Advertisement
Advertisement
A voodoo devotee in a trance, in the role of a spirit known as a gede, hoists a body from a grave in the Port-au-Prince cemetery on Sunday. Photo: AFP

IN PICTURES: Haitian Voodoo followers celebrate their festival of the dead

AP

Revellers streamed into cemeteries across Haiti on Sunday bearing beeswax candles, food offerings and bottles of rum infused with hot peppers to mark the country’s annual Voodoo festival of the dead.

At Port-au-Prince’s sprawling national cemetery, Voodoo priests and priestesses gathered around a blackened monument that is believed to be the oldest grave. There, they lit candles and stoked small fires as they evoked the spirit Baron Samedi, the guardian of the dead who is typically depicted with a dark top hat and a white skull face.

A woman clutches a human bone during festivities in the Port-au-Prince cemetery marking the day of the dead on Sunday. Photo: AP
A man in a trance sways amid crowds of Voodoo adherents in the Port-Au-Prince cemetery. Photo: AFP

Some filled their mouths with fiery rum and sprayed it over the tomb’s cross. As if in a trance, one young man wrapped in a paisley print sheet chewed up bits of a broken glass bottle, but onlookers who scrambled on burial vaults to get a better look didn’t buy his performance. “Thief!” they shouted, as he spat out blood.

Minutes later, the crowd perched atop the tombs gave respect to a priestess with a purple scarf wrapped around her head as she danced in a contorted manner and made a keening lament.

Other Haitians gathered among the tombs to quietly remember dead relatives and ask spirits to grant favours or provide guidance. One man paid a soothsayer for advice on how to increase his chances at winning bets at Haitian outlets that play on New York State Lottery numbers.

Rum and dancing play important roles in the Haitian Voodoo rituals marking the Day of the Dead. Photo: AFP
A Voodoo follower puffs on a pipe as she takes part in revelry in Haiti on Sunday. Photo: AFP

Vendors who set up shop in the cemeteries did a brisk business selling pictures of Catholic saints alongside candles, rum, and rosary beads.

Voodoo, or Vodou as preferred by Haitians, evolved in the 17th century when colonists brought slaves to Haiti from West Africa. Slaves forced to practice Catholicism adopted saints to coincide with personalities in the African religions. Voodoo was sanctioned as an official religion in 2003 and it is practiced widely across the country of 10 million inhabitants.

This year’ two-day celebration comes shortly before Haitian officials are expected to announce the top two finishers in a presidential first-round vote. Electoral authorities say they plan to release the preliminary results of the presidential vote on Tuesday, after the Voodoo festival concludes.

Voodoo priest Pierre Saint Ange cracked a whip on a crumbling tomb and told onlookers not to “fight with guns or burn tyres” in coming days.

“We are asking for peace,” he cried, standing near three women with their faces smeared in white paint.

 

Post