Orisha
An
Orisha, also spelled
Orisa and
Orixa, is a spirit that reflects one of the manifestations of
Olodumare (God) in the
Yoruba spiritual or
religious system. This religion has found its way throughout the world and is now expressed in several varieties which include
Anago,
Oyotunji,
Candomblé and
Lucumí/Santería. These varieties or spiritual lineages as they are called are practiced throughout areas of
Brazil,
Cuba,
Puerto Rico,
Trinidad and Tobago, the
United States,
Mexico and
Venezuela. As interest in African indigenous religions (spiritual systems) grows, Orisa communities and lineages can be found in parts of
Europe and
Asia as well. While estimates vary, there could be more than 100 million adherents of this spiritual tradition worldwide.
The Orisha faith believes an ultimate deity,
Olorun or
Olodumare, who is removed from the day-to-day affairs of human beings on Earth. Instead, adherents of the religion appeal to specific manifestations of Olodumare in the form of the various Orisha. Ancestors reverence and culture-heroes can also be enlisted for help with day-to-day problems. Faithful believers will also generally consult a
geomantic divination specialist, known as a
babalawo or
Iyanifa, to mediate on their problems. This practice is known as
Ifa, and is an important part of life throughout West Africa and the rest of the world.
UNESCO, the cultural and scientific education arm of the
United Nations, declared Ifa a
Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity in
2005.An important part of the traditional Yoruba faith depends on proper alignment and knowledge of one's
Ori. Ori literally means the head, but in spiritual matters is taken to mean an inner portion of the soul which determines personal destiny and success.
Ase, which also spelled "Axe," "Ashe," or "Ache," is the life-force that runs though all things, living and inanimate. Ase is the power to make things happen. It is an affirmation that is used in greetings and prayers, as well as a concept about spiritual growth. Orisha devotees strive to obtain
Ase through
Iwa-Pele or gentle and good character, in turn they experience alignment with the Ori or what others might call inner peace or satisfaction with life.
Yoruba were brought to the
Americas during the
Atlantic Slave Trade, along many other ethnic nationalities from West, Central, and parts of East Africa. Yoruba religious beliefs are among the most recognizable African-derived traditions in the Americas, perhaps due to the comparatively late arrival of large numbers of Yoruba in the Americas and the conglomerative and spiritually tolerant nature of the faith. The Orisa faith is often closely aligned to the beliefs of the
Gbe ethnic nationalities (including
Fon,
Ewe,
Mahi, and Egun), and there has been centuries of creative cross-fertilization between the faiths both in Africa and in the Americas. In many countries of the African
diaspora, Yoruba and Gbe beliefs have also influenced and become influenced by
Catholicism, and faiths that originate in the Kongo-Angolan cultural region of West-Central Africa. These include
Palo in Cuba and the Dominican Republic,
Quimbanda in Brazil and, according to some sources, the
Petro rites of Haitian
Vodou.
Santeria (or Lukumĺ) is a set of related religious systems that fuse
Catholic beliefs with traditional Yoruba beliefs.
Saints and other Catholic religious figures are used as disguises for
Orishas.
The Orisha pantheon include
Shango,
Olokun,
Ifá,
Yemoja,
Osun,
Obatala,
Ogun,
Ochosi,
Oko,
Soponna,
Oya and
Esu, among countless others. The Yoruba also venerate their
Egungun, or Ancestors,
Ibeji, god of Twins (which is no wonder since the
Yoruba have the world's highest incidence of twin births of any group).
List of Orishas
*
Babalu Aye - deity of disease and illness.
*
Eshu (Ellegua, Exu, Esu, Elegba, Papa Legba) - messenger between human and divine, god of crossroads
*
Obatala (Obatalá, Oxalá, Orixalá, Orisainlá) - father of orishas and humankind
*
Ogoun (Ogún, Ogun, Ogou) - deity of iron, war, labour
*
Olorun (Oldumare) - creator of the universe, sky father
*
Orunmila - deity of wisdom, divination and foresight
*
Oshun (Oshún, Ọṣun, Oxum, Ochun, Osun, Oschun, Erzulie, Erzulie Freda) - goddess of rivers, love, fertility
*
Oxossi (Oxósse, Ocshosi, Osoosi, Ochosi) - hunter and the scout of the orishas
*
Oya (Oyá, Oiá, Iansã, Yansá, Iansan) - goddess of wind, hurricanes, and underworld gates
*
Shango (Shangó, Xango, Changó, Chango, Nago Shango) - warrior god of thunder, sky father
*
Yemaja (Imanja, Imanjá, Jemanja, Yemalla, Yemana, Yemanja, Yemaya, Yemayah, Yemoja, Ymoja, Iemanjá, Nanã, La Sirène, LaSiren, Mami Wata) - mother goddess
Gallery
Image:Iansa.jpg|Iansã, Orixá of wind, changeImage:Nana.jpg|Nanã, The oldest Orixá in CandombléImage:Ibeji.jpg|Pair of IbejiImage:Iemanja4.jpg|Yemaja pictured in Umbanda religionImage:Eleggua2005.jpg|Ellegua worshiped in Santería*
John Mason,
Black Gods - Orisa Studies in the New World *
Baba Ifa Karade,
The Handbook of Yoruba Religious Concepts*
William Bascom,
Sixteen Cowries *
David M. O'Brien,
Animal Sacrifice and Religious Freedom: Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of Hialeah*
James T. Houk,
Spirits, Blood, and Drums: The Orisha Religion of Trinidad. 1995. Temple University Press.
*
Raul Canizares,
Cuban Santeria*
Robert Farris Thompson, "Flash of the Spirit"
*
OrishaNet: A website written by a Lukumi high priest (Babalawo)*
Ile Orunmila Oshun, Luisah Teish's Ile*
Asaforitifa Temple*
Ile Orunmila Temple*
Ijo Orunmila*
Ashe Journal Special section on the Orisha Consciousness Movement
*
Traditional African Religion Communities Temples & Priests in U.S. Listed by Stat*
List of Orishas*
Orisha descriptions*
Lesser known Orishas