Let Us Sing of the Syncretic Gods of Outcasts and Wanderers
whatshot 121 snips
May 24, 2024
Dive into the fluid world of cultural traditions where constant evolution meets deep-rooted rituals. Explore how iconic figures like the Black Madonna adapt across cultures, connecting the past to resilient identities. Discover the spiritual syncretism that shapes eclectic practices and the importance of wandering deities in our search for belonging. Music becomes a powerful language of longing and roots, illustrating the interplay between displacement and cultural exchange. Celebrate the dynamic relationship between people and their land, breathing life into forgotten traditions.
02:11:37
forum Ask episode
web_stories AI Snips
view_agenda Chapters
menu_book Books
auto_awesome Transcript
info_circle Episode notes
insights INSIGHT
Longing for Lineage
Many seek deeper connections to place and cultural traditions but worry about appropriation.
This creates a dilemma for those who lack a strong lineage, leaving them feeling lost.
insights INSIGHT
The Outsider's Story
Not everyone feels at home even within their own tribe.
Many feel like outsiders, longing for belonging and questioning their place.
insights INSIGHT
Wandering Gods
Human history involves both rootedness and wandering, reflected in deities.
Some gods are tied to specific locations, while others travel and adapt.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Written by Kahlil Gibran, 'The Prophet' is a book of prose poetry that explores themes such as love, marriage, children, giving, eating and drinking, work, joy and sorrow, and more. The story follows the prophet Almustafa, who, before departing from the city of Orphalese, shares his wisdom with the people on a range of subjects. The book emphasizes the importance of freedom, self-knowledge, and the interconnectedness of all life. It has been widely acclaimed for its profound insights and has been translated into over 100 languages, making it one of the most translated books in history.
Chakmak
Chakmak
Ramesh Kartik Nayak
The Cult of the Black Virgin
The Cult of the Black Virgin
Ian Begg
Bury Me Standing
Isabel Fonseca
In 'Bury Me Standing', Isabel Fonseca delves into the customs, history, and daily lives of the Romani people, offering a vivid portrayal of their struggles and traditions. The book is based on her extensive travels and interactions with Gypsy communities in several Eastern European countries.
Scatterlings
David Abram
Martin Shaw
Syncretism in Religion
A Reader
Anita Maria Leopold
This book presents a comprehensive overview of syncretism, featuring essays that delve into the historical background, theories of power, and the future of syncretism studies. It brings together significant contributions from various authors, offering insights into the dynamics of cultural contact and change.
Inventing and Reinventing the Goddess
Contemporary Iterations of Hindu Deities on the Move
Sree Padma
This edited volume examines the invention and reinvention of goddesses in India, highlighting their significance in popular religion and their evolution over time. It delves into the roles of social hierarchy, gender differences, and modernity in shaping these religious phenomena. The book offers insights into various local goddesses and their cultural impact.
The story of human ritual and cultural tradition is one of depth and deep connection to land, to place, and to processes and protocols that remain steady across generations. But it's also a story of constant mutation, assimilation, and re-expression. There is a fluidity to culture and tradition that is not always acknowledged in modern discourse. Religious scholars will tell us that all traditions are — to one degree or another — syncretic, and when we lift the lid off of traditions and look deeper, we start to see that even those that seem the most anchored and fixed are deeply porous and adaptive, that traditions have always traveled and changed shape, just as the land itself changes constantly. At a time when more and more people are looking to reconnect to ritual practice, to tradition, and to the land — and yet wanting to be respectful of cultural boundaries — it can be helpful to also understand the fluid, spontaneous, artistic and adaptive aspects of cultural tradition, to hear stories of traveling gods and cross-cultural mashups and innovations that arrive with the movement of travelers. Right at the heart of this exploration of adaptation lives the Divine Mother, who continually re-invents herself to meet the needs of the ecosystems she encounters. So the Polish Black Madonna becomes assimilated into Haitian Voodoo, the Indian mother goddess finds a way to re-express as Catholic St. Sarah, and the African sea goddess Yemoja re-arises to become the most popular vision of the Divine Mother in Brazil and possesses bodies from all socio-cultural and ethnic backgrounds regularly. In many places, syncretism — the fusion and blending of traditions — is welcomed, even if the histories that led to that syncretism are painful. And in these syncretic cauldrons, new traditions are born all the time. Once we start to view the flow of culture and tradition beyond a human-centered sociocultural lens, we see a living animate process in which gods travel and the forces of 'place' are not static, in which outsider species are assimilated into new ecologies, and in which wanderers and outcasts play a key role in the adaptive movement of traditions. These stories teach us that the world is not so neatly divided into those who belong to a place and a tradition and those who don't. And that the story of 'not feeling at home' — of feeling rootless and separate from a homeland that is far away — is actually a key part of the human story and serves as a starting point to the process of reconnection. Featuring conversations with Peia Luzzi, Scout Rainer Wiley, Tyson Yunkaporta, Skye Mandozay and Bayo Akomolafe and music by Egemen Sanli, Victor Sakshin, Beya, and more, this episode is an oceanic cross-cultural ride that asks us to leave our preconceptions of what is fixed and what is fluid behind.