Search WWW
SiteSkipper
SiteSkipper Directory Listings

See also:


    http://www.aril.org/african.htm   » The African Experience of God through the Eyes of an Akan Woman - By Mercy Amba, an article in Cross Currents, the journal of the Association for Religion and Intellectual Life.

    http://www.marshall.edu/akanart/akancosmology.html   » Akan Cosmology and Symbolism - This site describes Akan cosmology and illustrates it through traditional Akan religious symbols, each of which encodes within its graceful lines a theological or moral belief or lesson. The integration of this rich traditional Akan symbolism into the Roman Catholicism of Ghana is shown, as well.

    http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/Fdtl/Ancestors/kopytoff.html   » Ancestors as Elders in Africa by Igor Kopytoff - Ancestor cults loom large in the anthropological image of Africa, but only certain dead with particular structural positions are worshipped as ancestors; this paper presents a study of ancestor and elder veneration among the matrilineal Suku of south-western Congo (Kinshasa).

    http://members.tripod.com/tettey/festival.htm   » The Ga Homowo Festival by A.B. Quartey-Papafio - Originally published in the Journal of the African Society, Vol. 19, in 1919, this essay describes the religious customs of the Ga people of Ghana as they existed independently of Roman Catholic influence.

    http://www.fa.indiana.edu/~conner/yoruba/man.html   » Man and the Gods in Yoruba Art - An exhibit of Yoruba religious art, with brief explantions of the iconography of the deities depicted.

    http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/34/011.html   » Voodoo in Benin, 1996 - In 1996 the government of Benin declared that Voodoo and other ATRs (practiced by about half of the population) are officially recognized religions on a par with Islam and Christianity, and gave ATR its own national holiday, January 10.

    http://www.mamiwata.com/   » West African Dahomean Vodoun - Large site created by an African-American Priestess, to initiate others across the diaspora. Site features both Dahomean Vodoun and Mami Wata traditions of West Africa, with articles on these and other ATRs in Benin, Togo, and Ghana; bibliography; links to related pages.



Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor

Free previews by Thumbshots.org