Voodoo makes a comeback in its Benin home

The Vodoun priestesses give offerings to a sacred Vodoun idol in Porto-Novo, on December 10, 2019. PHOTO | YANICK | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Benin is gearing for its annual voodoo festival -- an event that lures an influx of visitors to the capital Porto-Novo and underscores voodoo's comeback in the country of its birth.

In his long life, voodoo priest Kpohinto Medji has seen his religion flourish and then go into decline, banned for years by the authorities and pressured by other faiths.
Today, the ageing priest with mischievous eyes is somewhat happier.

Benin is gearing for its annual voodoo festival -- an event that lures an influx of visitors to the capital Porto-Novo and underscores voodoo's comeback in the country of its birth.

Voodoo worshippers dance at shore of Quidah beach during annual voodoo festival in Benin. PHOTO | FILE | AKINTUNDE AKINLEYE | AFP

Houngo Hounto Square is among a number of squares, once owned by voodoo-worshipping families, that are being renovated.

Painters have been putting the finishing touches to its ochre walls ahead of the January 10 festival, and fetishes and tokens of the old religion are proudly on display.

"Before, it was a run-down, abandoned square," the old priest said, speaking in the local language of Goun. "Today, it's lovely."

Voodoo, more often called "vodun" in West Africa, has a hierarchy of deities and tribal spirits of nature and sees revered ancestors living alongside the living.

It uses fetishes, magical practices and healing remedies, which followers consider to be divine.

Mito Akplogan Guin, the supreme leader of the Vodoun cult in Porto-Novo, prays for one of his visitors at a Voudon temple, in Porto-Novo, on December 10, 2019. PHOTO | YANICK | AFP

But its rituals have often been distorted by Hollywood, which tends to stereotype the religion as a source of black magic.

In Benin itself, voodoo was battered by French colonisation, when it was demonised by Catholic missionaries.

A dozen years after Benin gained independence, voodoo was banned by Mathieu Kerekou, a Marxist-Leninist who came to power in a military coup.

His elected successor, Nicephore Soglo, lifted the ban, but the religion came under pressure once more with the spread of evangelism in West Africa, whose preachers often compare native religions with sorcery.

Haitian voodoo followers bathe in a sacred pool during the annual voodoo festival held in Gonaives, Haiti, on March 27, 2016. PHOTO | FILE | HECTOR RETAMAL | AFP

According to the latest available official figures, which date from 2013, practitioners of voodoo, who are called vodounsi, account for just 11 per cent of Benin's population, against nearly 30 per cent Muslim and 25 per cent Christian.

"There are so many religions which have arrived in Benin, they have turned our brothers away from our faith," said Raymond Zannou, a printer.

The ancestors built Houngbo Hounto Square. Today, "a minority of people take care of maintaining the squares, and often they are elderly," he said.

Porto-Novo, a city of about a quarter of a million people, originally developed as a port for slave trade under the Portuguese empire in the 17th century.

Its squares -- 44, according to Gerard Bassale, head of a local cultural association called Ouadada -- are one of its most distinctive features.

Vodoun huts are seen in Houngbo Honto in Porto-Novo, on December 10, 2019. - In Porto-Novo, "vodoun" squares or temples (the term used in Benin, different from Haitian voodoo) are found all over the city, and are integrated in public space. PHOTO | YANICK | AFP

Many of them belong to local families, who built their homes there and established temples and housed their divinities as protection.

But many of them fell into sad disrepair, becoming a symbol itself of voodoo's marginalisation. Many blamed squabbles within families about sharing out the cost of renovation.

"They are the identity of our town. They create links between people, they are where important ceremonies take place," said Bassale, whose organisation is refurbishing the squares.

"If they disappeared, part of the town's history would go with them."

A Vodoun priestess poses for a portrait at a Vodoun temple in Porto-Novo, on December 10, 2019. PHOTO | YANICK | AFP

Restoring each square costs the equivalent of around $66,000 (60,000 euros). The funding comes from Cergy-Pontoise, a town in the greater Paris region that has twinning links.

Porto-Novo's authorities are paying for solar-powered lighting for the squares and for cleaning them, but does not maintain the voodoo shrines there, which it considers to be private areas.

King Te Houeyi Migan XIV, the descendant of a long line of local chiefs, is delighted at the rebirth of the squares.

French colonisers used a forest that was sacred to his forebears to build Porto-Novo's cathedral and governor's palace.

King Tê Houeyi Migan XIV, descendant of a long dynasty, poses for a portrait in Porto-Novo, on December 10, 2019. PHOTO | YANICK | AFP

The chief, clad in a magnificent purple gown, pointed to an ancient kapok tree towering over one of three renovated squares near the old palace.

"It is a sacred tree. Spirits live there," said the king. "Every five years, we hold a great party and make sacrifices there."

Paul Nouatin, treasurer of an association that maintains two of the squares, said there had been an upturn in interest in voodoo -- around 20 young people had been initiated into the religion in December alone, he said.

Paul Nouatin, the treasurer of the AGEP-DDA association, poses for a portrait in front of a Vodoun temple in Porto-Novo, on December 10, 2019. - In Porto-Novo, "vodoun" squares or temples (the term used in Benin, different from Haitian voodoo) are found all over the city, and are integrated in public space. They belong to families, who settled from the 16th century and established their temples and divinities around their houses. But these places were no longer maintained by family communities. PHOTO | YANICK | AFP

Mito Akplogan Guin, the supreme head of voodoo in Porto-Novo, said he was optimistic.

"Catholics, Protestants, Muslims ... all their ancestors (in Benin) were followers of voodoo. Our religion can't disappear in a flash."

Bare-chested women dance during a Voodoo ceremony on September 10, 2015 in Glidji Kpodji, 50 kms from Lome. PHOTO | FILE | EMILE KOUTON | AFP