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old as dirt

(1,972 posts)
134. In the Province of Popayán, ...
Sat Feb 4, 2023, 07:51 AM
Feb 2023
but flinging rosary beads

...(outside of the palenques, of course), historically, "a woman slave owner might measure the duration of a flogging by the time it took her to recite her rosary".

The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America

Michael T. Taussig


https://selforganizedseminar.files.wordpress.com/2011/07/taussig_devil_commodity.pdf

snip---------

Part II: The Plantations of the Cauca Valley in Colombia

CHAPTER 3: Slave Religion and the Rise of the Free Peasantry


Two generalizations are necessary to any discussion of black slave religion in Latin America. First, the whites were apprehensive of the supernatural powers of their subjects, and vice versa. Second, religion was inseparable from magic, and both permeated everyday life—agriculture, mining, economy, healing, marital affairs, and social relations in general. The Inquisition, for instance, regarded the occult arts that were drawn from the three continents not as idle fantasies but as the exercise of supernatural powers, including an explicit or implicit pact with the devil. The African slaves brought their mysteries and sorcery, the Indians their occult powers to cure or kill, and the colonists their own belief in magic (Lea, 1908:462).

The magical lore of the European was joined to that of the despised African and Indian to form a symbiosis, transformation, and adaptation of forms unknown to each group. This process was most obvious in beliefs concerning illness and healing. The Europeans had few efficacious medical resources, and their curing depended heavily on religious and magical faith: masses, prayers to the saints, rosary beads, holy water, and miracles wrought by priests and folk curers. The indoctrination of African slaves by Catholic priests focused on curing, which exploited the miracle-yielding power of the Christian pantheon to the utmost (Sandoval, 1956). Conversely, the Europeans availed themselves of their subjects' magic, which was not distinguished from religion. In fact, the Europeans defined African and Indian religion not merely as magic but as evil magic. "It is in this trance," writes Gustavo Otero, referring to the first days of the conquest, "that the conquerors became the conquered" (1951: 128). That restless dialectic of magical counterattributions persists in popular culture to the present day.

Colonization and enslavement inadvertently delivered a special mystical power to the underdog of colonial society—the power of mystic evil as embodied in the Christians' fear of the devil. The quasi-Manichaean dualistic cosmology of the conquerors coexisted with the polytheistic or animistic monism of the African slaves and Indians, so that the conquerors stood to the conquered as God did to the devil. Thus, the popular religion of Spanish America was stamped with ethnic and class dualisms of this momentous order —ever susceptible to mercurial inversions in accordance with the shifting currents of caste and class power.

The Inquisition was founded in Cartagena in the early seventeenth century for reasons that included the Church Fathers' judgment of the colony as the "most vicious and sinful in the Spanish Dominions, [with] the faith on the point of destruction" (Lea, 1908 :456). Female slaves served as healers to such exalted personages as the bishop of Cartagena and the inquisitors themselves, while others were lashed when their occult powers were defined as evil, especially when epidemics of witchcraft were raging. Male sorcerers (brujos) became important leaders in the runaway slave camps (palenques} which caused the authorities endless concern (Borrego Pla, 1973 :27, 83; Tejado Fernandez, 1954:117-32). As intermediaries for Satan, such leaders supposedly initiated their converts in a ritual that mocked Christian baptism and denied God, the saints, and the Virgin Mary in order to achieve salvation in the afterlife and wealth and power in the here and now. This system of belief expresses the specter of social inversion. Teleologically ordered by the Supreme God, the hierarchy of social forms defined by class, color, and sex engendered its mirror image in the fears or hopes of an underworld allied with Satan.

Blacks were notorious for their militantly anti-Christian outbursts, which were macabrely ritualized in the sine qua non of slavery, flogging; at such times it was not unusual for the victim to cry, "I denounce God!" (Medina, 1889:106; cf., Palmer, 1975). They also destroyed symbols of the church—hardly surprising in a society in which, for example, a woman slave owner might measure the duration of a flogging by the time it took her to recite her rosary (Meiklejohn, 1968:216).

Writing in 1662, the chief inquisitor attributed much of the sorcery and idolatry in the mining districts to the heedless materialism of the mineowners, who "live only for profit. . . and keep watch only that the slaves accomplish their daily labor and care for nothing else" (Medina, 1889:12,0). Ostensibly, this sorcery could not only kill and maim people but also destroy the fruits of the earth—a claim still heard in connection with alleged devil pacts made by plantation laborers in the southern Cauca Valley. The pact will increase their productivity and their wage, but renders the canefield barren. Yet, the same laborers, working as peasants on their own or their neighbors' plots around the plantations or as independent subsistence dwellers in the jungles of the Pacific coast, reputedly spurn such pacts. Zaragoza, the mining area referred to, was the scene of one of Colombia's greatest slave revolts, which, according to observers, attempted to exterminate the whites and destroy the mines, as well (Vazquez de Espinosa, 1948 :34i).

The spasmodic moment that bridged the lash and the cry of renunciation of the master's God epitomizes the slaves' devil. He can become a figure of solace and power in that war of attrition against the African's culture and humanity itself. In their devil worship, the slaves appropriated their enemy's enemy. Ironically, through its very attempts at suppression, the Church indirectly validated devil worship and invested it with power. By acknowledging fear of the slaves' spiritual powers, the credulous Spanish inadvertently delivered a powerful instrument to their bondsmen. The Spaniards believed that the devil had spawned the heathen African and that the slaves were part of his ministry. The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were, after all, the most intense years of the witch cult in Western Europe, the Counter-Reformation, and the Inquisition—an epoch in which the whole of Christendom trembled before the threat of the diabolic and the magician's manipulation of nature.

Ambiguously but persistently, Europeans equated slave folklore and religion, African identity, with the devil (cf., Genovese, 1974: 159-284). But for the African slave the devil was not necessarily the vengeful spirit of evil. He was also a figure of mirth and a powerful trickster. As Melville J. Herskovits pointed out, West Africans understood the European devil as their divine trickster, and their moral philosophy resisted the sharp dichotomy of good and evil espoused by the missionaries (195 8:2 5 3). Today, along the virtually isolated rivers of the Colombian Pacific coast, where blacks were largely left to fend for themselves after emancipation, they have, not one, but several devils, who tempt rather than threaten. The idea of hell among the blacks of the Raposo River only vaguely corresponds to the Christian idea; some people place it in the sky (Pavy, 1967:2,34). Finding their spirits defined as devils or one in particular defined as the devil, the blacks did not readily attribute evil to the "devil," at least not at first. And even if they did, the attribution could have signified hostility to the new order.

Describing the Apo ceremony among the Ashanti, William Bosman wrote during the late seventeenth century:

Conjurors and Miracle-Mongers are no strange things amongst the Negroes: they firmly believe in them, but in a different manner from our European Ridiculous Opinionists; who are persuaded no Conjuror can do any feats without the help of the Devil. For on the contrary, the Negroes do not doubt but that 'tis a gift of God, and though in reality it is a downright cheat, yet they, ignorant of the Fraud, swallow it as a Miracle, and above Humane power; but that the Devil may not in the least participate of the Honour, they ascribe it all to God. [1967:157-58]

Whereas the Spanish ascribed it to the devil! Perturbed by the purely formal character of baptism and conversion, which impeded rather than sustained indoctrination, the outstanding Jesuit Father Alonso de Sandoval wrote during the early seventeenth century from his post in Cartagena: "They worship the devil. . . and when sick they invoke the names of Jesus and Maria" (1956 1, 82). As for "Guinea," he writes, there the devil held such sway and had so many aides that those few people inclined to the Christian faith died without remedy from sorcery or poison. Yet, by his own testimony, it was impossible to proselytize without reinforcing the pagan premises of the potential neophytes.

The enforcement of Christianity entailed those almost insuperable contradictions that made social control difficult for colonialists everywhere. The authorities constrained or suppressed some of the most public expressions of popular religion—for example, the feast days and funerals organized by the black cofiadias (religious brotherhoods) and cabildos (councils)—which augmented the solidarity of slaves and free blacks, encouraged liberation, and maintained an African tradition in the New World (Acosta Saignes, 1967:202-5; Bastide, 1971 9). Yet, paradoxically, one of the reasons for allowing the formation of such cofiadias and cabildos in the first place had been to further control over the black population (Bastide, 1971; Ortiz, 1921).

The scanty accounts of Christianization suggest that conversion and consolidation of belief remained little more than a formality throughout the entire epoch of slavery. Indeed, Sandoval (1956:198) echoed the common observation that the slave owners regarded Christianized slaves as more rebellious and as poorer workers than those not indoctrinated and would pay less for them (Sandoval, 1956:198; cf., Bowser, 1974 9; King, 1939:16-17). Whites were not only disinclined to buy Christianized slaves but tried to prevent their conversion, at times telling them that baptism was bad. According to Jose Toribio Medina, slave owners, reluctant to pay the costs of lengthy inquiries and penalties, encouraged their slaves to disappear if they were on the Inquisition's wanted list (1889). As a result, an underground African or quasi-African religion seems to have flourished, at least during the early years, syncretized with ardent faith in the miracle powers of Christ and the saints—powerful spirits who could be appealed to for earthly succor.

In 1771 the Bishop of Popayan, capital of the Cauca region of south-west Colombia, complained bitterly that his attempts to catechize the slaves and prevent their being worked on Sundays and feast days encountered the firm opposition of the slave owners. He believed that clerical mine speculators were identifying too closely with the exploiters of their slave flocks (King, 1939:217). The right of the slaves to rest on feast days, of which there was at least one a week in addition to Sundays, was hotly disputed by the Cauca mine owners during the eighteenth century. Yet, in a study of the health of slaves in New Granada, David Lee Chandler concludes that for many slaves the Church's insistence on rest days "must have . . . prolonged their lives" (1972:238). On these days they could also earn the wherewithal to buy their freedom, but many Cauca slave owners responded by reducing the food and clothing ration of the slaves. In these circumstances the feast days may have inclined the slaves favorably toward the Church and added a religious rationale to their opposition to their masters.

Priests were in short supply, and few gave much attention to Christianizing slaves. "As a result," writes Norman Meiklejohn, "many of Colombia's Negroes were blithely ignorant of Christianity's true meaning and of its moral precepts" (1968:287,- cf., Pons, 1806, i: 160). Yet surely this "ignorance" cannot be explained only by the shortage of priests. Black popular religion could hardly endorse slavery and all it implied, nor could the slaves remain content with equality in God's eyes but not in their own. But only with the breakdown of the colonial hegemony and the power of the Church could a radical interpretation of Christianity surface fully, as it did in the chiliastic doctrine espoused by the radical liberals from the 1840s onward. In the opinion of Ramon Mercado, native of Cali and Liberal party governor of the Cauca region between 1850 and 1852, it was precisely Christianity in its true sense that was astir among the oppressed classes as a result of their condition and the authorities' abuse of doctrine. The slave owners and their priests taught a perversion of Christianity, which eventually facilitated their overthrow. His accusation was leveled not against Christianity, which he saw as innately liberating, but against the slave owners and the Church, whose preaching "was reduced to the idea of a terrifying God so as to exalt the large landowners, inculcate blind respect for the privileged classes, . . . combat with the threat of eternal punishment in hell the libertarianism threatening their hegemony, . . . and to erect as sins the slightest action of the poor and devalued classes" (1853 :xi-xii, Ixxix). As Mercado astutely observed, it became a moot point who was practicing idolatry, the rulers or the ruled. The tremendous power of the slave owners, nowhere greater than in Cauca, engendered a religious fanaticism prone to violence.

With the impulse set afoot by the unsettling conditions of the French Revolution and the Wars of Independence from Spain, the diabolical God of the slave owners spawned an antithetical vision of the holy cause among the subject classes—a radical Catholic Utopia, anarchist and egalitarian, founded in the sacred ways of nature. Confidently assuming the support of the masses, Mercado declared, "We have to drag into the light of Christianity the iniquities that they have committed against the people. The people know that their rights should not be at the mercy of rulers, but that they are immanent in nature, inalienable and sacred" (1853 : Ixxix).

snip-------

(pp. 41-46)

https://www.amazon.com/Devil-Commodity-Fetishism-South-America/dp/0807871338

Recommendations

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I remain flabbergasted by how ingrained racism is Effete Snob Feb 2023 #1
Racism is certainly appallingly pervasive, just pops up everywhere. Hortensis Feb 2023 #52
It kind of does matter, though. White people fall into two categories ... Whiskeytide Feb 2023 #68
Possibility of New Job people Feb 2023 #2
I do get sick of stupid people. Ignorance, laziness and greed: no one race has a monopoly. DFW Feb 2023 #3
That has the ring of truth Hekate Feb 2023 #29
:) +100 as the station chief weighs in gently. Hortensis Feb 2023 #57
I always weigh in gently, but I make it easy on myself DFW Feb 2023 #73
Sounds like a great place with great, and fortunate people. Hortensis Feb 2023 #76
My man in Geneva is very fortunate to be where he is. DFW Feb 2023 #129
Yes. I can't even live in a mostly white neighborhood ismnotwasm Feb 2023 #4
I moved to a white rural county in CA, no less. Here's what I found. usonian Feb 2023 #9
And hanging on mostly white social media sites gets even worse Hortensis Feb 2023 #53
Isn't DU a mostly white social media site? hunter Feb 2023 #88
Yes. ismnotwasm Feb 2023 #103
There's no way in hell I'd ever move back to the 99% affluent white community I grew up in. hunter Feb 2023 #91
See, this is the way ismnotwasm Feb 2023 #104
All the fucking time. Aristus Feb 2023 #5
+1000 Diamond_Dog Feb 2023 #12
+1,000,000 ismnotwasm Feb 2023 #36
This. And it won't stop until more of us admit it. yardwork Feb 2023 #65
+++++++ LuckyCharms Feb 2023 #74
A small pointless defense of Honey Boo Boo. betsuni Feb 2023 #117
Absolutely. cilla4progress Feb 2023 #6
I am a white woman, I feel much safer and more comfortable in a room that's all Black people but me Walleye Feb 2023 #7
Yes, I am white and sick of ellie Feb 2023 #8
Do you see the racism in your comments? Sympthsical Feb 2023 #10
Sure TexasBushwhacker Feb 2023 #11
I'd delete it Sympthsical Feb 2023 #14
I disagree. I think we need lots more OPs like this. yardwork Feb 2023 #66
+1000 Solomon Feb 2023 #70
It's just rewritten Catholicism Sympthsical Feb 2023 #71
Well said. BlackSkimmer Feb 2023 #80
I don't see it that way at all, though I agree with many of your points. yardwork Feb 2023 #84
There's nothing wrong with being Catholic. old as dirt Feb 2023 #85
My entire family is Catholic Sympthsical Feb 2023 #100
Always thought the Hamilton Walk might be fun. old as dirt Feb 2023 #116
In the U.S.A. the Catholic Church is as diverse and as divided as the U.S.A. in general. hunter Feb 2023 #118
I was just keeping it short Sympthsical Feb 2023 #122
In the Province of Popayán, ... old as dirt Feb 2023 #134
+1. N/T obnoxiousdrunk Feb 2023 #98
Nailed it fescuerescue Feb 2023 #112
I also hope your job situation improves. WDLAL Feb 2023 #45
To my mind it's about the culture, cilla4progress Feb 2023 #27
What about "white culture" is offensive? Sympthsical Feb 2023 #50
In historical writings, ... old as dirt Feb 2023 #59
Ok let's unpack, shall we? cilla4progress Feb 2023 #108
Very thoughtful post. K&R. GoodRaisin Feb 2023 #37
This thread is fascinating. BlackSkimmer Feb 2023 #43
Thank you for this comment. WDLAL Feb 2023 #44
Apparently no for people who don't realize that white on white Hortensis Feb 2023 #54
Racism is a by-product of a power structure ismnotwasm Feb 2023 #107
:) Right. Presumably, if all those who're sick of white people Hortensis Feb 2023 #111
I'm guessing your post will be studiously ignored. EX500rider Feb 2023 #130
:) I glanced down this sorry thread and noticed the typical Hortensis Feb 2023 #131
Thank you, you're totally on point. nt Raine Feb 2023 #56
Yeah, This RobinA Feb 2023 #58
as usual, spot on m8 Celerity Feb 2023 #60
This. It's like the "noble savage" cliche, even if unintended. Oneironaut Feb 2023 #79
That is the first phrase that came to mind Sympthsical Feb 2023 #99
Immersion in another culture GusBob Feb 2023 #105
Also like the decisions to appoint someone treestar Feb 2023 #93
OH DON'T EVEN GET ME STARTED Skittles Feb 2023 #13
I know how you feel. WinstonSmith4740 Feb 2023 #15
What I get sick of Demobrat Feb 2023 #16
Then there are the ones who want them to BUILD THAT WALL! TexasBushwhacker Feb 2023 #20
It Was Always Thus RobinA Feb 2023 #64
I've lived in diverse neighborhoods all of my life GenThePerservering Feb 2023 #17
Me too. Demobrat Feb 2023 #18
Lol, yes. When we moved away from extremely diverse Los Angeles, Hortensis Feb 2023 #63
Nope. Just like I never get sick of black people or brown people of other people. I do get kelly1mm Feb 2023 #19
That right there GenThePerservering Feb 2023 #120
Stupid, racist white people. I am reading "Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage niyad Feb 2023 #21
Oh, god, YES. I'm white, too. TygrBright Feb 2023 #22
I don't rabid_decline Feb 2023 #23
I get exhausted oer it at times... rabid_decline Feb 2023 #24
Yes, I do. Elessar Zappa Feb 2023 #25
I'm half white and I look white. So yeah, damn near every day. Iggo Feb 2023 #26
I really don't care where anyone is from. Mr. Evil Feb 2023 #28
Exactly TRUE Laura PourMeADrink Feb 2023 #31
+1 treestar Feb 2023 #49
+1. N/T obnoxiousdrunk Feb 2023 #124
60% of US population white. Non-white 40%. Seems Laura PourMeADrink Feb 2023 #30
Yascha Mounk Author, "The Great Experiment" littlemissmartypants Feb 2023 #32
I get sick of Right Wingers and Far Left Trolls that are closer to Right Wing than Liberal JI7 Feb 2023 #33
+100000000000000 betsuni Feb 2023 #40
+1 treestar Feb 2023 #48
This message was self-deleted by its author AllyCat Feb 2023 #34
No. johnp3907 Feb 2023 #35
Yep. Sick of their entitlement, racism, heads up their asses Sky Jewels Feb 2023 #38
I'm white and I like white people Tickle Feb 2023 #39
No I don't. I get sick of all people in general. nt Raine Feb 2023 #41
LoL 🤣 me too NT Tickle Feb 2023 #42
If you think you won't find non-whites who think just malaise Feb 2023 #46
how is this one whit any better treestar Feb 2023 #47
"It's a form of virtue signalling" LexVegas Feb 2023 #77
Bingo. BlackSkimmer Feb 2023 #115
The difference is: intheflow Feb 2023 #78
how does that make it OK to be treestar Feb 2023 #92
"Not all white people!!!" "White Lives Matter!" intheflow Feb 2023 #138
When is the "institutional racism" over treestar Feb 2023 #139
(HD) SON PALENQUE / YO ME VOY : AMPLIFICADO (COLOMBIA) EN VIVO old as dirt Feb 2023 #51
being Asian American, it's not just white people, stupidity runs rampant in all countries JuJuChen Feb 2023 #55
Only sick of angry, entitled white men. milestogo Feb 2023 #61
I get sick of stupidity, whatever the source. NT Patton French Feb 2023 #62
Even in our semirural blood-red GA county, about 30% vote Democratic Hortensis Feb 2023 #67
Yep, lots of them tavernier Feb 2023 #69
Vacancy rates GusBob Feb 2023 #72
Man, I miss working for smart Black people. intheflow Feb 2023 #75
I had a post on FB the other day where they were talking black people and a string LizBeth Feb 2023 #81
I like to think because I'm mucifer Feb 2023 #82
No. And I think saying that is weird. Happy Hoosier Feb 2023 #83
Seriously I am fed up with stupid kacekwl Feb 2023 #86
Sure, I get frustrated with other white people mvd Feb 2023 #87
No, I'm just sick of self righteous people forthemiddle Feb 2023 #89
Totally agree. nt Raine Feb 2023 #95
Sometimes it's ForgedCrank Feb 2023 #96
What is self righteous about acknowledging whiteness as a destructive social system? ismnotwasm Feb 2023 #106
This is how we lose elections. jalan48 Feb 2023 #90
People want to work. Employers don't want to pay workers a fair wage. Initech Feb 2023 #94
The premise and substance of this thread are crap. Bonx Feb 2023 #97
Embrace it my friend - this is the direction the left wants to go... Fix The Stupid Feb 2023 #102
Its virtue signaling. Its not real. nt LexVegas Feb 2023 #110
Not for me it's not ismnotwasm Feb 2023 #113
Trump is a cartoon of whiteness. How he dresses, what he eats, how he talks, everything. betsuni Feb 2023 #114
If you think it should be deleted, report it TexasBushwhacker Feb 2023 #132
I don't think it should be deleted TheProle Feb 2023 #140
Back atcha. Iggo Feb 2023 #125
No. I get sick of systemic racism, and as others have said, stupid people, or all kinds. Caliman73 Feb 2023 #101
I'd never put it like that. I can be well aware of my privilege and the political bent... Silent3 Feb 2023 #109
To figure out if this is offensive.... EX500rider Feb 2023 #119
I think this is shallow and offensive. My answer to you is "No. I don't" WarGamer Feb 2023 #121
+1 Kaleva Feb 2023 #128
You're trying too hard. BannonsLiver Feb 2023 #123
YES. My damn relatives. Siblings and their kids. Racist ignorant assholes, all. n/t CousinIT Feb 2023 #126
Most of us DUers in LTRs are in a relationship with someone of our own race Kaleva Feb 2023 #127
I don't understand the accusations in this thread that saying you're sick of your own group is the betsuni Feb 2023 #133
Quite an exaggerated conflation of events hey? GusBob Feb 2023 #135
So you think if a black person posted they "were sick of black people" on this site.. EX500rider Feb 2023 #136
I suggest the OP consider looking into the mirror every day and punch themselves in the face MichMan Feb 2023 #137
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