The art of Kevin Blythe Sampson

THE ART OF
KEVIN BLYTHE SAMPSON

2/21/10

On Religion - Myths Obscure Voodoo, Source of Comfort in Haiti - NYTimes.com

On Religion

Myths Obscure Voodoo, Source of Comfort in Haiti

Published: February 19, 2010

Barely 18 hours after an earthquake devastated Haiti on Jan. 12, the Rev. Pat Robertson supplied a televised discourse on the nation’s history, theology and destiny. Haiti has suffered, he explained, because its rebellious slaves “swore a pact with the devil” to overthrow the French two centuries ago. Ever since, he went on, “they have been cursed by one thing or another.”

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Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

A Haitian voodoo priest went into trance inside a voodoo temple during Day of the Dead celebrations in Belladère, Haiti, last November.

Crude and harsh as Mr. Robertson’s words were, he deserved a perverse kind of credit for one thing. He actually did recognize the centrality of voodoo to Haiti. In the voluminous media coverage of the quake and its aftermath, relatively few journalists and commentators have done so, and even fewer have gotten voodoo right.

Consider a few facts. Voodoo is one of the official religions of Haiti, and its designation in 2003 merely granted official acknowledgment to a longstanding reality. The slave revolt that brought Haiti independence indeed relied on voodoo, the New World version of ancestral African faiths. To this day, by various scholarly estimates, 50 percent to 95 percent of Haitians practice at least elements of voodoo, often in conjunction with Catholicism.

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