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Palo: African Ritual in Cuba

The large Palo altar (la prenda, or el caldero), a vessel filled up by magical objects, placed in Callejón de Hamel in Havana, Cuba, August 12, 2009. The Palo religion (Las Reglas de Congo) belongs to the group of syncretic religions which developed in Cuba amongst the black slaves, originally brought from Congo during the colonial period. Palo, having its roots in spiritual concepts of the indigenous people in Africa, worships the spirits and natural powers but can often give them faces and names known from the Christian dogma. Although there have been strong religious restrictions during the decades of the Cuban Revolution, the majority of Cubans still consult their problems with practitioners of some Afro Cuban religion.
The large Palo altar (la prenda, or el caldero), a vessel filled up by magical objects, placed in Callejón de Hamel in Havana, Cuba, August 12, 2009. The Palo religion (Las Reglas de Congo) belongs to the group of syncretic religions which developed in Cuba amongst the black slaves, originally brought from Congo during the colonial period. Palo, having its roots in spiritual concepts of the indigenous people in Africa, worships the spirits and natural powers but can often give them...
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Copyright > © Jan Sochor. All rights reserved.

Date > 12 Aug 2009

Size > 3872x2581 / 6.5MB