Yoruba in Brazil
Yoruba in Brazil
Yoruba in Brazil
Brazilians in Yorubaland
(O Povo Iorubá no Brasil, Os Brasileiros na Yorubalândia)
Ghana During the First World War: The Colonial Administration of Sir Hugh Clifford
Elizabeth Wrangham
Horror in Paradise
Edited by Christopher LaMonica and J. Shola Omotola
Ifá in Yorùbá Thought System
Omotade Adegbindin
Imperialism, Economic Development and Social Change in West Africa
Raymond Dumett
In Search of African Diasporas: Testimonies and Encounters
Paul Tiyambe Zeleza
The Indigenous African Criminal Justice System for the Modern World
Olusina Akeredolu
Intercourse and Crosscurrents in the Atlantic World: Calabar-British Experience
David Lishilinimle Imbua
Issues in African Political Economies
Edited by Toyin Falola and Jamaine Abidogun
Julius Nyerere, Africa’s Titan on a Global Stage: Perspectives from Arusha to Obama
Edited by Ali A. Mazrui and Lindah L. Mhando
“Life Not Worth Living”
Chima J. Korieh
Local Government in South Africa Since 1994
Alexius Amtaika
The Muse of Anomy: Essays on Literature and the Humanities in Nigeria
Femi Osofisan
Narratives of Struggle
John Ayotunde Isola Bewaji
Nollywood: Popular Culture and Narratives of Youth Struggles in Nigeria
Paul Ugor
Pan-Africanism in Ghana: African Socialism, Neoliberalism, and Globalization
Justin Williams
Perspectives on Feminism from Africa
Edited by ’Lai Olurode
Satires of Power in Yoruba Visual Culture
Yomi Ola
The United States’ Foreign Policy in Africa in the 21st Century
Edited by Adebayo Oyebade
The Vile Trade: Slavery and the Slave Trade in Africa
Edited by Abi Alabo Derefaka, Wole Ogundele, Akin Alao, and Augustus Babajide Ajibola
The Yoruba Frontier
Aribidesi Usman
Women, Gender, and Sexualities in Africa
Edited by Toyin Falola and Nana Akua Amponsah
Andrew Barnes
Arizona State University
Bessie House-Soremekun
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Jeremy Levitt
Associate Dean for International Programs and Distinguished Professor
of International Law at Florida A&M University College of Law
Fallou Ngom
Boston University
Steven J. Salm
Xavier University of Louisiana
Edited by
Niyi Afolabi & Toyin Falola
To my dad, John Okanlawon Afolabi, who told me stories about the Aguda as a child even
though I did not understand him at the time.
—Niyi Afolabi
To all the Afro-Brazilian social and religious movements who struggled to keep Yoruba
traditions alive in Brazil despite persecutions.
—Toyin Falola
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tuguese through cultural ties and soulful interactions. It is conceivable in the future
that a collaboration such as this book may go beyond scholarly production and lead
to further strategic partnerships in terms of exchange of visiting professors for a
month or even a semester through such funding outlets as CAPES, CNPQ, Ford,
Mellon, and others.
In an era in which rational people are making every concerted effort to make sense
of their relevance amidst chaotic realities and persistent uncertainties, to the extent
that the concept of a “world order” that was quite common during the Cold War era
until the 1980s, seems to have lost its meaning, one cannot but become wary at the
thought that the next manifestation of world order may actually be spiritual. What-
ever newly found “global” world we might have or desire is faced by another challenge
hitherto neglected in world affairs: terrorism in confusing grades and guises. Instead
of embracing faith and devotion as sources of celebration, veneration, joy, pleasure,
and invocation of higher forces who are often invisible in their spiritual significance
to the Earth and community they protect and harmonize, the world is now dealing
with a category of religious fanaticism so daring that it makes the world cringe on a
daily basis, especially at the sight of many atrocities committed in the name of an
invisible Supreme Being.
Needless to invoke the destructive forces of terrorism that go against the very es-
sence of rationality, humanity, and harmony with cosmic forces. In an ideal situation,
these cosmic forces have the mission to provide balance and to restore and sustain the
natural order of things. Yet the living Yoruba in their mythological, cosmological,
spiritual, and epistemological essences, must continue to seek relevance and harmony
as they navigate their belief in the ultimate good in every human being. It is against
this background that this edited work seeks to appreciate and approximate the differ-
ent locations, spaces, and transformations that the Yoruba and their dispersed cultures
have traversed, whether by accidents of history such as slavery, or by the very act of
resistance and hybridity in order to survive the atrocities of dislocation. It takes only
one visit to Brazil to see that the Yoruba are adaptive and resilient people. From reli-
gion, to culinary skills, music, and expressive arts in general, the northeastern part of
Brazil is quite rich in the manifestations of the Yoruba’s power of hybridizations and
negotiations across the Yoruba diaspora.
The thematic concerns of this volume, though focused on the four main areas of
“Mapping the Yoruba Atlantic,” “Returnees and Resettlements,” “Sacred and Spatial
Circularities,” and “Transatlantic Cultural Connections,” have only scratched the sur-
face. Brazilian-African-American relations remain a gold mine for comparative stud-
ies, especially in the areas of performance, music, architecture, spiritualities, slavery,
health, sports, medicine, sociology, anthropology, alternative energies, environmental
issues, and heritage tourism, among others. The focus here is on the duality of the
experience of slavery and its aftermath. More specifically, instead of studies focused
on unilateral diaspora of Africans in the Americas, and the implicit limitation of such
a perspective in the holistic understanding of the African experience in the Americas,
this volume challenges scholars to make more painstaking efforts not only to be com-
parative for the sake of comparison, but to be truly transatlantic by also examining
the aftermath of slavery and the often neglected historiography of a compelling group
in transatlantic slavery who chose to return to Africa after abolition of slavery, such
as the Agudá (the Yoruba [Catholic] returnees from Brazil), along the western coast of
Africa.
A fundamental issue for Brazilian(ist) scholars is the question of religious syncre-
tism which reverberates throughout Brazilian culture. It is a contested terrain of anal-
ysis. One school of thought suggests that there is nothing like syncretism between the
African and European religious values but more of co-existence. Another claims that
religious syncretism was more of a strategy that has actually permitted the survival of
African religious and cultural value systems in Brazil. Yet this controversy is not lim-
ited to the religious terrain alone. On the spectrum of the Brazilian returnees to Yoru-
baland, there is the issue of authenticity and superiority-inferiority complexes: even
as the indigenes feel a sense of arrogant oppression as exercised by the Brazilians re-
turnees, the returnees also feel a sense of hostility by the indigenes, and this creates
an atmosphere of confusion and alienation that Maya Angelou best describes in one
of her autobiographies, All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes, where she documents
her own experience of having her “Africanness” questioned in Ghana despite her gen-
uine efforts to sacrifice, contribute, and embrace those she hoped to see as her ances-
tors and fraternals, only to be disappointed and hurt by those who chose to see her
more as an “American” and not an “African.” Yet beyond these human and even schol-
arly controversies which are compelling of further research, there is a goldmine of
cultural affinities between Africans and their diaspora begging for scholarly investi-
gations not only in Brazil and Africa but in the rest of the African diaspora in Cuba,
Trinidad, Haiti, the Bahamas, the US (Miami, New York, Louisiana, etc.), among oth-
er locations.
One of the reasons why Afro-Brazilian syncretism has enriched many transatlantic
studies lies exactly in the interactions between Catholicism and African traditional
religions. Though there is a huge discussion about religious intolerance on the part of
more recently emerged Brazilian Pentecostals who demonize African-derived reli-
gions in Brazil and go to the extent of destroying, vilifying, and persecuting the dev-
otees of Candomblé or Umbanda temples—the same way the state (as represented by
the instrument of violence that the police represented pre- and post-abolition) perse-
cuted the worshippers even after abolition of slavery and in the face of the fact that
Brazil officially claims freedom of religion, though officially a Catholic state. In the
African-American context, and unlike the Afro-Brazilian context where there is at
least the sense of syncretism, that is, a structural correspondence between two models,
even when one is seen as dominant and the other secondary, the dynamics of syncre-
tism are resisted by the very power of Evangelicals who insist that there cannot be any
form of association between “pagan” or “satanic” worship and the Christian faith.
Thus, this inimical even “puritan” attitude made the notion of continuity of African
religious values in the United States quite problematic. However, it is hopeful, though
not to the extent of what obtains in Brazil, that the Santería and Orisa worshippers in
the US would continue to make some steady progress—so that what is considered
“satanic” may well inform those from other religious traditions that religious cosmol-
ogies are only media to attain perfection and purification that are part of the life-jour-
ney that is embodied in our goals, destinies, and aspirations, even when we may not
be aware of it. The cycle of life, even as a natural phenomenon, is indeed inescapable
for every human being.
We would like to thank all the contributors for their academic pieces as well as the
Carolina Academic Press (CAP) for believing in this unique bilingual book from the
very outset. Professor Falola thanks all his associates and friends in Brazil. Professor
Afolabi thanks the Warfield Center for African and African American Studies for the
research funds that enabled him to travel to Brazil as well as expend financial resourc-
es on these timely projects. We also thank the numerous anonymous readers as well
as the copyeditors, namely Dr. Arlen Nydam and Dr. Felipe Fanuel Xavier Rogrigues,
as well as the entire editorial staff of CAP for their production support, effectiveness,
and professional rigor. We thank the University of Rochester Press for the permission
to reprint Chapter 2, “Mapping and Conceptualizing the Yoruba Atlantic,” and an
abridged version of Chapter 5, “Atlantic Yoruba and the Expanding Frontiers of Yoru-
ba Culture and Politics,” previously published in Toyin Falola’s The African Diaspora:
Slavery, Modernity, and Globalization (New York: University of Rochester Press, 2013
[118–162]). Finally, we thank our families for allowing us focused time away from
them in order to complete this volume.