Obeah and
Myal
Introduction
Obeah is perhaps the oldest of all
Afro-Creole religions in the Caribbean.
Its name is derived from the Ashanti words Obay-ifo or Obeye, meaning wizard or witch. The Ashantis or Koromantyn Africans
were from the gold coast, and because they were generally thought to be
disposed to rebellion and witchcraft, the Spanish and French avoided importing
them as slaves. Thus, the practice
of Obeah is confined to the British West Indies, with variations in Guadeloupe
and Martinique. According to Margarite
Fernandez-Omos and Lizbeth Paravisini-Gerbert, Obeah Òis not a religion so much
as a system of beliefs rooted in Creole notions of spirituality, which
acknowledges the existence and power of the supernatural worldÓ (131). Furthermore, Obeah incorporates
two basic categories of practice:
spells, both good and evil, and healing practices based on the use of
elements in the natural world.
Obeah often provided a comfort to displaced Africans in that they could
rely on one of their own for healing and protection. However, British accounts of Obeah during the colonial
period figure it as menacing to white plantation owners, and its practice was
outlawed in many of the British colonies.
Obeah, then, is mainly a client-practitioner relationship, with the
afflicted subject seeking out the aid of the Obeah man or woman on an
individual basis.
Beliefs and Practices
Obeah
practices demonstrate many of the aspects of Afro-Caribbean religiosity such as
veneration of the ancestors, spirit possession, animal sacrifice, and
divination, but it does not have a complex system of organized liturgy and
ritual. Practitioners of Obeah are
known as Obeah man or woman and are believed to be born with the gift of special
powers that are passed down from generation to generation, or else undergo a
miraculous conversion that endows them with the powers of Obeah. Once the gift of Obeah has been
identified, the person usually spends time as an apprentice of a practiced Obeah
man or woman in order to learn the tricks of the trade. An Obeah practitioner is usually sought
out by someone wishing to make a change in his or her life, and the success of
the Obeah man or woman is Òdirectly related to the reputation he has established
as an herbalist, his skills as a listener, and his ability to achieve expected
resultsÓ (Fernandez-Omos and Paravisini-Gerbert 140).
Since
Obeah was outlawed for so long as a practice in the British West Indies, its
practice is on an individual basis and lacks though Òan Obeah practitioner may chant
or sing or go into a trance in the treatment of an individual client,Ó the
practice Òbears no resemblance to the complex rituals of possession and
summoning of the spirits through music and dance characteristic of other
African-derived Creole practicesÓ (Fernandez-Omos and Paravisini-Gerbert
136). The client may seek out the
Obeah practitioner for spells or charms that aid romantic relationships, or for
practices as varied as escape from legal trouble or luck in gambling. The Obeah man or woman consults with a
client and then recommends a solution for his or her problem. For example, ÒBaths, massages, or
healing prescriptions can be applied to physical maladies, while pouches or
bottles made of various substances—herbs, earth, animal, or human body matter
(hair, nail clippings, blood, and other bodily fluids), articles of clothing
(placed in strategic places or worn about the body—are recommended for
other problems (Fernandez-Omos and Paravisini-Gerbert 136-7). Thus, the primary social function of an
Obeah man or woman is that of healer.
In
this capacity as healer, Obeah men and women are often called upon to provide
protection from any number of the spirits that inhabit the living world. Fetishes, for example, are inanimate
objects that are supposed to have special powers and are carried for protection
or are intended to be revered.
They are often made of parts of the human body or parts of an animal
body, objects of clothing, and dirt, with hair being a particularly powerful
material for a fetish. Fetishes
and other protection materials are used to ward off duppies, or the
shadows of men and women who are left behind. Duppies are not the soul of a person, which passes into the
afterlife, but are instead the shadow that can inhabit specific locations. In order to protect against duppies,
the Obeah man prescribes many rituals so that the duppy will not cause evil or
mischief. For example, Òto prevent
the return of a duppy, red peas or banana suckers were planted at the grave of
the deceased personÓ (Moore and Johnson 42). Similarly, the Obeah practitioner may be called upon to
protect a person from Old Higue
(Hige), an old woman-figure who sheds her skin and sucks the breath from
babies, who subsequently die. Old
Hige could be destroyed if someone burned or damaged her skin so that she could
not return to it. As Moore and
Johnson assert, the Obeah man protected one from Old Hige, who also provided a
reason for the tragedies that occur in the every day life of the men and women
of the Caribbean (35).
Myal
is a variation of Obeah that is practiced in Jamaica. Its similarities include: skills in herbalism, healing aspects, preparation of
fetishes, and other objects for influencing behaviors, assuring protection, and
reaching oneÕs goals. However,
Myal has a much more complex set of community rituals than Obeah, which often
involve singing, drumming, calling to spirits, and possession. Also, myal men, as opposed to obeah
men, are leaders with adherents and the possibility of achieving a possession
trance in Myal is more closely related to Haitian Vodou that allows for a more
direct connection with the spirit world.
Myalism, because of
the influence of African and Catholic practices, may Òbridge the apparent gulf
between Obeah on the one hand and Santer’a and Vodoun
on the otherÓ (Fernandez-Omos and Paravisini-Gerbert 144). The dance in Myal is one of the most
important community practices and links practitioners to the pantheon of West
African gods. As
Fernandez-Omos and Paravisini-Gerbert assert, ÒThe ritual of the Myal dance, a
hypnotic dancing in circles under the leaderÕs direction, involved as well a
mesmerizing opening for the entrance of the spirit in the body of the initiate,
providing a bridge between the spirit possession characteristic of Afro-Creole
practices and the filling with the Holy Spirit found in some variants of New World
ChristianityÓ (145). Myal dances
were often aimed at recovering spirits trapped by duppies, and marijuana and
other hallucinatory drugs were used to enhance and enable the trance state. Because Myal is often considered to be
ÒgoodÓ magic in opposition to ObeahÕs Òbad magicÓ because Myal is associated
with healing practice, ecstatic worship, and spirit possession, it was more
susceptible to being absorbed by Christian evangelicals in the 19th
century, and in fact myal men clung to Christianity during the Revivalist
period in Jamaica because it distanced them from Obeah and Obeah men, and in
many cases, the Holy Spirit replaced the pantheon of West African gods.
Politics of the Movement
After 1760, it became punishable by death
for slaves to practice Obeah in Jamaica, and the rest of the British colonies
followed suit. This push to
illegalize Obeah was due to the Tacky Rebellion1 in 1760, when a man named Tacky led a
revolt by Koromantyn slaves. It
was said that he gave the slaves a Òmagical preparation that was supposed to
render them invulnerable to the weapons of the authoritiesÓ (Bisnauth 83). The passage of the law was meant to
safeguard against the practice of Obeah, which the colonizers though could
possibly lead to further revolts.
However, this was detrimental to the African belief system because any
practice of faith was likely to be called ÒobeahÓ by the authorities, and so
many of the African traditions at this point were lost or taken underground
(thus the individual nature of Obeah practice). The potential for revolt and retaliations against the
colonizers was never far from the minds of the British, and for the African
people, ÒObeah might have been bad magic, but for many people, it seemed to
empower them to shape their own existence by manipulating the spirits, both
benevolent and malevolentÓ (Moore and Johnson 46).
As
stated above, myalism gave way to a creolized form of Christianity during the
revivalist period, as revivalists Òbelieve in the effectiveness of obeah, but
while the revivalist shepherd may practice healing and provide charms against
diseases and ghosts (duppies), he cannot be described as Obeah manÉIn a real
sense, the shepherd is like the Akan okomfo; he is a priest, not an obeah-manÓ
(Bisnauth 96). Most importantly,
however, Obeah and Myal gave Africans access to a spirituality that connected
them with the past and with the spirit world, since from the African point of
view Òthe processes of life were involved in a perpetual conflict with those of
deathÓ (Bisnauth 96). This is most
important for the slave whose life is often dominated by death, and to feel
that one can affect and control the natural world in opposition to the
Christian beliefs of the masters is greatly empowering to the practitioners of
Obeah. As Moore and Johnson
assert, the most fundamental importance of Obeah is that Òthe preservation of
their Afro-Creole belief system further served to confirm their intention to
determine for themselves
what was culturally appropriate and what was not. It was a positive assertion of cultural self-determination
in the face of hostile pressure from aboveÓ (46).
1 Nanny
of the Maroons is also a legendary
rebellious practitioner of Obeah.
She is a very famous figure in Jamaican folklore and history for leading
bands of runaway slaves in retaliation against white masters and she supposedly
offered them protection through the use of Obeah. See also my discussion of Nanny in No Telephone to Heaven
on the Literature Page.
Works Cited
Bisnauth,
D.A. History of Religions in
the Caribbean. Trenton: Africa World Press, Inc. 1996.
Fernandez-Omos
Margarite and Lizbeth Paravisini-Gerbert.
Creole Religions in the Caribbean: An Introduction from Vodou and Santer’a
to Obeah and Espiritismo. New York:
New York University Press.
2003.
Moore,
Brain L. and Michele A Johnson. Neither
Led nor Driven: Contesting British
Cultural Imperialism in Jamaica, 1865-1920. Kingston: University of West Indies Press. 2004.