Monday, November 25, 2013

The Source of Saturday

Question: Can you recommend a good source for the Baron Samedi-Samhain connection theory you once mentioned?

Actually, no, although I can tell you where we tripped over it. This is one of those theories that is floating around and referenced by several different works, but that is never visited in-depth enough that we could say, "Oh, here's the book/article/whatever that explains it thoroughly."

For those who haven't seen us mention it before, the basic gist of the theory is that Baron Samedi, a New-World-only loa with no African roots that we know of who seems to have sprung up out of nowhere to become part of his current religion, is influenced by or even a later version of the lesser Irish god Samhain, who was brought over by Irish migrant workers and indentured servants who shared their stories with the local African slaves, thus creating a modern synthesis deity where none had existed before.

We first ran into the idea of Irish influence on African diaspora religions in Margarite Olmos & Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert's Creole Religions of the Caribbean, which does not mention Irish influence on the Baron but does point out that his wife, Maman Brigitte, has been pretty obviously influenced by the Irish Brigid and that the rainbow-goddess Ayeda Wedo has gained a few suspiciously Celtic traits, most noticeably the legend that her crown or treasure may be found at the end of the rainbow (and, incidentally, Ayeda is married to Damballah, who is frequently associated with the Irish Saint Patrick because of the former's status as a god of serpents and the latter's famous exploits driving said serpents out of Ireland). From the other end of the spectrum, Sean O'Callaghan's To Hell or Barbados, which is mainly concerned with the cultural movement of Irish people displaced or forced into slavery in the Americas in the seventeenth century, spends some time discussing the influence of Irish myth and religious practices on both indigenous people and African diaspora slaves that they came into contact with, including a nod to the Baron. We've also seen the Samedi theory pop up in various books on modern vodun worship, but not much from the scholarly end of the spectrum, so I don't have a great citation for you there.

Maman Brigitte's Irish roots are much easier to find information on, and you can usually find at least a throwaway line about how Brigid probably influenced her in both diaspora religion texts that mention that Brigid might have been imported to color Maman Brigitte and Irish mythology texts that mention that Maman Brigitte may be a much later form of the older Brigid (in particular, they often cite Maman Brigitte's connection with death as possibly being descended from Brigid's invention of mourning for her slain son Ruadan). Her clearer connection to Celtic myth doesn't necessarily mean that her husband also came from the isles, of course, especially given the cavalier mix-and-match of American religions around that time period, but it still does paint a picture of some filtered European influence from that area in Loa that don't occur in the old African religions.

Basically, to us it looks like a theory someone once came up with that a lot of people said, "Hey, that might be plausible, neat!" but then no one ever actually did any thorough research or wrote any authoritative paper on it, so it remains ethereal and homeless in the scholarly community.

We like to use the theory of an Irish-based Baron Samedi (because what other theories do we even have about that guy?)and Maman Brigitte as an in-game universe explanation for where the "rootless" gods of the American religions might have come from, but it's only a theory, and not a very solid one at that. No one should confuse it for gospel truth, and while we might use it as an in-game plot device, it would be super religiously incorrect (not to mention very douchey) to try to use it to tell actual modern-day worshipers of vodun that any of their loa don't "belong to them" or are otherwise secretly Europeans in disguise. Even those gods who clearly do have European influence in their history are firmly part of the diaspora religions now and have their own unique character and religious importance.

So for us, in the game world where gods are discrete beings who can run around and do things and be interacted with as characters, Samedi and Brigitte are former members of the Tuatha who migrated to the New World and reinvented themselves as loa who spend their time bolstering the ranks of the Orisha; but don't go extending that to how real people might experience their religions in the real world. We like our games rooted in authenticity, but they're still just games, and like everyone else on the planet, sometimes we just have to take a guess and pick the theory we like most.

6 comments:

  1. The only problem I have with the theory is that I've never found any evidence that Samhain was actually a god. A festival, sure, but a god, I'm not so sure. There's a very minor figure (Samthainn) who Balor stole a cow from, but since he's only given a brief mention its hard to tell if he was The Samhain or just some dude named after the season. Other than that its a really cool theory, and its giving me a lot of ideas so I might run with it.

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    1. That's the guy we're talking about when we talk about Samhain, although of course he might not be connected to the festival except in a vague etymological way. :) Part of the allure of the theory, I think, is that in a Scion framework it can be an example of a minor god of one pantheon jumping ship to become a major power in another one.

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  2. Interesting. I use the idea that Samedi and most of the Ghede and other more-or-less exclusively New-World or imported from other regions Loa were the result of Samedi being a Scion who got to apotheosis then went recruiting for a New-World focused branch of the Orisha.
    The other, previously established Orisha, were more than happy to get in on the action along with the others he recruited like Dambahlla.
    Either way I tend to have the New World Loa as a kind of satellite group to the Orisha proper, not as ancient and powerful, but focused and able to swing some serious influence in their area of interest.

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    1. Yeah, Samedi as a Scion who rose to prominance around the diaspora is also a really great approach to where he came from. Since that time period involved a massive upheaval of African peoples and the basic reinvention of a whole new culture based on influences from a whole bunch of older ones, it's a perfect time to say that the Orisha, seeing their people in flux, created some new Scions and reinvented their own personas in order to find a way to continue being there for their worshipers.

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    2. Exactly! He's also a morbid, snarky and charismatic sumbitch and helped rope others into the Voudon scene from other pantheons and got Scions from other pantheons involved too.
      Thus the origin of the New World group along with the originals using different faces as well.
      Since the Orisha don't have much in the way of an Underworld, I figure the Ghede family likely runs that franchise for them.

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    3. I do about the same and give my players a choice of Ori or Cheval based on that. They tend to go Loa, but still the choice is there.

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