vodun - definição. O que é vodun. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é vodun - definição

RELIGION PRACTICED BY THE AJA, EWE, AND FON PEOPLES OF BENIN, TOGO, GHANA, AND NIGERIA
Vodun; Voudun; Vodoun; Voudou; Vaudon; Voodoun; Voudon; Vodon; Vodun mythology; Woudon; West African Vodou
  • A vodoun market in [[Lomé]], [[Togo]], 2008.

vodun         
['v??du:n]
¦ noun another term for voodoo.
Origin
Fon, 'fetish'.
Vodun art         
  • Dolls at Akodessawa Fetish Market, Lomé, Togo
  • Asen altar attributed to the artist Akati Akpene Kendo
  • 1892 map of the Côte des escalves (Slave Coast) showing Dahomey (French) between Togo (German) and Lagos (British)
  • ''Bocheaw'' in Benin around Abomey 2013
  • 1880s Chromolithograph of a Samoan snake charmer, identified as [[Mami Wata]]
ASSOCIATED WITH THE VODON RELIGION OF WEST AFRICA
Asen (vodun)
Vodun art is associated with the West African Vodun religion of Nigeria, Benin, Togo and Ghana. The term is sometimes used more generally for art associated with related religions of West and Central Africa and of the African diaspora in Brazil, the Caribbean and the United States.
voodooism         
  • cannibalization]] of a child by eight Vodou devotees caused a scandal worldwide and was taken as proof of the evil nature of Vodou.
  • Ceremonial suit worn in Haitian Vodou rites, on display in the [[Ethnological Museum of Berlin]], Germany
  • An ason, the sacred rattle emblematic of the Vodou priesthood
  • Vodouists washing in a river following a ceremony; photographed in Haiti in 2010
  • A ''pakèt kongo'' on display in the [[Nationaal Museum van Wereldculturen]] in the Netherlands
  • A painting of the lwa Danbala, a serpent, by Haitian artist [[Hector Hyppolite]].
  • Drummer Frisner Augustin in a Vodou ceremony in [[Brooklyn]], New York City, early 1980s.
  • Area of [[West African Vodun]] practice, the religion with the greatest influence on Haitian Vodou
  • pp=368-369}}
  • An altar in Boston, Massachusetts established during the November festival of the gede
  • An ''oungan'' (Vodou priest) with another practitioner at a ceremony in Haiti in 2011
  • A Vodou ceremony taking place in an ounfò in [[Jacmel]], Haiti
  • Vodou paraphernalia for sale at the Marché de Fer (Iron Market) in [[Port-au-Prince]], Haiti.
  • A Vodou ceremony taking place at the [[National Black Theatre]] in New York City in 2017
  • Multiple styles of drum are employed in Vodou ritual; this example is used in rites invoking Rada lwa
  • A Vodou peristyle in [[Croix des Mission]], Haiti, photographed in 1980
  • A ''vèvè'' pattern designed to invoke [[Papa Legba]], one of the main lwa spirits worshipped in Haitian Vodou
  • Dancing at Vodou ceremony in Port-au-Prince in 1976
  • A Haitian drapo banner depicting a Roman Catholic saint
  • A selection of ritual items used in Vodou practice on display in the [[Canadian Museum of Civilization]].
  • Haitian ritual objects on display at the Ethnographic Museum in Berlin
SYNCRETIC RELIGION PRACTICED CHIEFLY IN HAITI AND THE HAITIAN DIASPORA
Sevi Lwa; Invultuation; Voudoun; Vaudoux; Voodou; Voudoo; Voodoo in Haiti; Vaudou; Voodooism; Vondon; Vodu; Haitian voodoo; Vudú; Haitian vodou; Vodouist; Haitian Vodun; Haitian Voodoo; Vodouisant; Haitian vodoun; Haitian Vodoun; Vaudoo; Ginen
see voodoo

Wikipédia

West African Vodun

Vodun (meaning spirit in the Fon, Gun and Ewe languages, pronounced [vodṹ] with a nasal high-tone u; also spelled Vodon, Vodoun, Vodou, Vudu, Voudou, Voodoo, etc.) is a religion practiced by the Aja, Ewe, and Fon peoples of Benin, Togo, Ghana, and Nigeria.

Elements of the West African religion have survived and evolved into the current forms of religions with similar names that are found in the New World among the African diaspora in the Americas, such as Haitian Vodou; Louisiana Voodoo; Cuban Vodú; Dominican Vudú, Venezuelan Yuyu, and Brazilian Vodum (Candomblé Jejé and Tambor de Mina).