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Who Is God?

TitleWho Is God?
# of Words715
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)2.86

Who is God?




Who is God?


     Worshipping is a way to communicate beliefs and feelings of individuals
and religious communities.  Every society I have every studied from the American
Indians to the Ancient Greek have all believed in some form of worship or
religion.  Altars have been and are in existence in several if not all forms of
region.  Robert Farris Thompson depicts this for the African population in "
Overture: The Concept 'Altar,' "  and " With the Assurance of Infinity:  Yoruba
Atlantic Altars," Face of the Gods:  Art and Altars of Africa and the African
Americas, through pictures he and others have taken, has well as evidence from
assorted books, articles, poems and songs, Thompson shows the meaningful role
the Altar had in self expression of the Africans.  "The aim is to view black
Atlantic art, especially in the New World, in terms of thoughtfully selected
[altar] objects belonging to specific philosophic constellations which help to
define the face of divinity."
     Through the oppression of the salve trade, the Yoruba Africans worked to
keep there own conception of region intact.  "Even under slavery, and under post
slavery persecution in the late nineteenth century, the Yoruba of Cuba and
Brazil managed to maintain sporadic but precious contact with Africa through
networks of friends and traders.  They sought the sacred cowries, seeds, and
beads of Africa for their religion."  This example of perseverance of their
native ritual and worship practices, shows the magnitude that region held for
many Yoruba Africans.
     They kept their own religion alive through many hidden tactics such as
unsuspected culinary art, by giving the gods the food they needed to be strong.
"But these were more than foods:  they were writings in code.  African system of
logic and belief flowed unsuspected from the kitchen, giving the gods the dishes
they craved."
     The Altar was also maintained by many-shelved cabinets called
canastillerd,  as  Thompson showed in plate 175, the cabinet would hide the
religious essence of the Alter inside, when police or strangers came. Thompson
shows that anything from a empty room to a plate of food can be an alter, an
altar is just a place that you realize and express your b...This is ONLY a preview of the article. If you would like to view the entire document, you must subscribe to Electronic References. Please register below now!

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