cannibalism and religion
Publié le 22/02/2012
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The eating of human
fl esh by other humans. It has been practiced in
a variety of places throughout human history for
many reasons, only some of which can be considered
religious. In extreme circumstances it has
been done just to survive. In some cultures parts
of the bodies of defeated enemies have been eaten
simply to degrade them and demonstrate the completeness
of the victory. In other instances, though,
elements of religious or at least spiritist belief
have come in, through the association of cannibalism
with war, sacrifi ce, and kinship or alliance
between the living and the dead and between different
tribes.
Among certain South American and African
tribes, for example, the bodies of killed foes were
reportedly cooked and eaten, or burned, reduced
to powder, and put in drinks. This was said to
protect the victors against attacks by the souls of
the deceased, and also to be a way of acquiring
their energy. Other tribesmen have disapproved of
the practice but claimed it is done by witches and
sorcerers in order to gain magical power. In still
other societies, such as some in New Guinea, parts
of the bodies of relatives, who had died naturally,
were eaten as a benign way of expressing kinship
and assuring their REINCARNATION within the tribe.
Cannibalism has also sometimes been a part
of religious sacrifi ce. In Fiji the communal eating
of cannibal victims who had been sacrifi ced to a
major god was said to be a way of cementing an
alliance between chiefs. Among the Aztecs of Mexico
(see AZTEC RELIGION) reports have alleged that
the bodies of the victims whose hearts and blood
were regularly offered to nourish the sun were
then eaten by priests and nobility. To eat offerings,
human, animal, or plant, presented to the gods is
widely considered a means of having communion
with that god and with other worshippers.
Recently some scholars have argued that
accounts of the practice of cannibalism, repellent
to most people, are greatly sensationalized. Cannibalism
has rarely if ever been reliably observed
fi rsthand, it is said, and accusations of human-eating
have come from informants whose real motive
was to slander rival tribes, or from tellers of tall
tales who enjoyed shocking their listeners. The
stories were then still more exaggerated by Western
colonialists to smear their "native" subjects as
barbaric and depraved, and so justify white rule.
Doubtless there is much truth to this. The
majority of anthropologists and religion scholars,
however, still believe that cannibalism has sometimes
been engaged in for religious reasons, though
probably not as often as was once thought.
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