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Encyclopedia > Babalu Aye

In the cult of Orishas, Babalu Aye is the spirit of illness and disease. He is an Orisha the son of Yemaja and Orungan. This article is about a type of spirit. ... This article is about a type of spirit. ... In Yorùbá mythology, Yemoja is a mother goddess; patron deity of women, especially pregnant women; and the Ogun river (the waters of which are said to cure infertility). ...


Origins of this deity trace back to the Fon traditions of Yoruba mythology, and appear in Cuban Palo Mayombe (as Bacoballende), Haitian Voodoo and Brasilian Candomblé Ketu (as Obaluaiê). Fon is a major West African ethnic and linguistic group in the country of Benin or Dahomey, and southwest Nigeria, made up of more than 2,000,000 people. ... The mythology of the Yorùbá is sometimes claimed by its supporters to be one of the worlds oldest widely practised religions. ... Palo Monte, or Regla de Palo is a religion of largely Bantu origin developed by slaves from Central Africa in Cuba. ... DEFINITION OF VODOUN Ewe Vudusi, Togo West Africa The Vodoun (Vudu Voodoo Vodou Vodun Vaudou Vaudaux) religion at its cosmological, theological, ritual and philosophical core, is an African ancestral religion, practiced today largely in West Africa, Haiti and througout the Diaspora. ... Candomblé Ketu (or Queto in Portuguese spelling) is the largest and most influential nation (sect) of Candomblé, an Afro-American religion widely practiced in Brazil. ...


In Dahomey mythology, he is venerated as Sakpata, god of smallpox. The Dahomey (or Fon) are a nation located in Benin, Africa. ...


He has been originally associated with smallpox, but more recently is appealed for healing AIDS.[1]


Babalu Aye is traditionaly pictured in black, blue, brown, red, white, purple, and is offered rice, wheat, corn, beans, chickpeas, garlic, onions, smoked fish and possum in divination rituals. [2]


References

  1. ^ Description of Babaluaye
  2. ^ Babalu Aye in Ifa/Orisha tradition


 
 

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