Annual Voodoo Day Celebration

A man blows liquid on a voodoo idol as hundreds of followers of the traditional religion gathered in the Atlantic coast town. AFP/Getty Images

A man blows liquid on a voodoo idol as hundreds of followers of the traditional religion gathered in the Atlantic coast town. AFP/Getty Images

Ritual dances, goat slaughtering and gin: Thousands gather for voodoo religious festival in tiny African country of Benin

COTONOU Jan 10 (Reuters) – The national voodoo holiday in the West African country of Benin had a distinctively political accent this year as practitioners from Africa and the Americas gathered on Sunday to offer prayers and sacrifices for peace.

Hundreds of followers of the traditional religion gathered in the Atlantic coast town of Ouidah, once an important port in the slave trade, to pray for calm during the tiny country’s presidential election scheduled for February.

Benin has no history of significant electoral violence. But David Kofi Aza, a well-known priest, said last month that an oracle named Fa had predicted dozens of deaths in post-electoral violence because the loser would refuse to cede to the winner.

The oracle did not reveal how the crisis would be resolved, Aza said.

 

King Daagbo Hounon (centre left), Chief of the Voodoo religion in Ouidah, walks through the streets during the annual Voodoo Day celebration on January 10, which had a very political tone this year. AFP/Getty Images

King Daagbo Hounon (centre left), Chief of the Voodoo religion in Ouidah, walks through the streets during the annual Voodoo Day celebration on January 10, which had a very political tone this year. AFP/Getty Images

At the ceremony in Ouidah, spiritual leader Daagbo Hounan Houna II appealed to the dead to help keep order during the vote. “The elections will pass in a peaceful manner in the name of the bounties of the ancestors,” he said.

Further inland in Savalou, the hometown of Prime Minister Lionel Zinsou, priests and dignitaries set a chicken on fire at a ceremony before spreading its blood and palm oil on a fetish made out of cowrie shells and sand.

 

A man dressed up as a Voodoo Idol walks the streets before the start of the annual festival at the weekend. AFP/ Getty Images

A man dressed up as a Voodoo Idol walks the streets before the start of the annual festival at the weekend. AFP/ Getty Images

The election campaign has been overshadowed by a controversy over the ruling party’s choice of Zinsou as its candidate, a pick approved by outgoing president Thomas Boni Yayi.

Last Tuesday, politicians from the opposition and dissidents from the ruling party met for discussions on the formation of a coalition to prevent Zinsou’s run.

Zinsou is both French and Beninese and spent a large part of his life in France. Critics claim he is an outsider without a true understanding of the realities of life in Benin.

But he does enjoy local support. “Diversity must be a richness and exclusion is a source of war,” Gbaguidi Tossoh, the king of Savalou, said at the ceremony there.

Boni Yayi has been president since 2006, when he took over in a peaceful transition of power after 28 years under Marxist coup leader Mathieu Kerekou, who gradually came to embrace multiparty democracy.

 

BENIN, GRAND POPO. Annual meeting of voodoo cult followers in January 1998. Photo by Jean-Claude Coutausee

BENIN, GRAND POPO. Annual meeting of voodoo cult followers in January 1998. Photo by Jean-Claude Coutausee

Aside from Zinsou, prominent businessman Sebastien Ajavon and Abdoulaye Bio Tchane, a former senior official at the International Monetary Fund and a 2011 presidential candidate, have officially declared their runs for the office.

The celebrations of voodoo, a traditional African spirit religion that spread to the Americas with the slave trade, were declared a national holiday in 1992.

This year they drew practitioners from nearby countries such as Togo, Ghana and Nigeria and locations as far away as Haiti, Brazil and the United States.

“For nearly 15 years, I have not missed this celebration,” said a man in his 60s from Brazil who gave his name only as Antonio. (Additional reporting by Allegresse Sasse; Writing by Makini Brice; Editing by Tom Heneghan)

By Samuel Elijah, Published by Reuters on January 10, 2016

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