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Soc. Sci. Med. Vol. 24, No. I, pp. I-I1, 1987 0277-9536 87 $3.00+0.

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Printed in Great Britain. All rights reserved Copyright ~ 1987 Pergamon Journals Ltd

HEALTH AND THE HOLY IN AFRICAN AND


AFRO-AMERICAN SPIRIT POSSESSION
THOMAS J. CSORDAS
Department of Social Medicine and Health Policy, Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck Street, Boston.
MA 02115, U.S.A.

Abstract--The difficulty of reconciling religious and medical dimensions of ethnopsychiatric phenomena


is discussed with respect to spirit possession cults. The paper documents a trend toward medicalization
of the phenomenon in the Anglo-American literature, and points out the lack of such a trend in the French
literature. Extended discussion is presented of the Afro-Brazilian candomblb, a cult not well represented
in the Anglo-American literature. Case vignettes are excerpted from key informant interviews with a
Brazilian psychiatrist who is also an initiated elder of the candombl~. It is concluded that a balanced
approach that attends to both religious and medical motives of cult participants is essential for an
adequate understanding of the phenomenon, and that such an approach is intrinsic to the goals of
contemporary medical anthropology.

Key words--religion and health, ethnopsychiatry, spirit possession, candombl~

The relation between medical and religious The phenomenon of African and Afro-American
definitions of human experience is of long-standing spirit possession trance (distinguished from pos-
concern for the cross-cultural study of illness and session belief without trance or trance behavior with-
healing. The importance of this relation stems from out possession belief, both of which are more typical
the following empirical circumstances: (1) many of other world culture areas) [4, 5] is a prime locus of
forms of religion are essentially concerned with the relation between health and the holy. Yet within
health and healing; (2) many religious phenomena, the literature on this topic, there has been in recent
and at times religion as a generic entity, have been decades a trend toward emphasis on pathology and
interpreted as pathological; (3) many forms of heal- therapy, with increasing neglect of the religious
ing can simultaneously be interpreted as forms of definition of the situation. When an earlier debate as
religion [1-3]. These circumstances raise a meth- to whether spirit possession is pathological or normal
odological dilemma: while it is possible to generate was largely resolved in favor of its normality, the
accounts of certain phenomena from either the point occasion was not taken to explore the religious and
of view of comparative religion or medical anthro- everyday meanings of this normality and its con-
pology, the two accounts may not be of great rele- nections to health and illness. Instead, the medical
vance to one another, and may not necessarily even question was reformulated in persistently medical
be mutually intelligible. terms: if spirit possession is not pathological, then
This is not simply to say that certain forms of how is it therapeutic?
healing can be interpreted as religious in an 'emic' This trend can be traced at least as far back as
sense and as medical in an 'etic' sense. It is instead to 1958, when Messing [6] published his analysis of the
recognize that scientific accounts can be formulated Ethiopian zar cult as an equivalent of the 'group
of religious phenomena qua religious, as well as in therapy' that was then achieving popularity in the
clinical terms. Thus, it cannot be assumed a priori United States. In 1960 Margaret Field [7] published
that an adequate account can be given by focusing her landmark study of Ashanti shrines operated by
only on the 'medical aspect' or 'clinical implications' spirit-possessed healers. The theoretical impact of
of a phenomenon that also has an overt 'religious this book can best be assessed in contrast to Field's
aspect' or 'spiritual-aesthetic implications.' Given the 1937 study of the Ga people [8], in which traditional
cross-cultural prevalance of religious healing, the medicine and spirit possession were examined against
ubiquitous interrelation of religion and healing, and the background of the religious system. In the inter-
the fact that both religion and medicine address basic vening years Field received medical training as a
existential problems of life and death, it can be clinical psychiatrist, with the result that the later
argued that the category of the 'sacred' may be just volume is analytically focused against the back-
as fundamental to our understanding of health and ground of major categories of psychopathology.
healing as are the categories of 'disease' and 'illness.' Given that not all shrine supplicants suffered from
A complete account of religious healing, then, must mental illness as opposed to problems of everyday
not only examine the construction of clinical reality life, and that it was the healers rather than those
with respect to medical motives, but also the con- afflicted with psychopathology who experienced pos-
struction of sacred reality with respect to religious session trance, it is yet the case that a major concep-
motives. tual transition had occurred in Field's work. Rather
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THOMASJ. CSORDAS

than possession and healing being treated as sub- 'normal' in that it supports a moral status quo,
topics under religion, possession was now a subtopic whereas the peripheral cult indicates a lack of social
in a discussion of psychopathology. Whereas in 1937 integration, most often serving as a response through
Field stressed the 'fundamental difference' between which women as a socially oppressed group can
the conceptions and premises of African and Euro- obtain limited redress as a 'secondary gain' of spirit-
pean medicine, in 1960 spirit possession was part of induced illness. The dichotomy is weak insofar as it
the 'ideological background' for an analysis of psy- stumbles over instances such as Haitian rodou and
chopathology. The trend continued with the first the Brazilian candombl~, which while socially mar-
major collection on possession trance, edited by ginal constitute the dominant reli~on of specific
Prince [9] in 1966, which includes, among several segments of their respective populations, and which
articles concerned with psychotherapeutic aspects of may or may not emphasize therapeutic goals. The
possession, only one that specifically addresses its dichotomy also implies a willingness to recognize a
religious meanings, and then primarily with regard to religious element only in the social sanctioning func-
Asian traditions [10]. In 1967 Kennedy [11] published tions of central cults, while the meaning of peripheral
an account of the zar cult as a form of psychotherapy, cults is essentially restricted to issues of personal and
including the hypothesis that the core participants of social pathology. This precludes addressing the re-
the cult "Tend to be rather unstable, emotional, and lation of medical and religious meanings in either
hysteria-prone persons" [7, p. 189]. type of cult.
In his 1973 account of the North African Ham- In spite of its weakness, not only has the
adsha, Crapanzano [12] expressed a methodological central/peripheral dichotomy persisted, but anthro-
tension in his choice of a "framework familiar to pological attention has been focused with increasing
readers of Western medical and psychiatric litera- exclusivity on the peripheral. The discussion of the
ure." He acknowledged this as a bias, stating that his zar cult by Young [15] in 1975 opens with an
informants would not agree, and that indeed it would acknowledgment of a trend toward concern with
be possible instead to emphasize religion or folk peripheral over central cults, but makes no attempt to
theology. His rationale for adopting the medical balance this concern. Instead, Young accepts the
framework was that cult adherents see its role not as trend, and accordingly proposes a methodological
mystical union but as cure, and that the question of shift that substantially narrows the relevance of his
whether these cures are religious is meaningless for argument. That is, he rejects the phenomenon of
them, since for them everything is religious. Crapan- possession as the focus of analysis, and replaces it
zano's own notion of a symbiotic cure in which the with illness, which he generalizes as the primary
patient merges with a cult calls into question any easy concern for members of possession cults. By the time
distinction between mystical union and cure, how- of the second major collection of papers edited by
ever, and the fact that informants see everything as Crapanzano and Garrison [16] in 1977, not only does
religious does not necessarily grant that the anthro- the religious element disappear, but the focus shifts
pologist leave to make the distinction for them exclusively onto socially marginal settings of pos-
between religious and medical dimensions of their session and affectively negative possession the cul-
experience--at least not without some careful meth- turally appropriate response to which is ethnomedical
odological critique of the distinction. Prince [13], in treatment. Even the single contribution dealing with
his 1974 discussion of Yoruba possession cults as a cult in which possession is positively valued, namely
psychiatric treatment, also blurs this distinction. Be- Brazilian Umbanda [17], focuses on instances in
ginning with an interest in psychiatric disorders in the which the possession is aberrant and negative [18].
Yoruba population, he observed that psychotic pa- The trend continued in 1980 with Ward's [19] elabo-
tients were at times initiated for therapeutic purposes. ration of the central/peripheral distinction as applied
He describes two cult initiations from Nigeria which specifically to mental health. This paper concludes
are indeed those of psychotics, but in two additional that central, or 'ritual,' possession is a kind of defense
initiations described from the Yoruba candombl~ cult mechanism that acts in a therapeutic capacity, while
of Brazil, there is no indication that the initiates are peripheral possession is a cultural explanation of
'patients' in any sense. Yet a psychological inter- individual pathology. The religious meaning of the
pretation is offered that lumps together situations the cults is neither discussed as relevant to mental health,
actors in which may have been 'possessed' of very nor discounted; it is simply not considered. Finally,
different motives. in 1981 Kehoe and Giletti [20] published their contro-
Lewis' [14] influential cross-cultural study of 1971, versial formulation, based largely on familiarity with
which also used the zar as an examplary case, intro- the zar material, of the hypothesis that the prepon-
duced the polar classification of possession cults as derance of women in possession cults is correlated
'central' or 'peripheral.' This work helped to crys- with nutritional deficiency, acknowledging little if
tallize the trend identified here, and thus deserves any relevance for religious motives and meanings.
extended comment. The central possession cult is That this is a tend and not a unanimous conclusion
defined as part of the institutional apparatus uphold- in the literature can be highlighted by mentioning
ing a society's moral order, and possession is usually certain exceptions. Deren's [21] early work on
regarded as a positive experience, Peripheral pos- Haitian vodou highlighted spiritual and aesthetic di-
session cults are the refuge of marginal, low-status, mensions of the dances executed by devotees in
non-mainstream individuals and possession is usually possession. Bourguignon's [22] phenomenologically
regarded as a form of illness. This distinction intro- sensitive account of vodou dwells neither on medical
duces an implicit notion of social pathology to that implications nor on manifestations of the sacred, but
of individual illness and therapy. The central cult is demonstrates the everyday reality of spirit possession
African and Afro-American spirit possession

as it is imitated in children's games and as it is called social position of bori and its devotees. Bori is both
into play in interpersonal relations between the an- a religious institution and a therapeutic institution
thropologist and her informants. The predominantly oriented around women, insofar as cult adepts are
British volume edited by Beattie and Middleton [23], respected healers consulted by both men and women,
covering both spirit mediumship and possession, and insofar as for Hausa people all illness has a
trance and non-trance behavior, also largely avoids spiritual dimension. Rather than a hysterical imita-
the debate as formulated here. Several authors elab- tion of men, bori is a significant opportunity for the
orate rather broad repertoires of possession types and social advancement of women. Possession trance is
functions in the societies they discuss, and demon- seen as a normal, valued, cathartic behavior in a
strate an interest in correlations of possession beliefs sacred context, and plays a significant role in articu-
with social structure or in the role of spirit activities lating social interaction in everyday life. Bourguignon
as articulations of social change processes. Leacock's concludes by adding a symbolic analysis of devotees'
[24] study of the Brazilian Batuque emphasizes that conceptualization as being 'mounted' as 'mares' of
the term cura has a connotation that includes prob- the spirits, as being 'wives' of the spirits, and as
lems such as obtaining employment or regaining the having their indwelling souls displaced by a spirit
affections of a wandering spouse as well as healing during trance. These images indicate that possession
illness, thus pointing to the overlap of existential trance is ultimately about identity, about relations of
concerns at the boundary between religion and med- power, dominance, activity, and passivity and about
icine. At the same time, there is in Batuque a sexuality and motherhood. While medical and ther-
distinction between public ceremonies which the apeutic elements are prominent, the ritual activities
deities attend in order to 'have fun,' and curing can thus be understood as a metacultural commen-
ceremonies which the deities attend in order to tary on the existential conditions of social life that
'work.' transcends the 'battle of the sexes.'
What is noteworthy in the foregoing review of a The existence of contradictory accounts of bori can
medicalized discourse on spirit possession is the have several possible explanations. First, the two
prominance of a single cult, the Ethiopian zar, as a anthropologists worked with different populations:
paradigm case in establishing the dominant trend in Onwuejeogwu with Hausa in northern Nigeria and
the literature [6, 1 I, 14, 15, 19, 20]. Such inordinate Monfouga-nicolas with Hausa in Niger. A second
weight given to a single example might be suspect in and likely more relevant factor is that the former is
any case. It appears more serious in light of a a man and the latter a woman. Hence they would not
comparative study from the disciplinary perspective only differ in their personal research stances, but
of the history of religions by Walker [25], who would have access to different types of informants
suggests that the zar is in fact unique among African and data. Yet a third factor is a cultural difference
and Afro-American possession cults: "The Zar cult is between scholarly traditions, in that the former writes
considered a healing cult for disturbed people in English within the Anglo-American tradition and
whereas the other possession cults in question are the latter writes in French within the French tradi-
actually religious institutions for the worship of the tion. Indeed, perusal of the French literature on
gods of the community" [25, p. 160]. While this African and Afro-American spirit possession does
statement may go too far in asserting the uniqueness not reveal a pronounced trend toward medical-
of the zar [26], it legitimately argues for the necessity ization, or an overly great concern with social
of more careful empirical determination of the rela- pathology/marginality. Monfouga-Nicolas [31] work
tive contribution of medical and sacred interests is a case in point of the balanced approach prevalent
across ethnographic instances. Within ethnographic in the French works. She demonstrates that the bori
instances, it should also be recognized that social is not marginal, but provides a power base for women
change may alter the religious and therapeutic needs vis-a-vis traditional Hausa religion and Islam, both
of a community, and thus transform the cultural of which are male-dominated. She points out that
profile of possession trance cults. For example, the while adepts are frequently recruited as the con-
recent incarnation of the Afro-Cuban Shango cult sequence of an illness, they may also inherit a posi-
(Regla Lucumi) as 'Santeria' among Cuban immi- tion within the cult, or seek to join of their own free
grants in Miami has been described as a therapeutic will and because of the prestige associated with
response to social malaise and personal crisis gener- membership. Finally, while examining the important
ated by the stresses of immigration and acculturation work of cult leaders as healers, she does not neglect
[27,28], whereas in Cuba it was predominantly a the pantheon of bori deities and the spiritual relation
religious institution. Exactly what has changed? between devotees and their guardians.
In a recent article, Bourguignon [29] clearly delin- Other works of note in this tradition include those
eates some of the issues raised here by juxtaposing of M~traux [32, 33], on Haitian vodou, which include
two accounts of the bori cult among Hausa women. discussion of the nature of the soul in that religion.
The account by Onwuejeogwu [30] portrays the cult Leiris' [34] monograph on the zar cult demonstrates
from the perspective of social pathology, or structural that even this paradigm case for the predominantly
flaws in the relation between men and women: in medical approach can be analyzed as a form of ritual
possession, bori participants enact roles from the drama as well as a form of ethnomedical therapy.
male domains of public life and officialdom, denied Rouget's [5] outstanding recent work on the role of
to them in real life. Thus they escape in fantasy from music in possession trance gives prominence to spir-
the role of oppressed female to that of dominant itual and aesthetic dimensions of the experience.
male. On the other hand, the account by Monfouga- Music is not simply a psychological triggering mech-
Nicolas [31] gives a much more balanced view of the anism for trance, as writers like Neher [35] have
4 THOMAS J. CSORDAS

suggested, but is integral to the trance experience, to the Anglo-American literature, and contrasts sub-
the life of the adept and to the unfolding of the ritual stantially with the better known zar cult.
event: "A possession ritual is an architecture of time
composed of different phases to which different mu-
CANDOMBLI~
sics are attached. It is within the dynamic of the
ceremony that we must consider the relations of Candombl~ in Brazil is essentially Yoruba (in Brazil
music and trance" [5, p. 64; my translation]. Yoruba = Nag6 = Quetu) religion transplanted from
Finally, there is the classic monograph by Bastide West Africa. Participants honor the gods and god-
[36] on the Afro-Brazilian candomblO. This work desses, or orixas of the traditional Yoruba pantheon
emphasizes the relation between myth and ritual, [39]. In Afro-Brazilian culture as a whole the Angolan
examines the cosmological structure of the candomblO influence is strongest, due to its presence since the
universe, and treats possession trance as a form of Sixteenth Century; however, in the domain of religion
religious mysticism. Interestingly, in a retrospective the Yoruba pantheon, introduced in the Nineteenth
some 15 years later, Bastide stated that this approach Century, has largely displaced or assimilated other
had been necessary to countervail the medicalization deities. At the same time, each orixa is paired with a
of his time that saw possession trance as hysteria and Christian saint who is its counterpart with respect to
neurosis, but that ultimately an approach more bal- shared attributes. Candomblk has an established litur-
anced between religious and medical meanings would gical calendar, the festivals of which only partially
be necessary: overlap with the feastdays of Catholic saints. Within
the spectrum of Afro-Brazilian possession cults, the
"'In the end, after having repudiated the psychiatrists" Nag6 candornbl~ of Bahia is said to be the most
interpretation as a unilateral interpretation, it was necessary orthodox. Other cults with varying degrees of Yor-
to incorporate from it that which could be of value to what uba influence include Xango of Recife and Rio de
I was calling the sociology of trance. For in Africa pos- Janeiro, Angolan candombl~s, Umbanda, Batuque,
session is, if not always, at least very often, linked to
therapeutics, not only of madness but of all illnesses of Macumba, Catimbo, and Caboclo [31]. These cults
psychosomatic origin or nature. It was necessary to lay the are prominent in different regions, and represent
foundations for a unified discourse, where the sociological various syncretisms of orixas, Angolan deities, native
and psychiatric were no longer identified, but on the con- Indian spirits, and spirits of the two found in
trary once again separated, complementary..." [37, pp. 56 Kardecist spiritism [17, 24, 40, 41].
and 57; my translation]. The first Bahian congregation, or terreiro, was
founded by a priestess from Africa in 1830, ~ith
This review is not intended to be comprehensive; former slaves as members [42]. Periodically repressed
and again there are important exceptions within the by the predominantly Catholic authorities, it has
French literature, such as Zempleni's [38] work focus- been only since 1976 that Bahian terreiros have not
ing on the therapeutic dimension of possession trance been required to register with the police. Terreiros
rites among the Lebou and Wolof. It is also not participate publicly in the carnival, and annually
intended to deny the recognition of religious elements stage a public festival for Yemanja, the orixa patron-
by most Anglo-American authors, although they ness of the waters. Many Brazilians make use of the
appear to emphasize religious ideology and par- spiritual resources of the candombl~, and its members
ticipation in ritual over experiential dimensions of include people of European as well as African de-
religion, the latter being referred to medical or scent. The impact of this religion extends even to diet,
psychiatric issues. In any case, what must be explored with the publication of books on preparation of the
are the implications of starting from a 'medical- ritual cuisine honoring the orixas----each deity having
therapeutic' orientation as opposed to a 'comparative his or her favorite dish [43].
religion' orientation. While a comprehensive com- In the summer of 1979, the African and Afro-
parison of the French and Anglo-American literature American Studies Program at the University of
would doubtless confirm the relative trends identified North Carolina, Chapel Hill, was fortunate to have
here, and be valuable in its own right, the problem as guest the Brazilian psychiatrist Dr Alvaro Rubim
remains of the interrelation of medical and sacred de Pinho. In a series of intensive interviews coordi-
realities in this phenomenon. In summary, what is the nated by the present author and historian Linda
relation between statements like Young's that " . . . it Guthrie [44], Dr Rubim offered a valuable key infor-
is these sickness episodes, together with the therapies mant perspective based on his unique dual position as
and rituals they entail, that dominate the interest of chairman of the Department of Psychiatry in the
many devotees" [15], and a statement like Bastide's Faculty of Medicine at the University of Bahia in
that "The structure of ecstasy is the structure of Salvador, and initiated elder of the eandombl~ terreiro
myth" [36]? Admittedly these statements are taken of Ax~ Op6 Afonja. This participation is not as
out of context--Young is a student of the zar and astounding as it may first seem to non-Brazilians, for
Bastide of the candombl& Beyond the issue of it continues a trend begun by liberal intellectuals in
whether such statements are true for specific ethno- the 1930s and 1940s, who found in Afro-Brazilian
graphic instances, the problem is that they tend to be culture a focus of populist concern with folk culture
made as generalizations across the field of possession in response to discouragement of activist politics by
trance studies. Do they contradict one another, or an authoritarian right-wing government. Dr Rubim
can they be reconciled? The question is large, and the attributes his personal interest in candomblO to three
present paper will take only a first step by presenting sources. First was his reading of works by an earlier
some material on the Afro-Brazilian candombl& This generation of anthropologically concerned Brazilian
major possession trance cult is poorly represented in psychiatrists, notably Nina Rodriguez [45] and
African and Afro-American spirit possession

Arthur Ramos [46]; also influential were the works of The obas are organized hierarchically among them-
Rene Ribeiro [47,48] and Edison Carneiro selves: first oba on the right of Xango, first on the left,
[49, 50]--few of these works are available in English second on the right, etc. This group is responsible for
translation. Through this reading Dr Rubim was choosing a new Male-de-Santo on the death of one in
self-instructed about issues of ethnopsychiatry, and office. Finally, the drummers or players of the ata-
decided that it should be a responsibility of baque are generally young men responsible for cere-
psychiatrists of his own generation to resume these monial music, producing the sacred rhythms that
studies. A second influence was the discovery that his indicate the presence of particular orixas. None of
patients frequently submitted themselves to religious these male cult participants experience possession
treatments without being open about it to him. His trance.
chance discovery of these visits led him to explore Whether or not a person experiences possession
their consequences for his patients at a private trance, each participant is consecrated to a single
psychiatric hospital where he was employed. Third orixa that serves as his or her guardian. Dr Rubim
was the matter of curiosity, which led him to attend acquired his patron when, while attending his second
his first candombl~ ceremony in 1968, along with a candombl~ ceremony in 1969, he was levantado para
group of colleagues participating in the transcultural ser ogan (raised up to be ogan) by an entranced
psychiatry symposium sponsored that year in Bahia Filha-de-Santo who was possessed by the deity Ox-
by the World Association of Psychiatry. His initial ala. During the following year he was required to
encounter with the cult leader evolved into a long- attend all public ceremonies of the terreiro, and
standing involvement with the affairs of the terreiro. undergo a series of interviews with the Mae-de-Santo,
Ax~ Op6 Afonja is one of three daughter terreiros during which she instructed him about the structure
of the original Nag6 terreiro of Bahia. It is organized of the religion, his ritual obligations, and how to
around an ialorixa or M~e-de-Santo (Mother of comport himself during rituals. His initiation oc-
Saints), who is invariably a woman of African de- curred at the end of this period, at the culmination
scent. Male cult heads (babalorixa or Pai-de-Santo) of a 3 week cycle of ceremonies that constitutes the
have been known, but are infrequent in the Nag6 festival of Oxala. The night before the initiation, he
candornbl& Second in rank is the iaquerere or Mae was dressed in white, the sacred color of Oxala, and
Pequeno (Little Mother), whose responsibilities in- required to keep vigil before Oxala's altar. The night
clude directing the music at ceremonies, and who is was punctuated by rituals that included a sacred
the temporary replacement for a deceased Male-de- bath, animal sacrifices, and rites of purification and
Santo until a successor is chosen. She also directs the strengthening by means of the animals' blood and
initiation of the ya6s or Filhas-de-Santo (Daughters cooked meat. On the day of initiation he was given
of the Saints) who constitute the remainder of female a necklace sacred to Oxala as a sign of his office, and
devotees who experience possession by the orixas. a ritual name in the Yoruba language. From this time
Males seldom experience possession; in Ax~ Op6 he was entitled to attend private as well as public
Afonja the relation of male to female y a f s is 1:I0. rituals.
Finally among female participants, the ekeide is a Having achieved the status of ogan, Dr Rubim
kind of general protectress. There are seldom more anticipated access to valuable ethnopsychiatric data.
than three ekeide in a terreiro, and they are typically As he states, in the course of 10 years this antici-
women of higher social status than the yafs. They pation was disappointed.
serve as auxiliaries in charge of coordinating deco-
rative and aesthetic aspects of terreiro festivities,
especially those of a more social and less sacred "At the time of my initiation, it looked like the circum-
character. stances which led me to be an ogan would give me the
Four ceremonial offices are available to male opportunity to study what I wanted: the treatment of mental
illnesses. In fact, experience did not bear this out, because
participants. There are eight ogan de faca (ogans of in the Nag6 candombl~ few treatments of mental illnessesare
the knife), full-time officiants of the terreiro who applied. There are far more religious practices than there are
must be present in all public and private rituals, and treatments. The Nag6 M8e-de-Santo makes appointments
who are the only persons ritually consecrated to kill in which she gives advice, which is either moral advice or
sacrificial animals. The ogan de quarto (ogans of the advice about how to fulfil religious obligations. When one
room) are a larger group that may vary in number; talks about authentic mental illnesses--psychoses--she gen-
there are slightly more than 20 in Ax6 Op6 Afonja. erally recommends going to a doctor. I continued as an ogan
Aside from attending festivals of their guardian to frequent the terreiro and attend the rituals, but for
orixa, their primary responsibility is as patron to the purposes of research I have preferred to take another route,
y a f s consecrated to the same orixa. These ogans offer using questionnaires [in general population surveys]" [44, p.
721.
advice and support to the yafs, and in certain in-
stances financial support as well; e.g. they may help
defray the cost of an orixa's expensive ritual costume. In general, it is not strictly speaking an episode of
They also act as general supporters of the terreiro. illness that indicates initiation as a ya6 capable of
They are typically both black and white men, and in possession trance. On occasion an uninitiated indi-
A x 6 0 p 6 Afonja a small but significant group of vidual attending a public ceremony will become
artists and intellectuals of European ancestry occupy possessed, and this is a possible indication that she is
this office, including Dr Rubim. Above the ogans in chosen by an orixa. The more usual process is
rank, and serving the M8e-de-Santo as direct advis- through consultation with the Mae-de-Santo, again
ors, are eight obas. All are consecrated to the orixa not for an illness, but for some difficulty, problem, or
Xango, who is also the principal deity of the terreiro. conflict in life, and not with the advance intention
6 THOMAS J. C$ORDAS

of becoming a member of candomblO. In such a and possession occurs only 'in religious situations. In a
consultation, the Male-de-Santo seeks advice from situation of conflict, I imagine that this could be compre-
Xango through the technique of Ifa divination [51]. hensible to us as personality traits that appear to be in
Xango indicates the cause of the problem and tenders disagreement. But I have the impression that the conflicts
advice. Becoming a ya6 or Filha-de-Santo is only about which the ,Side-de-Santo talks do not concern
one of his possible recommendations. The person situations of personality but moments of possession--the
conflict between two orixas possessing the same body. I
may need the ritual of bori (not to be confused with
imagine that this is purely personal. I imagine that the
the Hausa bori cult), in which one is strengthed by conflict the M8e-de-Santo talks about as possession by
'feeding the head' with cooked meat and blood from more than one orixa has a connection with what I would
a sacrificial animal, and which is included as one think to be resistance of the person to adopting that pattern
part of the initiation of organs and yars. This ritual of behavior which is being induced as the pattern of
fortifies spirit and mind, enabling a person to con- behavior of that particular orixa. But the Mac-de-Santo
front life's difficulties, but its effects perdure for only says that when the work of initiation is done correctly, the
a limited period, and even for initiated members must identification of the ya6 with the orixa is perfectly defined"
be renewed after several years. Another ceremony, [44, pp. 48-50].
meant to prevent misfortune, is 'cleansing of the
body.' This is a simple rite consisting of a series of
prayers uttered by the Mre-de-Santo while the sup- In contrast to some possession cults, each par-
plicant performs predetermined gestures. Yet another ticipant in candomblb has only one guardian spirit. A
prophylactic measure is bestowal of a necklace made person often resembles, or has certain personality
in the terreiro with ritually prepared beads. While traits in c o m m o n with the guardian orixa: it is
all ogans and yars receive a necklace of color and c o m m o n to say that a person is 'for Oxala' or 'for
composition specific to their guardian orixa at their Oxun' in the same way that a North American might
initiation, necklaces may be given to anyone in con- say that a person 'takes after her grandmother.' This
sultation, though they vary in color, size and shape suggests caution in concluding that spirit possession
of beads. Other prescriptions made by Xango in candomblk is a cultivation of the multiple person-
through medium of the Mre-de-Santo include taking ality phenomenon, wherein repressed or un-
sacred herb baths, attending particular religious recognized motives are acted out [52]. Those who are
ceremonies, offering a sacrificial animal to an orixa, initiated into the possession experience undergo a
and offering a meal of a particular orixa's favorite careful process of training over a period of several
dish (ebo or fazer um despacho). months, since they will be responsible for incarnat-
In a situation in which a w o m a n is required to ing their deity in human form. During this period.
become a yar, Dr Rubim described the following initiates make the elaborate costume characteristic of
process of initiation: their patron, and learn both the complex mythology
associated with that divinity and its t?pical patterns
"It is very different from the initiation of an ogan. Many of behavior and speech as manifested on ritual occa-
years ago in Ax~ Op6 Afonja the period of initiation sions. During initiation the novice Filha-de-Santo is
extended to nine months of seclusion in the peji [initiation secluded in darkness in a twilight state of semi-trance
house]. This time has been greatly diminished, I suppose characterized as one of childlike suggestability or
because the process is expensive, and that it does not allow regression, and referred to in Y o r u b a as ~r& While
the person to work for too long a time. But even now the totally absorbed in the sacred presence, the novice is
process of initiating a ya6 in A x 6 0 p 6 Afonja is never sensitized to the drum rhythm sacred to her orixa,
shorter than three months. Inside the peji the environment so that on ritual occasions her possession experience
is shadowy, semi-dark, quiet, and isolated. The iaquerere is initimately tied to a particular musical experience.
(Mae Pequeno) enters daily and directs the works, and on
Thus, there is no uniform susceptibility to sonic
certain occasions the ialorixa (Mac de Santo) visits to
supervise and give directions. It can be a group of initiates, driving [35] as a mechanism of trance induction, but
but there are different rooms. Sometimes they are in rather a selective suggestibility based on cultivated
different rooms performing different rituals, and sometimes sensitivity to the interweaving of musical themes in
the same ritual is performed simultaneously for more than the ceremonies [cf. 5].
one. A part of the formation is specific to each orixa. The The effects of this training are seen not only in the
initiates don't talk to one another; they talk to the iaquerere carefully stylized behavior of the deities during ritual
only for essential things. She is the one who coordinates the possessions, but in interactions among orixas that
ambience of the place. reflect their relations in myth. For example, Bastide
I judge the process of initiation to be mainly a process
of conditioning, where the Filha de Santo is prepared to be [36] recounts that one of Xango's wives, once tricked
a person who dances in a certain way, mimics certain in myth by her co-wife, often flies into a rage during
characteristics of the orixa, and has certain ways of ceremonies, and must be restrained by assistants from
behaving socially. I imagine that during this process there beating her malefactress in revenge. Thus, instead of
can arise resistances or duplicities to the adoption of a kind therapeutic acting out, spirit possession in candomblb
of conduct, and that the process of conditioning makes it can be seen as a pure form of ritual drama, where the
possible to overcome this and adopt the proper behavior. parts of deities are not played by humans, but where
This raises the issue of the separation of pathological the deities in effect play themselves. Also according to
processes from possession in the religious context, in which Bastide, the relation of the individual to her pos-
latter case it is perfectly normal. The M~e-de Santo used
to tell me that it is possible before or during the initiation sessing orixa is essentially one o f mystical commu-
that more than one orixa would try to possess the same nion. On an interpretive level, the mystical relation in
daughter. But if the process occurs correctly there is a this instance takes precedence over features of social
definite link established between a ya6 and only one orixa, pathology or marginality that are often invoked in
African and Afro-American spirit possession

the e x p l a n a t i o n o f p o s s e s s i o n cults. In Bastide's that she acquired a lot of trust--after all, she had confidence
words: in the J,Ide-de-Santo and the necklace. What seems curious
to me in this case is not the situation's development, because
" . . . (T)he social can only inscibe, in the domain of inter- although my information is that the ambience improved
personal relations, the laws of the mystical life. The devees quite a lot, it is still too early to judge. But the mother-in-
of participation in the group can only follow those of the law's confidence in the MSe-de-Santo improved because the
identification of a person with the orixa. The variations of Male-de-Santo described the facts as they happened, having
social solidarity are finally only the reflection, and the heard very little of the story. She did the diagnosis, made
consequence, of the variations of solidarity established some recommendations, and decided upon the use of the
between the person and the world of the gods ... It is not necklace for the lady and a smaller necklace for her husband
social morphology that commands religion or explains it, [44, pp. 73-75].
but on the contrary the mystical that commands the social"
[36, pp. 27 and 28; my translation]. If this case is an e x a m p l e o f religious m e d i a t i o n o f
i n t e r p e r s o n a l conflict, the following is o n e w h e r e
religious p a r t i c i p a t i o n itself is an issue in the conflict
CASE VIGNETTES b e t w e e n spouses. N o t e also D r R u b i m ' s role as a
If illness is n o t the p r i m a r y c o n c e r n o f candombl~ p s y c h i a t r i s t in this instance, w h i c h a p p e a r s typical o f
p a r t i c i p a n t s , a n d the cult's existence is n o t a d e q u a t e l y his self-described o p e n n e s s to religious t r e a t m e n t as
e x p l a i n e d as a r e s p o n s e to social m a r g i n a l i t y , it is still long as it is c o m p a t i b l e with t h e r a p e u t i c goals, as well
necessary in a b a l a n c e d e t h n o p s y c h i a t r i c a p p r o a c h to as his t e n d e n c y n o t to c o n s u l t directly with his
view it as a resource for the h e a l t h a n d well-being o f religious c o u n t e r p a r t .
a c o m m u n i t y t h r o u g h the m e a s u r e s o f ritual p r o p h y - Case 2. This was a very curious case that concerned a lady
laxis p r e s c r i b e d by the M ~ e - d e - S a n t o in c o n s u l t a t i o n . who was not a participant in the cult of candornblk. She was
A l t h o u g h o n o c c a s i o n p e o p l e with v a r i o u s m e d i c a l a white woman about thirty years of age. She was from
illnesses c o n s u l t the M d e - d e - S a n t o , m o s t c o n s u l t e e s Ceara State in the north of Brazil, though her family moved
are p e o p l e with p s y c h o s o c i a l issues such as m a r i t a l to Bahia when she was an adult. She had gone to Europe
p r o b l e m s , financial difficulties o r p r o b l e m s with when very young, and spent six years there pursuing her
d r u g s a n d alcohol. T h e following is an e x a m p l e o f education. On returning she became a Professor of Litera-
ture at a university. Then she got married. In this case a
such a situation, as r e c o u n t e d by D r R u b i m : . conflict arose within her marriage because she wanted to
Case 1. It concerns a family that lives in the Amazon region. participate in the Afro-Brazilian cults, and her husband did
A lady, mother of one child, has a conflict with her not let her. Her orientation towards this had come through
daughter-in-law. The difficulties grew worse for the family, contact with a house of Umbanda in Rio. The conflict grew
so the lady went to Bahia to have an appointment with the worse and became aggravated. Her husband suggested that
M~e-de-Santo. In this case it was my Mac-de-Santo in Ax6 they go on vacation to take her away from her anxiety. So
Op6 Afonja. I know this family very well, since they are the couple spent several weeks at the beach of Espirito Santo
from my hometown; the lady wanted to go to a M~e-de- in Guarapari. One morning the husband woke up and did
Santo, so she consulted me and I recommended this one for not see her--she had disappeared. The police were alerted,
her. From what she told me, she gave very little information and they found her in Minas Gerais, in the city of Mariana,
to the Mac-de-Santo, and the Mac-de-Santo completed her in an Afro-Brazilian terreiro--another place, another state,
description of the family situation with absolute fidelity. completely different. She was having a possession. She
The initial conflict was between daughter-in-law and would agree to leave only if she could go to Bahia to consult
mother-in-law, but the older women's husband took a another house of religion, the address of which she had
position of solidarity with his wife against their daughter-in- obtained in Minas. She had simply fled from the hotel room
law. This in turn had repercussions for their son, who was in Guarapari and gone to Minas.
their only child. All four live in the same city, but not in the She did have relatives in Bahia; someone in Minas gave
same house; they share a lot. Now this mother always had her the address of the terreiro there, saying it was a very
great affection for her only son, who does not have any good one. In Bahia I was called to help this lady, who,
children himself. The marriage was well accepted, but the besides having lived in Europe and being a professor at the
daughter-in-law began to think that the mother-in-law was university, had for more than two years submitted herself to
overprotective of her son. So the daughter-in-law tried to psychoanalysis. I found her in a very a~tated and anxious
avoid seeing the older women too m u c h - - b u t she still state. After two consultations with her, I decided that a
wanted to profit materially and financially from her in-laws. psychotic condition did not exist. It was a neurotic state,
The situation became very difficult, to the point that they aggravated by her reaction to the situation--the condition
did not see each other unless the daughter-in-law would go was psychogenic, as we say in psychiatry,. But she refused
to ask for something. The situation would be tense, and the psychiatric treatment. She did not accept me. I tried to get
young women would be demanding. She tried to ask for another psychiatrist, but the problem was not with me---she
jewellery, and once she demanded a car. The mother-in-law wanted a religious solution. In trying to get her to accept
gave her the car, and soon after they sold it to get cash. me, I told her about my contacts with candombl& I just used
In this case, the orientation given by the Male-de-Santo my position as ogan in order to be well accepted. She
was for the lady to use, in perpetuity, a necklace prepared continued to refuse me, saying that when intellectuals go to
and made sacred by the M~e-de-Santo. Another necklace candombl~ it's out of curiosity, and not because they believe.
was prescribed for the lady's husband. Even though the Then I surprised the family. I advised them to take her to
husband is a lawyer he agreed to wear it, saying that it didn't the cult whose address she had brought back from Minas.
matter, because if it does not do any good, it will not do any After two weeks of frequenting the house and fulfilling
bad. I do not want to judge the consequences of all this as religious obligations, her anxiety disappeared. She went to
it evolves, because this happened only a few months ago and the Mac-de-Santo daily, talking with her and participating
many factors can influence the situation. However, as of in the cult. She received the indoctrination and fulfilled
now, the situation seems to have become better. The lady obligations, but I do not know which ones. The anxiety
believes that the relationship is much better. I think that the disappeared. A prayer was given to her and she was told to
consultation had been made with many doubts, even though continue to use it. But it was indicated to her that she should
the-woman had travelled a long way to do it. But it seems not become a yar. I do not know if this indication was
8 THOMAS J. CSORDAS

proper through religious means or because it coincided with what she told me later, she experienced certain perturbing
the wish of her husband. The evolution of the situation was reactions while she was in New York. She consulted a
quite normal. But it seems to me that this was funny religious cult, and was told that her problem was a religious
behavior on the part of the Male-de-Santo: she gave re- one; I have the impression that the cult had to do with black
ligious orientation and obligations, but she advised that, on magic, demonology. When she was back in Bahia she
returning to Rio de Janeiro, the woman should not frequent decided, on the indication of a Mde-de-Santo. to submit
the cults. That was the major conflict with her husband. But herself to the process of initiation and become a Filha-de-
what was said was that there had been an orientation from Santo. In this case, it was an Angolan candornblk.
a superior entity. From the description, I understood that She initiated the process, and stayed in the eamaria (the
it was not a traditional terreiro, but one characterized by a room where the MSe-de-Santo stays) for two months. So
syncretism of candombl~ and the beliefs of Kardecist spirit- there she was, despite the fact that we knew that the process
ism. The spirit who advised through the medium was not an of becoming a Filha-de-Santo included modification of
orixa. I remember this because, although the ceremonials one's level of consciousness. The M~e-de-Santo observed
described were ofcandombl~ type, the woman told me it was that there was a different disturbance that aggravated her to
Irm~o Basa--Spirit of the Brother Basa ('Irm~o' is the such an extent that one day she burned certain sacred
Kardecist term for 'spirit'). objects. In the Peji there were some days when she submitted
Very simply, I think she was neurotic. I have reason to herself in a disciplined way to the determinations of the
think this because she submitted herself to psychiatric Male-de-Santo and fulfilled her rituals, but there were some
treatment for two years, a treatment which she interrupted. days when she interrupted the rituals with her behavior.
So there must already have been some reasons to motivate This behavior would cause disturbances in the environment,
the consultation and treatment. In Rio, after she interrupted and the M8e-de-Santo identified it as not being proper
her psychoanalytic treatment, she had consulted an Um- within possession. She would be very talkative, talking too
banda house. There she was advised to have initiation. It much during times when she should not have been speaking.
would have been that she sensed a problem intuitively in She would have episodes of agitation and accentuated
Rio. and felt the incapacity of psychoanalysis to understand insomnia. In one of the nights when she could not sleep, in
the problem. Religion was an alternative solution. I have the middle of an agitation, she burned sacred objects. Later
heard that everything is now going well in this case. As a on, she told me she was having fun, playing--but that is
psychiatric instrument I would not have been able to resolve proper to these manic syndromes. It is common that an
it. because it was not a psychiatric problem [44, pp. 75-79]. ecstasy of happiness is associated with an activity that does
not correspond to, or is inappropriate to the feeling, and
Two points must be made in c o m m e n t a r y on this that the action is done without any reflection or inhibition.
case. First, D r R u b i m ' s simultaneous ability to diag- Although the family of the girl was opposed to her
nose a neurosis and willingness to declare the p r o b - initiation, the Mae-de-Santo asked her relatives to come,
lem not a psychiatric one is directly related to his own and told them that she suspected that there was a medical
conception o f psychiatry's p r o p e r boundary. He is problem in addition to the religious one. The Male-de-Santo
critical o f the trend in American psychiatry since felt uneasy, because according to the rule of candomblk she
could not call a stranger or uninitiated person--a doctor--
A d o l p h Meyer toward increasing medicalization o f
to help her in the private area of the house. By coincidence,
h u m a n life to the point o f presumed omniscience for an ogan of this candombl~ had been an attendant in a
psychiatry. Thus, for him, the area o f 'neuroses' is no psychiatric hospital, and he knew me becasue of this. He
more the privileged d o m a i n o f psychiatry than it is o f knew that I was an ogan of another candombl~. He
religion. His willingness to acknowledge 'informal informed the M~e-de-Santo about this, and she accepted.
psychiatry' is tied to a critique o f the lack o f limits So I was called to give my opinion, and diagnosed that the
between pathological and normal socially condi- young woman was in a psychotic episode. It was a
tioned p h e n o m e n a in N o r t h American psychiatry, to manic-depressive psychosis. I explained this diagnosis to the
a conception o f Latin American psychiatry as limit- M~e-de-Santo, and we were in total agreement. The
M~e-de-Santo concluded that while she was ill, conditions
ing its scope to 'psychiatric p h e n o m e n a in the strict
were not right to proceed with the initiation. Later on, this
sense,' and to a view that those who are waiting for girl was cured, but she then had other episodes. She
a solution through p r o g r a m s o f mental health to continued to attend the house, but the Mae-de-Santo did
societal problems o f poverty, u n e m p l o y m e n t and not accept her for initiation again, because she thought that
communality will ultimately be frustrated. Second, in the existence of a medical problem made a contrary
this instance the prescribed level o f religious par- indication.
ticipation goes well beyond that observed in the first What I find curious about this is that the Male-de-Santo
case, but it stops short o f full initiation as a cult did not attribute the agitation to religious causes, and
devotee. The treatment a p p r o a c h o f both Dr R u b i m thought it necessary even in that moment to obtain medical
intervention. My contact with the M?te-de-Santo wasn't
and the M a c - d e - S a n t o - - b e t w e e n w h o m there was
good enough to know why she thought as she did, but she
apparently no direct c o n t a c t - - a p p e a r s to have been told me that there were situations of mental illness that
aimed at c o m p r o m i s e between the w o m a n ' s perceived were considered to be natural illnesses, and that in such
spiritual needs and her h u s b a n d ' s a d a m a n t op- cases Xango did not think that initiation was convenient.
position to her cult participation. In the third case, I don't know if in the past this would have been regarded
the degree o f ritual participation is greater still, as the correct procedure for a Mde-de-Santo--it may be a
actually reaching the initial stages o f initiation, and consequence of some awareness of psychiatric subjects on
the relation between medical and sacred realities the part of contemporary Males-de-Santo. Nevertheless,
although this M~e-de-Santo looked like a very intelligent
becomes critical.
woman, she was very primitive in her knowledge; she didn't
Case 3. Let me tell you about a case in which I was involved have the higher level such as does the M~e-de-Santo in Ax6
that illustrates the capacity of the Mile-de-Santo to separate Op6 Afonja. The present M~e-de-Santo in my Terreiro was
what comes from the religious side and what comes from the a public functionary who left that work when she was
medical side. It concerns a recently graduated medical chosen as Mile-de-Santo. This Mile-de-Santo with whom I
student, who had been an excellent student. After her have been associated knows how to differentiate trance by
~aduation she went to New York for a time. According to possession of an orixa, hysterical crisis, and simulated
African and Afro-American spirit possession

trance----something we psychiatrists do not know. When she only to those regarded as stable enough to function
decides it is a hysterical crisis she does not use that term, appropriately.
of course. She simply decides it is a case for the psychiatrist
by excluding possession by an orixa and simulation. I don't
know how she can do it; but I have seen my Male-de-Santo CONCLUSION
observe trances even in the initiated ya6s of her terreiro,
Using the example of African and Afro-American
and tell them to see a doctor. Her evidence is that the Santo
does not know what she is doing; the saint does not spirit possession, it has been argued here that certain
manifest itself in that way. religious or health-related phenomena can be ade-
It is also curious in this case that the Mac-de-Santo knew quately understood only by examining both their
how to separate the infantile behavior of ~r~ [preparatory medical and sacred dimensions. To argue for the
trance---see above] from the euphoric behavior of mental inclusion of the holy as a factor in the discourse of
disease. And there was another episode in which the young medical anthropology is not to advocate a return to
woman was hospitalized and it was necessary to use older paradigms, or abandonment of the sub-
electrical shock treatment--a treatment done in few cases, discipline's important move toward clinical relevance.
but which in certain ones can be necessary, though it must
Indeed, the 'new cross-cultural psychiatry' [53] com-
be used with care. In that case it was administered under
anaesthesia. The family was informed and authorized the bines the sophistication of epidemiological method
treatment, but the patient didn't know about it; even now with the sensitivity or hermeneutic method. Klein-
she does not know that she underwent electroshock treat- man and G o o d ' s [41] recent outline of a research
ment. She passed through a period of several days during program for an anthropology of emotions specifies
which she had a problem with fixation of memory, which the need for detailed phenomenological description,
is common among people who receive electric shock, When analysis of relevant semantic domains, attention to
she commented to me about this period, she said she had local contexts of interpersonal power, and recog-
the impression of having passed through several days which nition of the basic somatic dimension of culturally
she remembered only as if it were a dream, and which she
conditioned activity. Specific issues that must be
interpreted as a supernatural situation. She confused the
effect of electroshock with a possession. But she herself told addressed in the study of possession trance include
me that the M~e-de-Santo listened to the narration of this the degree to which existential problems are defined
period and did not confirm the possession. The Mac-de- in religious or medical idioms, cultural definitions of
Santo does not know what happened, but told her that which health resources are appropriate for which
what she described was not a possession. She knows how illnesses, diversity in types of trance behavior and
to make the differential diagnosis [44, pp. 82-90]. experience available in adherents' behavioral en-
vironment, the different levels of participation and
identification attained by individual supplicants, and
In this account of direct collaboration between variations of symbolic structure within the repertoire
psychiatrist and religious specialist, the medical ex- of possessing spirits. A situation in which a variety of
pert is impressed by his counterpart's intuitive and modes of possession are possible may be significantly
practical ability to distinguish pathological from different from one in which only a single form is
sacred experience; Dr Rubim notes that this con- recognized; a context in which 'possession" is a man-
forms to an observation made decades earlier by ner of speaking about an emotional attachment [55]
Ribeiro [48]. These judgments by a Male-de-Santo are may not have much in c o m m o n with one where
apparently based both on observation of more or less 'possession' implies mystical communion with a deity
subtle behavioral cues and on evaluation of states of [36]. Careful empirical study and ethnological com-
consciousness entered by devotees. Ecstasy as a cate- parison along these lines are essential for a balanced
gory of cultural experience is elaborated to a degree approach to the relation between ecstasy and illness.
alien to Western science, such that there are definite, The present work argues, then, that one cannot a
if implicit, distinctions between normal ecstasy and priori deny the psychiatric aspects of candornbl~, and
pathological ecstasy. Contrary to the c o m m o n gener- that one is remiss in denying the religious aspects of
alization that individuals are initiated into possession the zar cult. The controversy between Leacock on the
cults as a form of psychotherapy for mental illness, one hand and Crapanzano and Garrison on the other
this is a case in which initiation was denied precisely over the latter's edited volume on possession in the
because the novice was discerned to be mentally ill. end came down to the relative emphasis given to
Likewise in the previous case, a neurotic individual medical and religious features in defining the nature
was deemed an inappropriate candidate for initiation; of the phenomenon. Each side accused the other of
it is unlikely that the opposition of her husband was being one-sided, and each claimed even-handedness
the only factor affecting the Mde-de-Santo's decision [56]. Would it not be wiser to pose the issue at the
to limit her participation. Finally, all three cases outset rather than to let it arise in a post-facto
described by Dr Rubim involved individuals who polemic? What are the implications of observations
were marginal not to their society--all were profes- that some people appear to make no distinction
sional class women of European ancestry--but mar- between the spiritual domain and the domain of
ginal to the religious milieu, and hence not considered health, while others, such as the Mac-de-Santo de-
as viable candidates for initiation. As Dr Rubim scribed here, are able to make surprisingly subtle
noted, even initiated ya6s will be referred to a doctor distinctions? How and under what circumstances are
if their possession behavior becomes inappropriate, the boundaries drawn? Is spirit possession predom-
indicating that the cult experience itself is not primar- inantly an idiom for illness, as evidenced by the
ily a form of therapy. The ability to experience frequent accounts of initiatory illness; or can illness
possession by an orixa is a highly valued religious in some cases by an idiom for a certain type of
skill and a serious ritual responsibility, entrusted encounter with the sacred [cf. 57]? Is there a religious
10 THOMAS J. CSORDAS

'side' and a medical 'side' to the issue, or are they Ethnopsychiatry. University of Calitbrnia Press,
ultimately two discourses on precisely the same exis- Berkeley, 1973.
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from one to the other, or is it possible to construct ment for psychiatric disorders. Ethos 2, 315-333, t974.
a 'meta-discourse' that does justice to both? The 14. Lewis I. M. Ecstatic Religion: An Anthropological Study
methodological status of our own a b i l i t y - - o r of Spirit Possession and Shamanism. Penguin.
necessity--to distinguish between medical a n d sacred Middlesex, 1971.
15. Young A. Why Amhara get kureynya: sickness and
must also be c o u n t e d as a problem. This is evident
possession in an Ethiopian zar cult. Am. Ethn6L 2,
not only in terms o f the overlap o f existential con- 567-854, 1975.
cerns (health a n d illness, life a n d death) between 16. Crapanzano V. and Garrison V. (Eds) Case Studies in
religion a n d medicine, but also in terms of the Spirit Possession. Wiley, New York, 1977.
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boundaries o f psychiatry in Latin and N o r t h A m e r i c a in a developing society. In Religion. Altered States of
as pointed out by D r Rubim. It is certainly spurious Consciousness, and Social Change (Edited by Bour-
to resolve a dualism in our o w n t h o u g h t by opting for guignon E.), pp. 264-320. Ohio State University Press,
Columbus. [973.
one of its poles a n d claiming that all can be a c c o u n t e d
18. Pressel E. Negative spirit possession in experienced
for from t h a t perspective. C o n f r o n t i n g the issue is not
Umbanda spirit mediums. In Case Studies in Spirit
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1980.
Acknowledgements--An earlier version of this paper was 20. Kehoe A. and Giletti D. Women's preponderance in
presented to the annual meetings of the American Anthro- possession cults: the calcium-deficiency hypothesis ex-
pological Association in 1983. I am grateful to Dr Erika tended. Am. Anthrop. 83, 549-561, 1981.
Bourguignon for comments on that earlier version. I am 21. Deren M. Divine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti.
grateful to Dr Ann Dunbar of the University of North McPherson. New York, 1953.
Carolina Program in African and Afro-American Studies 22. Bourguignon E. The self, the behavioral environment,
for the opportunity to inerview Dr Alvaro Rubim de Pinho, and the theory of spirit possession. In Context and
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