He remarks that, in his view, the oracles of Dodona and Thebes resemble each other, and that the rites of Egyptian priests are older than that of the Greeks, and that he thinks they adopted them from Egypt.[10] The priestesses at Dodona would enter trance, though this does not seem to be as prominent as the trances of the Pythia at Delphi,[11] and was borrowed from them.[12] The Delphic oracle possibly dates back to the 1400s BC in Mycenean Greece, and if there is a connection between Per-Wadjet's oracle and it, Minoa likely was an intermediary.[13]
There is some evidence for adorcism and possession-trance (a commonly linked phenomenon) in Pre-Exilic Israelite religion. In Samuel and Numbers, it occurs as a way of the divine affirming someone should be selected for a leadership position, with the spirit of God seizing hold of a person. This divine confirmation only occurs once in Numbers. However, in Samuel a group experiences that same possession without clarity as to why. Saul is also both seized by the spirit of God to protect David from him, and has the spirit of God leave him and be replaced by a bad spirit from God which is soothed by David's music. In 2 Kings, the prophet Elisha experiences prophetic possession-trance brought on in conjunction with music. The first instance of Saul's possession with the larger group of tracers is also accompanied by music.[14]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Luc de Heusch. Cultes de possession et religions initiatiques de salut en Afrique. Annales du Centre d'etudes des Religions, ii. 226-44. 1962
- ^ Jean-Michel Oughourlian. The Puppet of Desire: The Psychology of Hysteria, Possession, and Hypnosis [Eugene Webb, trans. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1991], p. 97).
- ^ de Heusch, Luc (1989). "Kongo in Haiti: A New Approach to Religious Syncretism". Man. 24 (2): 290–303. doi:10.2307/2803307. ISSN 0025-1496. JSTOR 2803307.
- ^ El Hadidi, Hager. Zar: Spirit Possession, Music, and Healing Rituals in Egypt.
- ^ Besmer, Fremont. Horses, musicians, and gods: the Hausa cult of possession-trance.
- ^ Somer, Eli; Saadon, Meir (December 2000). "Stambali: Dissociative Possession and Trance in a Tunisian Healing Dance". Transcultural Psychiatry. 37 (4): 580–600. doi:10.1177/136346150003700406. ISSN 1363-4615.
- ^ a b Winkler, Hans Alexander. Ghost Riders of Upper Egypt.
- ^ Review of Women's Medicine: the zar-bori cult in Africa and beyond by Sjaak van der Geest
- ^ Kenyon, Susan. Spirits and Slaves in Central Sudan: The Red Wind of Sennar. p. 4.
- ^ "The History of Herodotus, parallel English/Greek: Book 2: Euterpe: 50". sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 2024-05-17.
- ^ Cartwright, Mark. "Dodona". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2024-05-17.
- ^ Parke, Herbert William; Dietrich, B. C.; Peatfield, Alan A. D. (2015-12-22), "Dodona", Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics, doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.2264, ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5, retrieved 2024-05-17
- ^ "Women in the Aegean: Minoan Snake Goddess: 8. Snakes, Egypt, Magic & Women". arthistoryresources.net. Retrieved 2024-05-17.
- ^ Parker, Simon B. (1978). "Possession Trance and Prophecy in Pre-Exilic Israel". Vetus Testamentum. 28 (3): 271–285. doi:10.2307/1517036. ISSN 0042-4935. JSTOR 1517036.