Santeria - From Africa To Miami Via Cuba Five Hundred Years of Worship (Diana Gonzalez Kirby & Sara Maria Sanchez) PDF
Santeria - From Africa To Miami Via Cuba Five Hundred Years of Worship (Diana Gonzalez Kirby & Sara Maria Sanchez) PDF
Santeria - From Africa To Miami Via Cuba Five Hundred Years of Worship (Diana Gonzalez Kirby & Sara Maria Sanchez) PDF
Santeria
From Africa to Miami Via Cuba;
Five Hundred Years of Worship
By
Diana Gonzalez Kirby, Assistant Professor
and
Sara Maria Sinchez, Associate Professor
Santeria is an ancient religion with African roots. The slaves
brought it to Cuba and the Cubans brought it to the United States where
membership is estimated at 60,000 mostly Catholic Cuban immigrants.
The religion is prevalent among Cubans living in Miami, where 7.1
percent of the Cuban population utilizes the services of a santero.' This
may be a conservative estimate given the present cloak of secrecy that
surrounds the religion, and the unwillingness of many to admit adherence to the cult.
Santeria is controversial, particularly in South Florida, where the
ordinances denouncing the practice. City of Hialeah (Florida) residents
and the City Council have opposed the Church of Lukumf Babali Ay6
for its animal sacrifice rituals, spirit possession and perceived links with
voodoo and black magic. The civil unrest may be sparking an unpreceDiana Gonzalez Kirby is an Assistant Professor in the Otto Richter
Library at the University of Miami in Coral Gables. She is the
Bibliographer for the Department of Anthropology and has a second
Masters degree in Anthropology from the University of Florida in
Gainesville.
Sara Marfa Sanchez is an Associate Professor in the Otto Richter
Library at the University of Miami in Coral Gables. She is Subject
Specialist for Latin American Studies and the Bibliographer for the
Graduate School of International Studies, whose Institute of Interamerican Studies features a Cuban Studies Program. She has a second
Masters degree from the Interamerican Studies Institute at the University of Miami.
37
38 TEQUESTA
with his favorite foods, dances and ritual offerings, as did the sea
goddess Yemaya, along with the love goddess Oshdn, Eleggua the
trickster, ObatalA the patriarch and Oggin the warrior.
Five hundred years later, the diaspora continues and thrives today in
Miami. In 1980, faced with internal economic pressure, Fidel Castro
expelled 125,000 Cubans from his island-nation through the Mariel
Boatlift. This last immigration attracted media attention following
rumors of newly arrived prisoners and mental patients. But later we
learned the "Marielitos" were no different from earlier Cuban immigrants. Their aspirations, hopes and goals were the same as those of
their predecessors, namely, to find work and to live in a democratic and
free society. The main difference between Mariel refugees and the first
Cuban immigrants was demographic; the 1980 Mariel refugees represented segments of the Cuban population which had been underrepresented in the past: the young working classes and the blacks. 6
Cultural and Historical Beginnings.
Santeriais well known in Miami and in other Cuban-American communities, but it is less understood elsewhere in the United States. Even
less is known about the religion prior to the abolition of slavery in
colonial Cuba. The gap in the colonial literature has been attributed to
class and race-conscious Cuban colonials who considered Santeria a
social and moral evil, a pagan cult unworthy of serious study or
scholarship. 7 However, a surge in scholarship surfaced following the
abolition of slavery when blacks were assimilated into society. The
impetus for research on Afro-American cultures thus began with the
works of Nina Rodrigues,8 Arthur Ramos 9 and Roger Bastide in
Brazil, 10 Melville J. Herskovits in Haiti and Dahomey, 1 1 ,1 2 Feando
Ortiz 13 and Lydia Cabrera in Cuba.14
The Afro-Cuban studies by Ortiz 15 and Cabrera, 16 considered classics among today's scholars, provide the foundation for our paper.
Their writings span over a century of recorded observations of rituals,
traditions and folktales among African peoples and their descendants in
Cuba and Miami. In addition, current interest in Afro-Cuban-American
studies is reflected in the works of at least three Cuban-born anthropologists living in Miami: Rafael Martfnez, 17 Lydia Cabrera'8 and Mercedes
Sandoval' 9, who continue to monitor the evolution of the cult in ecile,
39
European and Cuban intellectuals...," and it was these Black and white
40 TEQUESTA
Renewed interest in Santeria took hold among worshippers and
scholars alike shortly after 125,000 Cuban refugees arrived in Miami
during the 1980 Mariel Boatlift. The majority of Mariel refugees
eventually remained in Miami where they joined relatives and got on
with the task of earning a living. The influx of new talent seemed to give
impetus to the interest in the arts, literature, and drama. Thus, the Mariel
refugees of the 1980s reawakened in the Cuban-American commuity a
craving for the literature, art, music, and religion of their native land.T
Slavery in the Americas.
Slavery in the Americas played a significant part in the development
of Santerta: Slavery was the process by which individuals were separated from their own culture and it provided the mechanism for culture
contact between two fundamentally distinct societies.
Cuba holds a special place in Caribbean history, since slavery existed there almost until 1900.2 1 In view of this, the first important fact
to be borne in mind is the volume and continuity of the slave trade.22
The first African slaves reached the New World as early as 1502,23
and large-scale introduction of African slaves to Cuba dates back to
1524, when the Spanish Crown allowed Cuban colonials to import 300
Africans to work in gold mines. 24 Unable to endure substandard work
conditions, Cuba's Taino and Ciboney Indians (numbering 50,000)
were quickly decimated by disease and ill-treatment; thus Cuba's need
for slaves rose precipitously in the last quarter of the eighteenth century,
when a free market economy and increased demand from Spain stimulated sugarcane and coffee production. 25
Conservative estimates place the total number of slaves transported
to the Americas at 9 million, 26 of these, 1.3 million reached Cuba
roughly between 1512 and 1864. 27 Toward the end of the slave trade in
1871 one third of the Cuban population was black, including 528,798
"free colored" persons. 28 In addition, the slave trade continued long
after slavery was abolished in 1888, when a new class of mercenary
slavers formed to supply new shipments of Africans to receptive
Caribbean plantation societies.
Tracing the ethnic origins of Afro-American slaves to their exact
provenience in Africa has been a difficult task given the inaccuracy of
archival records. For example, blacks taken from various regions in
Africa were embarked in coastal ports and thereafter identified as
originating from these ports and not from their true tribal or state
41
42 TEQUESTA
of the slave trade.3 8 Bascom's case proves that complex segments of
Nigerian customs were carried substantially intact from Africa to
Cuba. 39
The language and behaviors people shared in common in Africa and
the New World left no doubt that southwestern Nigeria had been the
birthplace of the great majority of Cuban slaves. Comparative studies
of African and Afro-American societies therefore helped to fill in the
gaps in the archival record and became the standard for establishing the
ethnic origins of slaves in America40 By documenting religious rites in
Nigeria and in Cuba decades beyond the end of the slave trade,
researchers established beyond the shadow of a doubt the common
bonds between Cuban blacks and the Yoruba in southwestern Nigeria. 41
The Catholic Church
We've examined the impact of slavery on African religious and
cultural retentions in the New World. The Church also played an
important part in the evolution of Santeria and other African culture
traits among the Afro-Cubans, who, as slaves, encountered two types of
religious environments in the colonies: Catholic and Protestant America. 42
In Protestant America, the African slave was accepted as a member
of the church following religious indoctrination. Missionary work
eradicated Africanisms, or at best led to a "reinterpretation" of ideology
and creed. 43
In Catholic Latin America, on the other hand, the slave needed only
to learn a few prayers and ritual gestures to be granted baptism. Proselytization was, broadly speaking, less intense, and African features survived more easily in Catholic America where slaves worshipped their
gods surreptitiously during Catholic prayer group assemblies, or cofradias.4
As a result of the Catholic Church's approach to religious conversion, many African religions therefore coexisted with Catholicism in
Latin America and the Caribbean. In addition, this mutual coexistence
was made possible by the striking similarity in function and form
between Catholicism and African beliefs, specifically the Yoruba
religion, in that both ideologies acknowledge the existence of one
unique God and creator who remains remote from mankind. It is
mankind's remoteness from God which prompts the faithful to seek the
aid of intermediaries like the saints, angels, and the African orisha,who
43
44 TEQUESTA
lished networks of religious associations which served to foster transmission of languages and traditions. 49 These religious centers temples, schools and mutual aid societies, or "nations" - enhanced
solidarity among slaves and reinforced the survival of African cultural
patterns among them and their descendants.
The demographic distribution of slaves in urban and rural Cuba also
influenced the nature and degree of African retentions. Santerfa flourished in the Cuban capital of Havana and in other towns in Western
Cuba. To assess the impact of urbanization on acculturation, Herskovits compared the retention of Africanisms to settlement patterns in
the New World from rural areas to urban townships. 50 Syncretism, or
the blending of cultural traits, took hold in the urban areas where life
conditions were conducive to carrying on customs and beliefs.
The Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, the first public worship
center associated with Santeria in South Florida, formerly located
in Hialeah.
Bastide also looked at settlement patterns in 1971, and wrote:
..,[The Lukumi] were restricted to the towns; in the country,
they could only exist if they spread over an entire district, which seems
to have been rare. 51
In the rural areas then, plantation slaves lived in relative isolation
from other plantations, and this lack of inter-plantation interaction
evidently precluded the maintenance of common religious and ethnic
associations. Religious nations flourished in the towns:
45
...[where] wealthy families maintained an army of servants. This disproportion was advantageous to the black
servants, who were able to retain their customs regarding
food habits, associations,festivities,
religious rites,
etc. 52
Thus, urban slaves had better access to ritual gatherings in the cities
where houses were closely-packed, than out in the country where the
rural slave population was distributed among relatively isolated plantations. Religious syncretism became more pronounced in the towns
where slaves, freed blacks and their descendants formed associations,
and where the anonymity of city life fostered participation in ceremonies in the guise of the Catholic mass. Rural blacks, on the other hand,
had to hold secret meetings at night and away from the plantations and
overseers, and as a result, Santeria tended not to flourish out in the
countryside where there were many barriers to its free expression. 5
Other important economic factors came into play in the city, such as
access to steady sources of income for priests' fees. Bums noted the
African influence permeating towns throughout the Caribbean where
blacks worked as domestic servants, peddlers, mechanics, and artisans
whose urban living offered ample opportunities for practicing Santeria.54
46 TEQUESTA
stratum, although Sandoval documents the participation of members of
the middle class. 59 And in exile, Santeria'sgrowing popularity among
Latins in Miami can be linked directly to the changing needs of the
immigrant population, among whom many find in Santeria a:
link to the past and a positive means of coping with many
of the adjustmentpressures imposed by the new social, economic andpolitical order.59
Although early Cuban Santeria worshippers consisted of slaves and
their descendants, its popularity eventually crossed socioeconomic
lines. Santeria lore gradually reached all levels of Cuban society
following generations of intimate contact between black domestic
servants and white middle upper class families. However, the process
also was hastened by the Cuban colonials' reliance upon the santero for
spiritual and medical advice in cases where neither Catholic priests nor
medical practitioners obtained results.
When Fidel Castro rose to power and reconstructed Cuban society
by establishing a socialist government, close to one million persons,
representing one tenth of the population fled the country. Unable or
unwilling to return to a communist Cuba, many Cubans have endured
psychological, social and economic strains. The pressures of living in
exile, including the language barrier, downward social and economic
mobility, separation from family and homeland and anxiety about what
the future may bring have instilled in many estranged Cubans the need
to strengthen socio-cultural practices and beliefs.
Consequently, Santeriaritual has become increasingly popular among
exiles living in Florida and elsewhere. Sandoval attributes the popularity of the religion to its functional role. 6 Santerfa seems to be taking the
place of the vanishing Cuban extended family by bringing together
individuals who relate to each other as kin during the course of planning
and participating in festivities and other social gatherings.
Another reason for the growing popularity of Santeriaamong Cuban
immigrants in South Florida can be attributed to the activities of the
Vatican in the 1960s. When the Vatican revised the Catholic hagiography and repudiated several saints who were previously revered in
Cuba, including St. Lazarus (Babalu-Ay6) and St. Barbara (Shang6).
many Catholics simply joined the ranks of Santeria to continue to
worship their favorite saints.6 1
The anonymity of exile makes it easy for many to practice Santeria
in relative safety; Latins are not eager to admit involvement in the cult
because doing so tends to reinforce the stereotype many non-Latins
47
have about people who believe in Santeria;but Latins are more tolerant
of such behaviors and are very likely to seek the aid of all healers,
including priests, physicians and santeros.62
Over the centuries, social, cultural, and political factors have altered
the form and function of the cult. We've examined the roles played by
slavery, the Catholic Church and the Cuban exile experience in shaping
the current status of Santeria. Of equal importance has been the impact
of Santeria and other Hispanic traits on the development of Miami.
The Latinization of the Greater Miami area began during the 1960s
migration of Cuban exiles, although constant waves of other Latins
seeking refuge from political turmoil in their countries continue to
reinforce the view of Miami as a gateway to the Americas.
Miami has evolved into a unique city with a distinct Latin flavor as
a result of its geography and demography. Latin-owned businesses,
health clinics, Spanish-language media and banking are but a few of the
many services and products now being marketed by Miami Latins to
other Latins and non-Latins throughout the Americas.
The commercialization of Latin businesses and services is a relatively recent development in a population that is accustomed to approaching professional interactions in a more personal and informal
manner. The shift in interpersonal relations among clients seeking
services, for example, is evident in the case of Santeria,where cash has
replaced gifts of food, clothing or housewares for payment of services
rendered.
The proliferation of botdnicas, those Cuban flower and religious
stores found along 8th Street and Flagler Street in Miami, have no
precedent in Cuban history.63 Botdnicas are retail outlets specializing
in herbs, roots and religious items for use by santeros and their clients
in healing rituals and special ceremonies. We have mentioned the rise
in Santeriaritual following the 1980 Mariel Boatlift which introduced
new santeros and helped to renew interest in the cult among Cubans
living in Miami. Even a cursory review of the listings in the Miami
telephone directory under "Religious Goods" shows significant statistical increases in the number of botdnicas since the Mariel Boatlift. In
1980, only twelve such outlets were listed in the Miami directory,
whereas close to forty now appear in the 1987-88 directory, representing a 233 percent increase in seven years.
Although botdnicas are seen as Cuban specialty stores, this was not
the case in pre-Castro's Cuba, where botdnicasdid not thrive to the same
extent as in Miami. 64 According to eyewitness accounts, curative. 11.
48 TEQUESTA
As they look towards Cuba for signs of a return to democracy, many
exiles rely upon Santeria to make the passage of time tolerable. Thus,
the syncretic process continues, but initiation fees are high, and upwardly mobile Cubans perceive Santeria as a glamorous luxury.
Unfortunately, exploitation of worshippers has become a reality as
unscrupulous self-proclaimed priests target the needs of desperate
souls. Nonetheless, as long as suffering prevails, people will continue
to seek relief, whether in the form of magic or religion. 66 In view of this,
Santeria shall prevail as long as it continues to fulfill the needs of
Cubans and other Latin immigrants, refugees and exiles.
Loss of land and country, severed family ties and economic as well
as social hardship are contributing factors to the popularity of Santeria
in Miami. Although there have been studies on Santeria in places like
New York,6 7 research is needed to determine if Sandoval's findings are
valid in other American cities with large Cuban communities. It will be
interesting to trace the flexibility of the religion with time and to test its
ability to heal the alienated and the emotionally distressed.
There is little doubt that the future course of Santeriawill influence
the way Floridians feel about the basic laws of religious freedom and the
rights of states to impose restrictions on religious conduct. Although
the legal fate of Pichardo's "dream of a public Santerfa Church remains
unresolved, one thing remains certain. Whatever happens to Pichardo's
church, Santeria fs a centuries-old religion that will endure," 68 especially in a city like Miami, which provides fertile ground for the
continued growth and blending of multiple cultures. 67
Notes
1. Thomas D. Boswell and James R. Curtis, The Cuban-American
Experience (Totowa, NJ: Rowman & Allanheld, 1983), p. 133.
2. Frank Burgos and Carlos Harrison, "Hialeah May Ban Animal
Sacrifices," Miami Herald, 8 September 1987, sec. B, p. 1.
3. Charles V. Wetli and Rafael Martfnez, "Forensic Sciences
Aspects of Santerfa, a Religious Cult of African Origin," Journalof
ForensicScience (July): 514.
4. James R. Curtis, "Santerfa: Persistence and Change in an Afrocuban Cult Religion," in Objects of Special Devotion: Fetishism in
PopularCulture, ed. Ray B. Browne (Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling
Green University Press, 1982), p. 347.
5. FloridaStatutes (Tallahassee, Fla.: Division of Statutory Revi-
49
50 TEQUESTA
toricas, 1972), p. 179.
22. Bastide, African Civilisations,p. 5.
23. E. Bradford Bums, Latin America: a Concise Interpretive
History (Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1972), p. 20
24. Arthur F. Corwin, Spain and the Aboliton of Slavery in Cuba,
1817-1886, Latin American Monographs, no. 9 (Austin: Institute of
Latin American Studies, University of Texas Press, 1967), p. 9.
25. Margaret E. Crahan and Franklin W. Knight, Africa and the
Caribbean: the Legaciesofa Link (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979), p.7.
26. Philip D. Curtin and Jan Vansina, "Sources of the Nineteenth
Century Atlantic Slave Trade," JournalofAfrican History 5 (1964): pp.
185-208.
27. Franklin Knight, Slave Society in Cuba During the Nineteenth
Century (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1970), p. 10.
28. Ibid.
29. Rosa Valdes Cruz, Los Ancestral Africano en la Narrativade
Lydia Cabrera(Mexico: Editorial Vasgos, 1974), p. 10.
30. Bastide, African Civilizations, p. 8.
31. Nina Rodrigues, Africanos, 1932.
32. Ramos, Brazil, 1939.
33. Ortiz, Hampa Afro-Cubana, 1973.
34. Herskovits, Life in the HaitianValley, 1937.
35. Bryan Edwards, An HistoricalSurvey of the Island of Saint
Domingo, Together With an Account of the Maroon Negroes in the
Island ofJamaica;and a History of the War in the West Indies, in 1793
and 1794 (London: J. Stockdale, 1801).
36. Melville Herskovits, quoted in Arthur Ramos, Las Culturas
Negras en el Nuevo Mundo (Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Economica,
1943).
37. Ortiz, quoted in Bastide, African Civilisations,p. 94.
38. William Bascom, Two Forms of Afro-Cuban Divination (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1952).
39. Sidney W. Mintz, Forwardto Afro-American Anthropology:
ContemporaryPerspectiuves, edited by Norman E. Whitten and John
F. Szwed (New York: Free Press, 1970), pp. 1-16 passim.
40. Ramos, Las CulturasNegras, 1943, pp. 70-71
41. Mintz, AnthropologicalApproach, 1976, pp. 1-16 passim.
42. Herskovits, African Gods, 1937; Ramos, Las CulturesNegras,
1943; Bastide, African Civilisations,1971; Eugene D. Genovese, Roll,
51
52 TEQUESTA
68. "Exploring the Dark Continent of Santeria; the Ancient Gods of
Africa are Alive and Well in Miami," Tropic, the MiamiHeraldSunday
Magazine, 13 March 1988, pp. 10-12, 19-21.