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The arrival and endurance of Santeria (also known as Regla de Ocha) in Cuba is the result of multiple contributing factors. The roots of Santeria stem from Nigeria and were transported to Cuba by way of the Lucumi people. However, the Lucumi people only consisted of about 8% of the overall slave population in Cuba from 1760 until about 1850.<ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993:</ref> With such low numbers to draw upon the religion was under constant attack in the form of dilution through more dominant numbers in the form of reproductive outsourcing and the cruelty inflicted through the employment of slavery <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Between 1800 and 1850 almost the entire population in Cuba consisted of people of African descent <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>This factor created a sense of uncertainty for Plantation owners because of tensions amongst the slave population. The slave rivalries eventually resulted in an ever-rising loss in production. The method for combating the losses yielded that an increase in the Lucumi population would serve the plantation best. Lucumi people are known to be hard workers and are mild mannered <ref>Vega, Marta Moreno. “Interlocking African Diaspora Cultures in the Work of Fernando Ortiz''.''” Journal of Black Studies , Vol.. 31 No. 1, September (2000): 39-50. Print.</ref>. As result of increasing import of slaves the population of the Lucumi rose sharply to about 34% <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Attributing to the increase of Santeria was that many other slaves and freemen began to practice the religion of Santeria thereby increasing the span of influence and affiliation in a more diverse manner.
The arrival and endurance of Santeria (also known as Regla de Ocha) in Cuba is the result of multiple contributing factors. The roots of Santeria stem from Nigeria and were transported to Cuba by way of the Lucumi people. However, the Lucumi people only consisted of about 8% of the overall slave population in Cuba from 1760 until about 1850.<ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993:</ref> With such low numbers to draw upon the religion was under constant attack in the form of dilution through more dominant numbers in the form of reproductive outsourcing and the cruelty inflicted through the employment of slavery <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Between 1800 and 1850 almost the entire population in Cuba consisted of people of African descent <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>This factor created a sense of uncertainty for Plantation owners because of tensions amongst the slave population. The slave rivalries eventually resulted in an ever-rising loss in production. The method for combating the losses yielded that an increase in the Lucumi population would serve the plantation best. Lucumi people are known to be hard workers and are mild mannered <ref>Vega, Marta Moreno. “Interlocking African Diaspora Cultures in the Work of Fernando Ortiz''.''” Journal of Black Studies , Vol.. 31 No. 1, September (2000): 39-50. Print.</ref>. As result of increasing import of slaves the population of the Lucumi rose sharply to about 34% <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Attributing to the increase of Santeria was that many other slaves and freemen began to practice the religion of Santeria thereby increasing the span of influence and affiliation in a more diverse manner.
The disposition of colonialism brought a significant strain on all religions outside of Catholicism. Over the course of a 90-year span the Lucumi maintained the practice of the religion of Santeria. The religion of Santeria encompasses sacrificial food, song, dance, costumes, spiritual deities and the use of artifacts. In the beginning the Lucumi and other worshippers of Santeria would have to practice in secret <ref>Simpson, George Eaton. ''Black Religions in the New World''. New York. Columbia University Press. 1978</ref>They would create hasty areas in which they would conduct structuralized practice of Santeria and return to their colonial life after. However, the practice of Santeria on a more regular basis takes place not on the sugar plantations but in the urban areas <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>The syncretism that modernized Santeria was introduced when high-class Mulattoes needed to find ways to alleviate ailments such as stress or sickness. There was no formal medical aid available to the community at the time. In light of this disposition high-class Mulattoes pulled from whatever resources that they could find. They employed the practices of Christian taught house slaves with Afro-Cuban healers and Spanish curanderos.The Afro-Cuban healers and Spanish curanderos served as the only medical practitioners in Cuba and were responsible for treating both the Black and White population <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>The distance between the city and the countryside made it very difficult for the opportunity of slaves to participate in the syncretism of Santeria with Catholicism and Christianity. This was due to geographic reference. Most of the European religious practice and churches were located the urban areas or towns and to attend services would require traveling over long distances, which would interfere with the sugar production <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>In the urban areas slaves worked along side of freemen and White Cubans in a less restricted atmosphere. They were educated and trusted to perform skilled labor and given a great deal of responsibility. Their presence served in a number of diverse jobs, which acted as a catalyst for the syncretism of Santeria with Catholicism and Christianity <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Not every slave in Cuba complied with the employment of slavery. Cimmarones as the Cuban slave owners labeled them were a group of slaves who fled captivity and formed communities consisting of thousands of people. They took refuge in the wilderness and the mountains of Cuba they maintained the practice of Santeria. They were considered a very serious threat to the colonial government’s hold on slavery and oppression. The Cimarrones were able to elude capture, provide aid and shelter to other escaped slaves. Over the course of time they developed the means to communicate with other surrounding secret camps via the plantation slaves and friendly White Cubans <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Other slaves and freemen who lived in rural areas formed secret societies and groups in which they would exercise their religious beliefs of Santeria out of the public view to avoid colonial reform and oppression <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>After the abolishment of slavery Palenque, the Cimarrones establishment was converted into a town named El Cobre after surviving for fifty years <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993</ref>In the religion of Santeria the emphasis of conscious existence binds the understanding of nature, the higher powers, and the channels of lineage together through ritual practice and clairvoyance. The circle is a symbol that is divided into three sections that begin at the core with people and extend out into two other sections being ancestors and finally divinities<ref>Daniel, Yvonne. ''Dancing Wisdom: Embodied knowledge in Haitian Vodou, Cuban Yoruba, and Bahian Candomblé''. Frank Ward Photo. 2005. Reprinted by permission.</ref>The significance of people at the inner core stand to represent the present day of existence and understanding in the form of perception with in the individual as he or she can interpret the information surrounding them. The outer layer of the ancestor represents the heritable understanding that the individual carries with them as a source of how and why to interpret values of perception with in a given realm. The outmost layer represents divinity is the value of knowledge, direction and understanding that is acquired from Orishas and personal experience. The existence the circle represents is not a fixed plain of understanding but stands as an interchangeable ever evolving and rotating sense of awareness and being <ref>Daniel, Yvonne. ''Dancing Wisdom: Embodied knowledge in Haitian Vodou, Cuban Yoruba, and Bahian Candomblé''. Frank Ward Photo. 2005. Reprinted by permission.</ref>Santeria lineage is structured in the connection through Sibs (a group of kin) with each Sib being traced back to a common male ancestor linking the bloodlines to the religion <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>“There were three different routes for the transmission of Orisha worship. A child could inherit an Orisha from either its mother or father and continue their worship of it. In this case a triangular relationship existed between the child, the parent, and the Orisha” <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.p59</ref>.
The disposition of colonialism brought a significant strain on all religions outside of Catholicism. Over the course of a 90-year span the Lucumi maintained the practice of the religion of Santeria. The religion of Santeria encompasses sacrificial food, song, dance, costumes, spiritual deities and the use of artifacts. In the beginning the Lucumi and other worshippers of Santeria would have to practice in secret <ref>Simpson, George Eaton. ''Black Religions in the New World''. New York. Columbia University Press. 1978</ref>They would create hasty areas in which they would conduct structuralized practice of Santeria and return to their colonial life after. However, the practice of Santeria on a more regular basis takes place not on the sugar plantations but in the urban areas <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>The syncretism that modernized Santeria was introduced when high-class Mulattoes needed to find ways to alleviate ailments such as stress or sickness. There was no formal medical aid available to the community at the time. In light of this disposition high-class Mulattoes pulled from whatever resources that they could find. They employed the practices of Christian taught house slaves with Afro-Cuban healers and Spanish curanderos.The Afro-Cuban healers and Spanish curanderos served as the only medical practitioners in Cuba and were responsible for treating both the Black and White population <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>The distance between the city and the countryside made it very difficult for the opportunity of slaves to participate in the syncretism of Santeria with Catholicism and Christianity. This was due to geographic reference. Most of the European religious practice and churches were located the urban areas or towns and to attend services would require traveling over long distances, which would interfere with the sugar production <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>In the urban areas slaves worked along side of freemen and White Cubans in a less restricted atmosphere. They were educated and trusted to perform skilled labor and given a great deal of responsibility. Their presence served in a number of diverse jobs, which acted as a catalyst for the syncretism of Santeria with Catholicism and Christianity <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Not every slave in Cuba complied with the employment of slavery. Cimmarones as the Cuban slave owners labeled them were a group of slaves who fled captivity and formed communities consisting of thousands of people. They took refuge in the wilderness and the mountains of Cuba they maintained the practice of Santeria. They were considered a very serious threat to the colonial government’s hold on slavery and oppression. The Cimarrones were able to elude capture, provide aid and shelter to other escaped slaves. Over the course of time they developed the means to communicate with other surrounding secret camps via the plantation slaves and friendly White Cubans <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>Other slaves and freemen who lived in rural areas formed secret societies and groups in which they would exercise their religious beliefs of Santeria out of the public view to avoid colonial reform and oppression <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>After the abolishment of slavery Palenque, the Cimarrones establishment was converted into a town named El Cobre after surviving for fifty years <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993</ref>In the religion of Santeria the emphasis of conscious existence binds the understanding of nature, the higher powers, and the channels of lineage together through ritual practice and clairvoyance. The circle is a symbol that is divided into three sections that begin at the core with people and extend out into two other sections being ancestors and finally divinities<ref>Daniel, Yvonne. ''Dancing Wisdom: Embodied knowledge in Haitian Vodou, Cuban Yoruba, and Bahian Candomblé''. Frank Ward Photo. 2005. Reprinted by permission.</ref>The significance of people at the inner core stand to represent the present day of existence and understanding in the form of perception with in the individual as he or she can interpret the information surrounding them. The outer layer of the ancestor represents the heritable understanding that the individual carries with them as a source of how and why to interpret values of perception with in a given realm. The outmost layer represents divinity is the value of knowledge, direction and understanding that is acquired from Orishas and personal experience. The existence the circle represents is not a fixed plain of understanding but stands as an interchangeable ever evolving and rotating sense of awareness and being <ref>Daniel, Yvonne. ''Dancing Wisdom: Embodied knowledge in Haitian Vodou, Cuban Yoruba, and Bahian Candomblé''. Frank Ward Photo. 2005. Reprinted by permission.</ref>Santeria lineage is structured in the connection through Sibs (a group of kin) with each Sib being traced back to a common male ancestor linking the bloodlines to the religion <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.</ref>“There were three different routes for the transmission of Orisha worship. A child could inherit an Orisha from either its mother or father and continue their worship of it. In this case a triangular relationship existed between the child, the parent, and the Orisha” <ref>Brandon, George. “''Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories''. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.p59</ref>.BASDSNFn


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 14:34, 5 May 2010

Cuba is traditionally a Catholic country. In some instances Catholicism is much modified and influenced through syncretism. A common syncretic belief is Santería, which was brought to Cuba by the slaves from Africa and spread to neighboring islands; it shows similarities to Brazilian Umbanda and has been receiving a degree of official support.

The Roman Catholic Church estimates that 60 percent of the population is Catholic.

Membership in Protestant churches is estimated to be 5 percent and includes Baptists, Pentecostals, Jehovah's Witnesses, Seventh-day Adventists, Presbyterians, Anglicans, Episcopalians, Methodists, Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), and Lutherans. Other groups include the Greek Orthodox Church, the Russian Orthodox Church, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, Baha'is, and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons).

Entrance to the Catedral de San Cristóbal de la Habana (Cathedral of Saint Christopher of Havana)
File:Caridad del Cobre.jpg
Our Lady of Charity, Patroness of Cuba

Cuba is home to a variety of syncretic religions of largely African cultural origin. According to a US State Department report, "Cuba International Religious Freedom Report 2008", some sources estimate that as much as 80 percent of the population consults with practitioners of religions with West African roots, such as Santeria or Yoruba. Santería developed out of the traditions of the Yoruba, one of the African peoples who were imported to Cuba during the 16th through 19th centuries to work on the sugar plantations. Santería blends elements of Christianity and West African beliefs and as such made it possible for the slaves to retain their traditional beliefs while appearing to practice Catholicism. La Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre (Our Lady Of Charity) is the Catholic patroness of Cuba, and is greatly revered by the Cuban people and seen as a symbol of Cuba. In Santería, she has been syncretized with the goddess Ochún. The important religious festival "La Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre" is celebrated by Cubans annually on 8 September. Other religions practised are Palo Monte, and Abakuá, which have large parts of their liturgy in African languages.

History

After the revolution of 1959, Cuba restricted religious practice. On paper, the government "recognizes" the right of citizens to profess and practice any religious belief within the framework of respect for the law; however, in law and in practice, the Government places restrictions on freedom of religion.[1]

Ffrom 1959 to 1961 eighty percent of the professional Catholic priests and Protestant ministers left Cuba for the United States. Relationships between the new government and congregations were tense, the new Cuban government was very limiting and suspicious of church operations, blaming them for collaboration with the CIA during the Bay of Pigs invasion and stockpiling arms provided for a "counter-revolution".

Since 1992, restrictions have been eased and direct challenges by state institutions to the right to been eased somewhat, though the church still faces restrictions of written and electronic communication, and can only accept donations from state-approved funding sources. The Roman Catholic Church is made up of the Cuban Catholic Bishops' Conference (ccbc), led by Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, Cardinal Archbishop of Havana. It has eleven dioceses, 56 orders of nuns and 24 orders of priests.

In January 1998, Pope John Paul II paid a historic visit to the island, invited by the Cuban government and Catholic Church.

On October 20 2008, the first Orthodox Church in Cuba opened during an official ceremony attended by Raul Castro.[2]

Santeria in Cuba

The arrival and endurance of Santeria (also known as Regla de Ocha) in Cuba is the result of multiple contributing factors. The roots of Santeria stem from Nigeria and were transported to Cuba by way of the Lucumi people. However, the Lucumi people only consisted of about 8% of the overall slave population in Cuba from 1760 until about 1850.[3] With such low numbers to draw upon the religion was under constant attack in the form of dilution through more dominant numbers in the form of reproductive outsourcing and the cruelty inflicted through the employment of slavery [4]Between 1800 and 1850 almost the entire population in Cuba consisted of people of African descent [5]This factor created a sense of uncertainty for Plantation owners because of tensions amongst the slave population. The slave rivalries eventually resulted in an ever-rising loss in production. The method for combating the losses yielded that an increase in the Lucumi population would serve the plantation best. Lucumi people are known to be hard workers and are mild mannered [6]. As result of increasing import of slaves the population of the Lucumi rose sharply to about 34% [7]Attributing to the increase of Santeria was that many other slaves and freemen began to practice the religion of Santeria thereby increasing the span of influence and affiliation in a more diverse manner. The disposition of colonialism brought a significant strain on all religions outside of Catholicism. Over the course of a 90-year span the Lucumi maintained the practice of the religion of Santeria. The religion of Santeria encompasses sacrificial food, song, dance, costumes, spiritual deities and the use of artifacts. In the beginning the Lucumi and other worshippers of Santeria would have to practice in secret [8]They would create hasty areas in which they would conduct structuralized practice of Santeria and return to their colonial life after. However, the practice of Santeria on a more regular basis takes place not on the sugar plantations but in the urban areas [9]The syncretism that modernized Santeria was introduced when high-class Mulattoes needed to find ways to alleviate ailments such as stress or sickness. There was no formal medical aid available to the community at the time. In light of this disposition high-class Mulattoes pulled from whatever resources that they could find. They employed the practices of Christian taught house slaves with Afro-Cuban healers and Spanish curanderos.The Afro-Cuban healers and Spanish curanderos served as the only medical practitioners in Cuba and were responsible for treating both the Black and White population [10]The distance between the city and the countryside made it very difficult for the opportunity of slaves to participate in the syncretism of Santeria with Catholicism and Christianity. This was due to geographic reference. Most of the European religious practice and churches were located the urban areas or towns and to attend services would require traveling over long distances, which would interfere with the sugar production [11]In the urban areas slaves worked along side of freemen and White Cubans in a less restricted atmosphere. They were educated and trusted to perform skilled labor and given a great deal of responsibility. Their presence served in a number of diverse jobs, which acted as a catalyst for the syncretism of Santeria with Catholicism and Christianity [12]Not every slave in Cuba complied with the employment of slavery. Cimmarones as the Cuban slave owners labeled them were a group of slaves who fled captivity and formed communities consisting of thousands of people. They took refuge in the wilderness and the mountains of Cuba they maintained the practice of Santeria. They were considered a very serious threat to the colonial government’s hold on slavery and oppression. The Cimarrones were able to elude capture, provide aid and shelter to other escaped slaves. Over the course of time they developed the means to communicate with other surrounding secret camps via the plantation slaves and friendly White Cubans [13]Other slaves and freemen who lived in rural areas formed secret societies and groups in which they would exercise their religious beliefs of Santeria out of the public view to avoid colonial reform and oppression [14]After the abolishment of slavery Palenque, the Cimarrones establishment was converted into a town named El Cobre after surviving for fifty years [15]In the religion of Santeria the emphasis of conscious existence binds the understanding of nature, the higher powers, and the channels of lineage together through ritual practice and clairvoyance. The circle is a symbol that is divided into three sections that begin at the core with people and extend out into two other sections being ancestors and finally divinities[16]The significance of people at the inner core stand to represent the present day of existence and understanding in the form of perception with in the individual as he or she can interpret the information surrounding them. The outer layer of the ancestor represents the heritable understanding that the individual carries with them as a source of how and why to interpret values of perception with in a given realm. The outmost layer represents divinity is the value of knowledge, direction and understanding that is acquired from Orishas and personal experience. The existence the circle represents is not a fixed plain of understanding but stands as an interchangeable ever evolving and rotating sense of awareness and being [17]Santeria lineage is structured in the connection through Sibs (a group of kin) with each Sib being traced back to a common male ancestor linking the bloodlines to the religion [18]“There were three different routes for the transmission of Orisha worship. A child could inherit an Orisha from either its mother or father and continue their worship of it. In this case a triangular relationship existed between the child, the parent, and the Orisha” [19].BASDSNFn

See also


Notes

  1. ^ International Religious Freedom Report 2004, US State Department
  2. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7679319.stm
  3. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993:
  4. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  5. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  6. ^ Vega, Marta Moreno. “Interlocking African Diaspora Cultures in the Work of Fernando Ortiz.” Journal of Black Studies , Vol.. 31 No. 1, September (2000): 39-50. Print.
  7. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  8. ^ Simpson, George Eaton. Black Religions in the New World. New York. Columbia University Press. 1978
  9. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  10. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  11. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  12. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  13. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  14. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  15. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993
  16. ^ Daniel, Yvonne. Dancing Wisdom: Embodied knowledge in Haitian Vodou, Cuban Yoruba, and Bahian Candomblé. Frank Ward Photo. 2005. Reprinted by permission.
  17. ^ Daniel, Yvonne. Dancing Wisdom: Embodied knowledge in Haitian Vodou, Cuban Yoruba, and Bahian Candomblé. Frank Ward Photo. 2005. Reprinted by permission.
  18. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.
  19. ^ Brandon, George. “Santería from Africa to the New World: The Dead Sell Memories. Indiana University Press. Bloomington and Indianapolis.1993.p59

{{Americas topic|Religion in}