JAMAICA WITCHCRAFT
IN Notes and Queries, London, January 25, 1851, we find the
following communication.
"Can any of your readers give me some information about obeism?
I am anxious to know whether it is in itself a religion, or merely a rite
practised in some religion in Africa and imported thence to the West
Indies (where, I am told, it is rapidly gaining ground again); and whether
the obeist obtains the immense power he is said to possess over his
brother Negroes by any acquired art, or simply by working upon the more
superstitious minds of his companions. Any information, however, on the
subject will be acceptable. T. H., Mincing Lane, January 10, 1851." (1)
This inquiry drew forth several replies. In the issue of February 22,
1851, we find: "As our correspondent T. H. desires 'any information' on
the subject of obeism, in the absence of more and better, I offer
my mite: that in the early part of this century it was very common among
the slave-population in the West Indies, especially on the remote
estates--of course of African origin--not as either a 'religion' or a
'rite,' but rather as a superstition; a
{p. 51}
power claimed by its professors, and assented to by the patients,
of causing good or evil to, or averting it from them; which was of course
always for a 'consideration' of some sort, to the profit, whether
honorary, pecuniary, or other of the dispenser. It is by the pretended
influence of certain spells, charms, ceremonies, amulets worn, or other
such incantations, as practised with more or less diversity by the adepts,
the magicians and conjurers, the 'false prophets' of all ages and
countries, etc." The writer thinks that obeism is on the decline
and simply signs the letter M. (2)
Another reply in the same issue runs as follows: "In answer to T. H.'s
Query regarding obeahism, though I cannot answer his question fully, as to
its origin, etc., yet I have thought that what I can communicate may serve
to piece out the more valuable information of your better informed
correspondents. I was for a short time in the island of Jamaica, and from
what I could learn there of obeahism, the power seemed to be obtained by
the obeah-man or woman, by working upon the fears of their fellow-Negroes,
who are notoriously superstitious. The principal charm seemed to be, a
collection of feathers, coffin furniture, and one or two other things
which I have forgotten. A small bundle of this, hung over the victim's
door or placed in his path, is supposed to have the power of bringing ill
luck to the unfortunate individual. And if any accident, or loss, or
sickness should happen to him about the time, it is immediately imputed to
the dreaded influence of obeah! But I have heard of cases where the
unfortunate
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victim has gradually wasted away, and died under this powerful spell,
which, I have been informed by old residents in the island, is to be
attributed to a more natural cause, namely, the influence of poison. The
obeah-man causes a quantity of ground glass to be mixed with the
food of the person who has incurred his displeasure; and the result is
said to be a slow but sure and wasting death! Perhaps some of your medical
readers can say whether an infusion of powdered glass would have
this effect. I merely relate what I have been told by others, etc." This
letter is signed D. p. W. (3)
In the issue of April 19, 1851, a communication signed T. J. furnishes
a number of references to show that "obeahism is not only a rite, but a
religion, or rather a superstition." It is further stated that "the
influence of the obeist does not depend on the exercise of any art or
natural magic, but on the apprehensions of evil infused into the victim's
mind." (4)
In Notes and Queries of May 10, 1851, Henry H. Breen writing
from St. Lucia insists: "Obeism is not itself a religion, except in the
sense in which Burke says that 'superstition is the religion of feeble
minds.' It is a belief, real or pretended, in the efficacy of certain
spells, and incantations, and is to the uneducated Negro what sorcery was
to our unenlightened forefathers. This superstition is known in St. Lucia
by the name Kembois. It is still extensively practised in the West Indies,
but there is no reason to suppose that it is rapidly gaining ground." (5)
{p. 53}
While the interest awakened in the subject by this correspondence was
still rife, The Medical Times (6) published a communication from
Doctor Stobo of Tortula, in the Virgin Islands, of a peculiar case of
child-birth which had been accompanied by symptoms that he seems unable to
diagnose although he evidently does not credit the patient's explanation
that she was a victim of obeah. The title of the article is "Spasmodic
Action of the Uterus.--Obeism," and the main fact in the case is thus
stated: "Ann Eliza Smith, aged 50, Sambo, domestic servant, mother of
three children; has a miscarriage between first and second, and an
interval of seventeen years between second and third child. During that
interval was in bad health, and under the delusion that she was (hurted)
obeahed, and is now under that delusion."
The Editor of The Medical Times adds this information in a
footnote: "Obeism was a species of witchcraft employed to revenge
injuries, or as a protection against theft, and is so called from Obi, the
town, city, district or province of South (sic) Africa where it
originated. It consisted in placing a spell or charm near the cottage of
the individual intended to be brought under its influence, or, when
designed to prevent the depredations of thieves, in some conspicuous part
of the house, or on a tree; it was signified by a calabash or gourd
containing, among other ingredients, a combination of different coloured
rags, cats' teeth, parrots' feathers, toads' feet, egg-shells, fish bones,
snakes' teeth, and lizards' tails. Terror immediately seized the
individual who
{p. 54}
beheld it; and either by resigning himself to despair, or by the secret
communication of poison, in most cases death was the inevitable
consequence."
The Editor immediately adds: "The following is a description of the
superstition as given by a witness in a trial that took place some years
ago: 'Do you know the prisoner to be an obeah-man?--Ees massa!
shadow-catcher true. What do you mean by shadow-catcher?--Him heb coffin
(a little coffin was here produced) him set fe catch dem shadow. What
shadow do you mean?--When him set obeah for somebody, him catch dem
shadow, and dem go dead.'" This example is really taken from Alexander
Barclay, A Practical View of the Present State of Slavery in the West
Indies, London, 1828, p. 185f, although no credit is given by the
Editor who quotes it in The Medical Times.
From what has been said thus far, it is evident how confused has been
the concept of that form of witchcraft which is known as Jamaica obeah
even in usually most reliable sources of information. It must be our
purpose, then, at the very outset to try and clarify the origin of the
name as well as the practice of this intriguing subject, obeah.
The following communication appears in Notes and Queries for July 15,
1899, signed by James Platt, Jun.: "Obi; obeah.--The origin of this
well-known West Indian term is not precisely defined in any of our
existing dictionaries. We find such statements as 'probably of African
origin' (Webster and Chambers); 'said to be of African origin' (The
'Century'); 'said to have been introduced from
{p. 55}
Africa' (Worcester). The following quotation from the Rev. Hugh
Goldie's Dictionary of the Efik Language (of Old Calabar), Glasgow,
1874, p. 300, appears to set the matter at rest, and should interest
etymologists and students of folklore; 'Ubio, a thing, or mixture of
things, put in the ground, as a charm, to cause sickness or death. The
obeah of the West Indies.'" (7)
This little notice had far-reaching effects, or at least its writer's
influence quickly made itself felt. For the Oxford Dictionary
shortly afterwards accepted Mr. Platt's suggestion and came to describe
obeah with its variants obi, obia, obea, obeeah, as "A West African word:
cf. Efik ubio, 'a thing, or mixture of things, put in the ground,
as a charm to cause sickness or death,'" and quotes as its authority
Goldie's Dictionary of Efik, 1874. (8)
Sir Harry Johnston, too, regarded the word as "a variant or a
corruption of an Efik or Ibo, word from the north-east or east of the
Niger Delta." (9) But as his Preface is dated May, 1910, long after the
appearance of Vol. VII of the Oxford Dictionary, it would be only natural
to suppose that Sir Harry drew his information from that source, unless
perhaps he was originally the authority consulted by the Editor of the
Dictionary. In either supposition, we would have overlapping authority for
the Efik origin of the word and not independent sources.
Now I am informed by those who are actually working among the Efik
speaking people that ubio really means rubbish or dirt, and that
the derivative
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ubi signifies wickedness in general. Further that witchcraft is
included under ubi or ubio only in so far as it is a
wickedness like any other evil act.
In keeping with this observation, Goldie himself gives the primary
meaning of ubio as "anything noxious," (10) and the citation quoted
by the Oxford Dictionary is a secondary meaning. However, even here Goldie
says nothing about witchcraft which he actually renders as idion.
(11) This, in itself, might well imply that obeah is given as a particular
illustration of the generic idea of what is noxious or wicked.
All this is supported by tracing historically the introduction of the
word obeah into English usage. The first appearance of the word in any
dictionary is in An American Dictionary of the English Language by
Noah Webster. Revised and Enlarged by Chauncey A. Goodrich; Published by
George and Charles Merriam, Springfield, Massachusetts, and Copyrighted in
1847. In this, the Third Edition of Webster's Dictionary-it does not
appear in the earlier editions--we find the entry on page 762: "Obeah,
n. A species of witchcraft practised among the African Negroes.
Encyc. Am."
As will be noticed, the only reference given in the above entry is to
the Encyclopedia Americana. The first edition of this work was
edited by Francis Lieber and published in thirteen volumes in Philadelphia
by Carey, Lea and Carey, 1829-1833. The word obeah appears in volume IX
which was issued in 1832: "Obeah; a species of witchcraft practised among
the Negroes, the apprehension of which,
{p. 57}
operating upon the superstitious fears, is frequently attended with
disease and death."
There is reason for thinking that the entry in the Encyclopedia
Americana is based on one of the Philadelphia editions (1805-6 or
1810) of Bryan Edwards, History, Civil and Commercial, of the British
in the West Indies, which was originally published in London in 1793.
Edwards avowedly drew his information from the Report of the Lords
of the Committee of the Council appointed for the consideration of all
Matters relating to Trade and Foreign Plantations, which appeared in
London in 1789. It is in this same Report of 1789 that we first find the
distinction suggested: "The term obeah, obiah, or obia (for it is
variously written) we conceive to be the adjective, and the obe or obi the
noun substantive."
As noted in that Report, the principal source of information
regarding obeah was Edward Long who belonged to an old Jamaica family and
who had already been Speaker of the House of Assembly in Jamaica. He had
published a History of Jamaica, London, 1774, wherein is the first
reference by an historian to obeah as such.
As far as I can ascertain, the first actual record of the word in print
is in the Acts of the Jamaica Assembly of 1760, Vol. II, Act. 24:
"To remedy the Evils arising from irregular Assemblies of Slaves, prevent
possessing Arms and Ammunition, going from Place to Place without tickets,
and for the preventing of Obeah, etc."
Up to the Report of 1789, as we find recorded
{p. 58}
therein, the word was not much in use outside of Jamaica. Thus
Montserrat, Nevis, Dominica, St. Vincent, Bermuda and Bahama know nothing
about obeah, and in the Barbados, Antigua, Granada and St. Christopher,
where obeah is more or less known, there are no restraining Laws
mentioned, indicating that it had not yet been recognized as a menace to
the public peace.
It was long the Law in Jamaica, even before the real workings of obeah
were understood, to transport to other West India Colonies such obeah-men
as were convicted of the practice. This would explain the presence of the
word and practice in those islands where it was known but only in a less
degree.
Hence we may conclude from all this that the earliest acceptation of
the word obeah in the English dictionaries must be traced to a Jamaica
origin. And when I brought the foregoing facts to the attention of the
publishers of the Oxford Dictionary, with characteristic courtesy,
they made acknowledgment through the present Editor, Sir William A.
Craigie, under date of August 3, 1934: "The Efik etymology of obeah given
in the Oxford English Dictionary was no doubt supplied by James Platt, who
would have no other authority for it than the similarity of sound and
meaning. As the part of the Dictionary containing O to Onomashie was
published in July 1902, there was plenty of time for Sir Harry Johnston to
get it from that source. In such cases, unfortunately, the evidence of
dictionaries is often unsatisfactory, and is of no weight
{p. 59}
against evidence to the contrary such as you have supplied."
Having definitely established Jamaica as the source of the English
usage of the word obeah, the question naturally presents itself, whence
was it derived by Jamaica?
It has been shown in Voodoos and Obeahs that strictly speaking,
myalism, the direct antithesis of obeah, is the residue of the old
religious dance of the Ashanti, just as obeah itself is the continuation
of Ashanti witchcraft. Thus obeah is secretive, malicious, and has
gradually taken on a form of devil-worship. Myalism, on the contrary, is
practised in the open. It is beneficent in its purposes, and it has
developed into modern revivalism in Jamaica. In practice, however, the
same individual is now frequently an obeah-man by night and a myal-man by
day when he "digs up" the very obeah which he has planted while exercising
the other rôle.
To explain how all this has come about, a brief review of what has been
set forth in detail in Voodoos and Obeahs becomes necessary.
Among the Ashanti of West Africa there was a clearly defined system of
religion wherein the Supreme Being, Onyame, was more popularly known under
the title Nyankopon, meaning Onyame, alone, great one. Subordinate to this
Supreme Being were numerous abosom, minor deities or spirits,
acting as mediators between God and man, and claiming a prominent place in
religious observances, since God Himself was regarded as so remote, that
ordinarily
{p. 60}
He was to be approached only through His mediaries, except at a time of
particular need when He was addressed directly.
Consequently, while the Supreme Being actually had among the Ashanti a
temple and a regular priesthood (12) for which a three-years' novitiate
was required, (13) in the ordinary daily affairs of life recourse was
regularly had through the subordinate abosom who were regarded as
more accessible, and in consequence the okomfo, or priest, of these
various spirits exercised a dominant influence upon the general life of
the Ashanti both as a people and individually. It was the prerogative of
the okomfo not merely to lead the service of the shrines of the
minor deities but to imbue the good luck charm with its particular potency
and this he did by invoking not only the Supreme Being directly but
especially through the intermediary spirits since they were regarded as
closely associated with the affairs of man. All those rites and practices
that characterize the leading events in life, such as birth, marriage, or
death, were clearly of a religious character. So, too, were the civic or
national celebrations and even preparation for war or the coronation of a
paramount chief.
But concomitant with this religious spirit that permeated the very life
of the Ashanti there existed, essentially antagonistic to it, a condition
of affairs which may be summed up under the single term witchcraft. Of
this phase, Captain Rattray, the great authority on all things Ashanti,
writes: "Witchcraft was essentially the employment of anti-social
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magic. The belief in its general prevalence was largely due to the fact
that certain forms of illness resulting in death could not otherwise be
accounted for. There appears to be considerable logic in regarding killing
by witchcraft as akin to murder, even if its classification as such by the
Ashanti was not directly due to an acknowledgment of a fact which was in
many cases true, i.e. that poison in some form or other was often
an important stock-in-trade of the professed witch." (14)
That the Ashanti believed in a personal devil or evil spirit is
evidenced by the secondary meaning of obonsam, viz. "The devil
conceived to be an evil spirit reigning over the spirits of deceased
wicked men." (15)
As a derivative of this word, we have sasabonsam who, according
to Christaller, is "an imaginary monstrous being, conceived as having a
huge body of human shape, but of a red colour and with very long hair,
living in the deepest recess of the forest, where an immense silk-cotton
tree is his abode; inimical to man, especially to the priests, but the
friend and chief of the sorcerers and witches." ( 16)
Captain Rattray declares that the power of the Sasabonsam. "is purely
for evil and witchcraft," ( 17) and elsewhere he declares: "The Sasabonsam
of the Gold Coast and Ashanti is a monster which is said to inhabit parts
of the dense virgin forests. It is covered with long hair, has large
bloodshot eyes, long legs, and feet pointing both ways. It sits on high
branches of an odum or onyina tree and dangles its legs,
with which at times it hooks up the
{p. 62}
unwary hunter. It is hostile to man, and is supposed to be especially
at enmity with the real priestly class. Hunters who go to the forest and
are never heard of again--as sometimes happens--are supposed to have been
caught by Sasabonsam." ( 18 )
Here then we have a clear theoretical distinction between the Ashanti
devil, bonsam, and this fabulous forest monster, Sasabonsam. But,
just as in English the term devil represents indiscriminately either Satan
or his minions, so in practice the Ashanti Sasabonsam is used as a
euphemism for bonsam since it is not well to even mention names of
the dead lest their spirits haunt you.
The Ashanti word for witch was obayifo and Captain Rattray
furnishes us with the following information on this interesting topic.
"Obayifo, deriv. bayi, sorcery (Synonymous term ayen), a wizard, or more
generally witch. A kind of human vampire, whose chief delight is to suck
the blood of children whereby the latter pine and die. Men and women
possessed of this black magic are credited with volitant powers, being
able to quit their bodies and travel great distances in the night. Besides
sucking the blood of victims, they are supposed to be able to extract the
sap and juice of crops. (Cases of coco blight are ascribed to the work of
the abayifo.) These witches are supposed to be very common and a man never
knows but that his friend or even his wife may be one. When prowling at
night they are supposed to emit a phosphorescent light from the armpits
and anus. An obayifo in everyday life is supposed to be known by
having sharp shifty eyes,
{p. 63}
that are never at rest, also by showing an undue interest in food, and
always talking about it, especially meat, and hanging about when cooking
is going on, all which habits are therefore purposely avoided. A man will
seldom deny another, even a stranger, a morsel of what he may be eating,
or a hunter a little bit of raw meat to any one asking it, hoping thereby
to avoid the displeasure of anyone who, for all he can tell, is a witch or
wizard." (19)
At the recent Anthropological Congress in London, Modjaben Dowuona,
Esq., a native West African and one of the Vice-Presidents of the African
Section of the Congress, presented a most interesting and scholarly paper
on the subject of witchcraft. According to his view: "There are in the
main two forms in which witchcraft is practised. The first takes the form
of a power to do harm to other people, especially children, without any
physical contact or concrete act of poisoning. Death due to poisoning is
considered separate from that believed to be due to witchcraft, though in
practice it is not always distinguished from it. The tendency is to
ascribe to witchcraft any death which cannot be accounted for on other
grounds. It seems that this non-physical way of killing was first directed
against children, as is evidenced from the Twi word for witchcraft, 'Bayi'
meaning literally 'taking away or removing children.' It is interesting to
find that a corrupt form of the word, namely 'obeah' appears in the West
Indies, though there it is associated with the worship of various cults."
Again Mr. Dowuona stated: "I think that we
{p. 64}
may connect the belief in witchcraft of the first kind with the desire
to find reason for the heavy infantile mortality which exists in African
communities. . . . A saying among the Ga seems to support this view. It is
this: 'If you have no witch in your family, your children do not die
young.'" And he explained this assumption by the fact that "the power of a
witch is limited to the members of her own family and that therefore no
witch outside the family can do harm to any one in the family except
through the co-operation of a witch inside it."
Mr. Dowuona thus traces back Jamaica obeah through the Ashanti
obayifo, a witch, to the term for witchcraft, bayi, meaning
literally "taking away children." This view is supported by Christaller
(20) who derives bayi, witchcraft, from oba, child, and
yi, to take away, and renders obayifo as a witch or wizard.
Christaller also gives as a synonym (21) ayen with obaayen,
a compound of obaa, woman, and ayen, as the female form. And
it is probably from this form obaayen that the Jamaica word obeah was
directly derived. For Long in his History of Jamaica at times
spells the word obeiah. Incidentally, while examining Long's own copy of
his work which is now deposited in the Manuscript Section of the British
Museum, I noticed that he had entered a marginal correction: "Here et
sequent., for obeah." (22)
As Mr. Dowuona well observed, the primary concept of witchcraft
undoubtedly implied among the Ashanti a projection of some personal power
whereby even death might be produced without
{p. 65}
physical contact. But in practice, if the spirit-projection with its
customary incantation proved ineffective, it was only natural that the
surreptitious administration of poison should be resorted to, so that the
reputation of the witch might not suffer in popular esteem. Yet even here,
it was claimed that the effect was produced by the spiritual projection
alone.
Unquestionably, the Ashanti clearly distinguished religious practices,
the rôle of the herbalist and the workings of witchcraft. Thus we are told
by Captain Rattray: "From the information at our disposal, we now know
that the Ashanti makes a distinction between the following: the okomfo,
priest; the sumankwafo or dunseni, the medicine man; and the
bonsam komfo, witch doctor. The word okomfo, without any
further qualification, refers to a priest of one of the orthodox abosom,
gods. We see, however, that a witch doctor is allowed the same name as a
kind of honorary title or degree, being known as a bayi komfo, a
priest of witchcraft. Again the ordinary medical practitioners are never
termed okomfo; they are sumankwafo, dealers in suman;
or dunsefo, workers in roots; or odu'yefo, workers in
medicine." (23)
It would be well to notice here that Ashanti witchcraft, as a practice
of black magic is essentially antagonistic to religion in any form, and
that it is as clearly dissociated from the making of a suman, which
may be regarded as white magic, as its practitioner, the obayifo,
is distinguished from the medicine man, sumankwafo. Nevertheless,
the title
{p. 66}
bayi komfo, a priest of witchcraft, indicates that even in Ashanti
there has developed a phase of what might be called devil-worship inasmuch
as the sasabonsam, or devil, is so closely associated with witches.
(24)
This would help to explain the assertion of J. Leighton Wilson who when
writing of that part of West Africa which lies between Cape Verde and the
Cameroons, declares: "Fetishism and demonology are undoubtedly the leading
and prominent forms of religion among the pagan tribes of Africa. They are
entirely distinct from each other, but they run together at so many
points, and have been so much mixed up by those who have attempted to
write on the subject that it is no easy matter to keep them separated."
(25)
Thus it came to pass that as the Ashanti were gradually carried by the
slavers in increasing numbers to Jamaica, they naturally brought with them
all their old traditions and beliefs which they sought to put in practice
in their new surroundings. A strongly religious people, even as slaves in
a strange land, they instinctively turned openly to their okomfo
for guidance and consolation, while they necessarily feared the secret
machinations of the nefarious obayifo. This very fear quickly
became accentuated among the slave population generally, and it was this
baleful influence more than anything else which tended to give the Ashanti
their dominant control over all other tribes in Jamaica. For, secretly
administered poison came to play a more and more active part to supplement
incantations that might
{p. 67}
otherwise have remained inoperative. So, too, Nyankopon became the
Accompong of Jamaica, just as obeah-man was a transition from obayifo.
Herbert G. DeLisser, a native Jamaican who is now Editor of the
Kingston Daily Gleaner, was one of the first writers to
differentiate the functions of Ashanti priest and wizard among the early
practices of the days of slavery in Jamaica. More than twenty years ago,
he wrote: "The West African natives and particularly those from the Gold
Coast (From which the larger number of Jamaica slaves were brought)
believe in a number of gods of different classes and unequal power. All
these gods have their priests and priestesses, but there is one
particularly malignant spirit, which, on the Gold Coast, has no regular
priesthood. He is called Sasabonsam, and any individual may put himself in
communication with him. Sasabonsam's favourite residence is the ceiba, the
giant silk-cotton tree. He is resorted to in the dead of night, his votary
going to the spot where he is supposed to live, and collecting there a
little earth, or a few twigs, or a stone, he prays the god that his power
may enter this receptacle. If he believes that his prayer has been heard,
he returns home with his suhman, as the thing is now named, and
hence forward he has a power which is formidable for injurious purposes,
to which he offers sacrifice, and to whose worship he dedicates a special
day in the week. By the aid of this suhman he can bewitch a man to
death. He can also sell charms that will cause death or bodily injury. . .
. A priest, on the other hand, may also sell
{p. 68}
you charms to scare away thieves, help you to prosperity, or keep away
disaster. All this comes within the functions of a member of the West
African priesthood. He may even undertake to 'put death on a man,' as the
wizard does, if he is sufficiently well paid for the business. But priests
do not care to indulge in this sort of thing. Their main function is to
propitiate the gods, to unbewitch people; in a word, to prevent disasters
from occurring. . . . Both witches and wizards, priests and priestesses,
were brought to Jamaica in the days of the slave trade, and the slaves
recognized the distinction between the former and the latter. Even the
masters saw that the two classes were not identical, and so they called
the latter 'myal-men' and 'myal-women'--the people who cured those whom
the obeah-men had injured. Of the present-day descendants of these priests
or myal-men more will be said later on. It is probable that many of the
African priests became simple obeah-men after coming to Jamaica, for the
very simple reason that they could not openly practice their legitimate
profession. But when known as obeah-men, however much they might be
treated with respect, they still were hated and feared. Every evil was
attributed to them. The very name of them spread terror." (26)
From the earliest days of legislation in Jamaica, there was recognized
to be a growing danger to the peace of the Colony in the assemblies of
slaves that were characterized by old tribal dances. These ceremonies were
openly accompanied by a system of drumming which evidently aroused the
fanaticism of
{p. 69}
the Africans to such a pitch as to endanger a general uprising. It
never occurred to the planters that these dances were really an adaptation
of time-honoured religious rites and they made the initial mistake of
attributing the danger entirely to the fact that the slaves had gathered
from various plantations and considered that while these assemblies were
dangerous when attended from without, they might still be harmless enough
if allowed to each group of slaves separately in their own plantation.
Accordingly in 1696, it was enacted: "And for the prevention of the
meeting of slaves in great numbers on Sundays and Holidays, whereby they
have taken liberty to contrive and bring to pass many of their bloody and
inhuman transactions: Be it enacted by the aforesaid authority, That no
master, or mistress, or overseer, shall suffer any drumming or meeting of
any slaves, not belonging to their own plantations, to rendezvous, feast,
revel, beat drum, or cause any disturbance, but forthwith endeavour to
disperse them, by him, or herself, overseer or servants; or if not
capacitated to do the same, that he presently give notice to the next
commission-officer to raise such number of men as may be sufficient to
reduce the said slaves." (27)
In his Ashanti, Captain Rattray has a very illuminating chapter
on "The Drum Language." Almost incredible stories are told of the rapidity
with which news is passed across Africa by means of the so-called "Talking
Drums," and it was more or less taken for granted that something like a
Morse Code must be employed for the purpose. We now find
{p. 70}
that what actually happens is that two drums are set in widely
different tones and are known as the male and female drums, the former
carrying the low note and the latter the high note. These drums are so
manipulated that the musical intonation which replaces articulation, at
least in the case of languages like the Ashanti which are distinctively
tonal, with sufficient accuracy as to be intelligible to the people
generally just as if the spoken word was used. (28)
Space will not permit our going into the question in detail, but so
efficiently is the process carried out by the Ashanti that we have
recorded, for example, the history of Mampon in a drum recital that has
preserved "an accurate record of the migrations of the clan from the
far-away days when the Mampon were settled in Adanse, and also the names,
deeds, and physical attributes of their former rulers." (29)
Indeed, so exacting is the demand for accuracy in this drum record,
that we are told: "A drummer who falters and 'speaks' a wrong word is
liable to a fine of a sheep, and if persistently at fault he might in the
past, have had an ear cut off." (30) When we remember that the entire
audience is checking up every sound at each recital, the drummer must
needs be skilful before he attempts publicly to display his proficiency.
What particularly interests us here is the fact that the early Ashanti
slaves in Jamaica must have numbered among them some really expert
drummers who would naturally exchange messages throughout the island while
all their fellow Ashanti could perfectly
{p. 71}
understand the conversation. And even when the use of the drum was
prohibited, native ingenuity made use of barrels, gourds, boards or any
other medium of producing notes that would correspond with those of the
male and female drums.
This immediately gave rise to a new anxiety among the planters. For,
while they seemingly knew nothing of the system of talking-drums, they
certainly realized that their troublesome Ashanti were signalling to one
another at considerable distances and were actually communicating their
designs back and forth.
Hence, in 1717 a new enactment prescribed: "And whereas the permitting
or allowing of any number of strange Negroes to assemble on any
Plantation, or settlement, or any other place, may prove of fatal
consequences to this your Majesty's Island, if not timely prevented: and
forasmuch as Negroes can, by beating on drums, and blowing horns, or other
such like instruments of noise, give signals to each other at a
considerable distance of their evil and wretched intentions: Be it further
enacted, That in one month's time after the passing of this Act, no
proprietor, attorney, or overseer, presume to suffer any number of strange
Negroes, exceeding five, to assemble on his plantation or settlement, or
on the plantation or settlement under the care of such attorney or
overseer; nor shall any proprietor, attorney, or overseer, suffer any
beating on drums, barrels, gourds, boards, or other such like instruments
of noise on the plantations and settlements aforesaid." (31)
{p. 72}
However, there was no material interference with the purely local
gatherings. Even in the Act of December 21, 1781, amusements are
permissible to the slaves on the properties to which they belong although
the use of "drums, horns, and other unlawful instruments of noise" are, of
course, prohibited, (32) and in the Act of December 19, 1816, the
restriction is made: "Provided that such amusements are put an end to by
ten o'clock at night." (33)
Meanwhile, as a precaution against complete proscription, the Ashanti
okomfo began to further disguise what was left of the old religious
rites under cover of one of the dances that were permissible in the local
amusements, until it was gradually appropriated to his own purposes. This
dance in its adapted form became known to the Whites as the myal-dance.
Possibly this was its original title, but thus far I have not been able to
trace its origin. Certainly the name itself is not Ashanti, since no
letter l is included in the Ashanti alphabet, and the only words in
which it occurs are foreign proper names. (34)
This subtle appropriation of an alien dance completely disguised the
true purposes of the okomfo as far as the Planters were concerned,
but as a consequence the okomfo himself gradually lost his own
identity until he became known to the Whites as myal-man, or leader in the
myal-dance. And myal-man he has remained up to the present time.
Myalism, then, was in reality the old tribal religion of the Ashanti
with some modifications due
{p. 73}
to conditions and circumstances. It substantially featured the
veneration of the minor deities who were subordinate to Accompong and
included communication with ancestral spirits.
The age-old antagonism to obeah or witchcraft on the part of the
priestly class gradually became accentuated and eventually took on a rôle
of major importance, so that it actually came to form a part of the
religious practice, to dig up obeah.
As I have remarked elsewhere, (35) in Ashanti, the okomfo openly
combated the obayifo as a matter of principle, and he had the whole
force of Ashanti religious traditions and public sentiment to support him,
until he eventually looked down with more or less disdain on the benighted
disciple of Sasabonsam. In Jamaica, on the other hand, native religious
assemblies were proscribed by law which greatly hampered the okomfo
in his sphere of influence, even his title being changed to myal-man,
while the obayifo or obeah-man, who had always worked in secret,
flourished in his trade. For the very status and restrictions of slave
life put his fellows more and more at his mercy and filled them with a
growing fear of his spiteful incantations, backed up as they were with
active poisonings. Their gods had abandoned them; why not cultivate the
favour of the triumphant Sasabonsam, or at least assuage his enmity and
placate his vengeance?
It was natural, too, for the okomfo to adapt his practice to the
new state of affairs. His hated rival, the obayifo, must be
conquered at any price. Personal interests demanded this as strongly as
religious
{p. 74}
zeal. Since public service of the deities was no longer possible, he in
turn was forced to work in secret, and it is not surprising that he met
fire with fire, incantation with incantation. His religion had aimed
primarily at the welfare of the community, even as the object in life of
the obayifo was the harm of the individual. Open intercession for
tribal success and prosperity necessarily gives way to secret machinations
to break the chains of bondage. A fanatical zeal takes hold of the myalist
okomfo and he devises the most impressive ritual he can, to arouse
the dormant spirits of his fellow slaves.
Thus it came to pass that it was the okomfo and not the
obayifo, as is generally assumed, who administered the terrible fetish
oath. It was he who mixed the gunpowder with the rum and added grave dirt
and human blood to the concoction that was to seal upon the conspirators'
lips the awful nature of the plot for liberty, and steel their hearts for
the dangerous undertaking. It was he, no less, who devised the mystic
powder that was to make their bodies invulnerable, and enable them to meet
unscathed the white man's bullets. Finally, it was the okomfo and
not the obayifo who, taking advantage of herbal knowledge, induced
a state of torpor on subservient tools, that be might seem to raise the
dead to life.
Yet, through it all, while he frequently substitutes for his own
religious ceremonial the dark and secret rites of his rival practitioner,
his aim at least is still within the tribal law, as he works white magic
for the welfare of the community, no less
{p. 75}
than he continues to combat the black magic of his adversary.
It is not surprising, then, that the rôle of the myalist okomfo
has been so little understood, and that his most effective work was
ascribed by the Whites in Jamaica to the agency of obeah, and that myalism
itself should become confused with witchcraft and even regarded by some as
an offshoot of obeah.
Even in the days of slavery the Jamaica Planters came to recognize a
two-fold menace. Danger to the individual from carefully devised but
secretive poisonings, and danger to the peace of the entire colony from a
spirit of unrest that was engendered at the assemblies of slaves. And yet
these same Planters were entirely blind to the presence of witchcraft
among the slaves, and completely unsuspicious of the element of
devil-worship that was becoming accentuated.
Legislation forbidding all religious assemblies of slaves and
particularly the time-honoured dances with drum accompaniment only tended
to increase the secret machinations that confused more and more the field
of influence of the okomfo and the obayifo. And if the
Planter did at times hear stories of existent obeah, he regarded it with
amused toleration as foolish superstition and nothing more, and failed
absolutely to associate with it the increasing menace of subservient fear
that was effectively supplemented by secret poisonings.
When at length the rebellion of 1760 disclosed the connexion of obeah
and poisoning, and there
P{p. 76}
arose a set determination to crush it out at any cost, even then the
true condition of affairs was never suspected. Popular opinion, it is
true, quickly swung to the opposite extreme and everything was now
ascribed to obeah. But the legislators themselves failed to realize that
they were not dealing with witchcraft alone but with a recrudescence of
the old religious spirit in a new and more dangerous guise, wherein it had
actually entered into league for the time being with its arch-enemy,
obeah, against the oppressor of both.
As a matter of fact, when the Assembly met to deal with the whole
question of the rebellion and its suppression, at first they saw no reason
for revising the general principles that had guided them in the past. Thus
The Annual Register for the Year 1760, (36) reports: "Regulations
made at a sessions of the peace at Jamaica, May 1, 1760, to prevent
disturbances for the future amongst the Negroes of that island. That no
Negro shall be suffered to go out of his plantation without a white with
him, or having a ticket of leave. Every Negro playing at any game
whatever, to be whipt through the public streets. Every rum or punch-house
keeper suffering it in their houses to forfeit forty shillings. Any
proprietor suffering his Negroes to beat a drum, blow a horn, or make any
other noise in his plantation, to pay ten pounds, or the overseer of a
plantation five pounds, and any civil or military officer has power to
enter the plantation and demand the money, or distrain it, etc." And there
is not yet any mention of obeah!
{p. 77}
Even when the formal Act that aimed at the regulation of the conduct of
the slaves for the future was introduced in the Assembly on December 6,
1760, there was still no reference to witchcraft. But the discussion that
followed so overwhelmed the assembled legislators that when the Act was
passed on December 13th it contained the first specific mention of obeah
in a public document. The full text of this Act of 1760 which was never
printed as it failed of the Royal Assent and consequently never became a
Law of the Colony, may be found in the Public Record Office,[*] London.
The preamble runs as follows: "Whereas there has largely been very
dangerous Rebellions and Rebellious Conspiracies amongst the Slaves of
this Island; and Whereas Suffering slaves to be instructed with Arms and
Lodging large Quantities of Arms and Ammunition in Houses improperly
guarded may be a means of enabling such Rebellious disposed Slaves to
Execute their bloody Intention; and Whereas permitting Slaves to go abroad
from their respective places of Abode without Tickets or Suffering them to
Assemble from different Plantations or Places to Beat their Drums, Gourds,
Boards, Barrells, or other Instruments of Noise, or Blow their Horns in
production of the most dangerous Consequences; And Whereas on many Estates
and Plantations in this Island there are Slaves of Both Sexes commonly
known by the name of obeah-men and obeah-women
[*. I am deeply indebted to the officials of the Record Office for
courteously giving me free access to their files as well as for furnishing
me with photostatic copies of the Act of 1760.]
{p. 78}
by whose Influence over the minds of their fellow Slaves through an
Established Opinion of their being endued with Strange Preternatural
Faculties many and great Dangers have arisen Destructive of the Peace and
Welfare of this Island; In Order to prevent for the future such Rebellions
or Rebellious Conspiracies and the fatal Consequences of such Meetings, We
Your Majesty's most dutiful and loyal Subjects, etc."
Coming to the section on obeah, we read: "And in order to prevent the
many Mischiefs that may hereafter arise from the Wicked Art of Negroes
going under the Appellation of obeah-men and women pretending to have
Communication with the Devil and other Evil Spirits whereby the weak and
Superstitious are deluded into a Belief of their having full Power to
Exempt them whilst under their Protection from any Evils that might
otherwise happen; Be it therefore enacted by the authority aforesaid that
from and after the first Day of January which will be in the Year of our
Lord One thousand Seven hundred and Sixty one Any Negro or other Slave who
shall pretend to any Supernatural Power and be detected in making use of
any Blood, Feathers, Parrots' Beaks, Dogs' Teeth, Alligators' Teeth,
Broken Bottles, Grave Dirt, Rum, Egg-Shells, or any other materials
related to the practice of Obeah or Witchcraft in Order to delude and
impose on the Minds of others shall upon Conviction thereof before two
Magistrates and three Freeholders suffer Death or Transportation, anything
in this Act
{p. 79}
or any other Act or any other Law to the Contrary notwithstanding,
etc." (37)
Here it is to be noticed, in the first place, that obeah is
specifically identified with witchcraft, and secondly, that it is regarded
as a form of pseudo-diablerie, since the obeah-men and women pretend to
have communion with the Devil and other evil spirits precisely as a basis
of their claims to preternatural powers. Thus the Ashanti devil, or
Sasabonsam, has definitely become the Jamaica Obboney according to the
point of view adopted by the Jamaica Assembly. Moreover, the work of the
okomfo or myal-man is entirely lost sight of and hereafter from a
legal aspect at least the obayifo is to reign supreme.
True it is that when slavery was coming to a close, the descendants of
the old priestly class made one last effort to regain their old prestige,
bringing themselves to the notice of the Whites especially by their zeal
in digging up obeah. But their identity had been so long submerged in the
chaotic superstitions of the plantations that the new activity was not
recognized as a recrudescence of the old Ashanti religious practices, but
was commonly regarded as merely an offshoot of obeah, and even the title
of myal-man given by the Whites to the readjusted okomfo had so
evolved that it left absolutely nothing that was suggestive of the ancient
Ashanti priesthood.
Edward Long, the first historian to mention obeah by name, joined the
Jamaica Assembly shortly
{p. 80}
after the passage of the Act of 1760, and for the next seven years he
assisted at the discussions of the subject as it recurrently came up for
consideration. His account, then, may be accepted as a fair portrayal of
what was commonly accepted at the time in popular belief regarding obeah.
Thus he writes concerning the slaves: "They firmly believe in the
apparition of spectres. Those of deceased friends are duppies; others, of
more hostile and tremendous aspect, like our raw-head-and-bloody-bones,
are called bugaboos. The most sensible among them fear the supernatural
powers of the African obeah-men, or pretended conjurers; often ascribing
those mortal effects to magic, which are only the natural operation of
some poisonous juice, or preparation, dexterously administered by those
villains. But the Creoles imagine, that the virtues of baptism, or making
them Christians, render their art wholly ineffectual; and for this reason
only, many of them have desired to be baptized, that they might be secured
from obeah.
"Not long since, some of these execrable wretches in Jamaica introduced
what they called the myal-dance, and established a kind of society, into
which they invited all they could. The lure hung out was, that every
Negro, initiated into the Myal Society, would be invulnerable by the white
man; and although they might in appearance be slain, the obeah-man could,
at his pleasure, restore the body to life. The method, by which this trick
was carried on, was by a cold infusion of the herb branched calalue;
which, after the agitation of dancing, threw the
{p. 81}
party into a profound sleep. In this state he continued, to all
appearance lifeless, no pulse, nor motion of the heart, being perceptible;
till on being rubbed with another infusion (as yet unknown to the Whites),
the effects of the calalue gradually went off, the body resumed its
motions, and the party on whom the experiment had been tried, awoke as
from a trance, entirely ignorant of anything that had passed since he left
off dancing." (38)
Here again we must remark the confusion of ideas regarding the
functions proper to the myal-man as distinct from those which belonged by
right to the obeah-man, although in practice no doubt the same individual
had by this time frequently assumed to himself the dual rôle.
Writing in 1740, Charles Leslie describes what might well be called a
myalistic séance. It is in reality a religious ordeal, on the pattern of
those practised in Africa, and not as is so often stated a true example of
obeah. It runs as follows: "When anything about a plantation is missing,
they have a solemn kind of oath, which the eldest Negro always
administers, and which by them is accounted so sacred, that except they
have the express command of their master or overseer, they never set about
it, and then they go very solemnly to work. They range themselves in that
spot of ground which is appropriated for the Negro burying place, and one
of them opens a grave. He who acts the priest, takes a little of the
earth, and puts into every one of their mouths; they say, that if any has
been guilty, their belly swells, and occasions death. I never saw any
instance of this
{p. 82}
but once; and it was certainly a fact that a boy did swell, and
acknowledged the theft when he was dying. But I am far from thinking there
was any connexion betwixt the cause and the effect, for a thousand
accidents might have occasioned it, without accounting for it by that
foolish ceremony." (39)
Building his account around the Report of 1789, Robert Renny
declared: "Whatever their notions of religion may have been, they, not
unlike their European masters, seem to pay little regard to the ceremonies
of any system in Jamaica. But they are not on that account, the less
superstitious. A belief in obeah, or witchcraft, is almost universal among
them. The professors of this occult science, are always Africans, and
generally old and crafty. Hoary heads, gravity of aspect, and a skill in
herbs, are the chief qualifications for this curious office. The Negroes,
both Africans and Creoles (i.e. those born in the island), revere,
consult, and fear them." (40)
In the following year, 1808, adopting the viewpoint usually put forward
by the missionaries of the time, J. Steward asserted: "There is one good
effect which the simple persuasion of his being a Christian produces in
the mind of the Negro; it is an effectual antidote against the spells and
charms of his native superstition. One Negro who desires to be revenged on
another, if he fears a more open and manly attack on his adversary, has
usually recourse to obeah. This is considered as a potent and irresistible
spell, withering and palsying, by indescribable terrors, and unwonted
sensations, the unhappy victim. Like the witches' cauldron in Macbeth,
it is the combination
{p. 83}
of all that is hateful and disgusting; a toad's foot, a lizard's tail,
a snake's tooth, the plumage of the carrion crow, or vulture, a broken
egg-shell, a piece of wood fashioned into the shape of a coffin, with many
other nameless ingredients, compose the fatal mixture. It will of course
be conceived that the practice of obeah can have little effect, without a
Negro is conscious that it is practised upon him, or thinking so: for as
the sole evil lies in the terrors of a perturbed fancy, it is of little
consequence whether it is really practised or not, if he only imagines
that it is. An obeah-man or woman upon an estate, is therefore a very
dangerous person; and the practice of it for evil purposes is made a
felony by the law. But numbers may be swept off by its infatuation before
the practice is detected; for, strange as it may appear, so much do the
Negroes stand in awe of these wretches, so much do they dread their malice
and their power, that, though knowing the havoc they have made, and are
still making, many of them are afraid to discover them to the whites; and
others, perhaps, are in league with them for sinister purposes of mischief
and revenge. A Negro under this infatuation can only be cured of his
terrors by being made a Christian; refuse him this indulgence, and he soon
sinks a martyr to imagined evils. The author knew an instance of a Negro,
who, being reduced by the fatal influence of obeah to the lowest state of
dejection and debility, from which there were little hopes of his
recovery, was surprisingly and rapidly restored to health and to spirits,
by being baptized a Christian;
{p. 84}
so wonderful are the workings of a weak and superstitious imagination."
(41)
In the second edition of this work, published fifteen years later, and
under the new title of A View of the Past and Present State of the
Island of Jamaica, this passage is rewritten and after ascribing to a
superstitious imagination the principal efficacy of obeah, it is now
stated: "But if the charm fails to take hold of the mind of the proscribed
person, another and more certain expedient is resorted to the secretly
administering of poison to him. This saves the reputation of the sorcerer,
and effects the purpose he had in view. (The Negroes practising obeah are
acquainted with some very powerful vegetable poisons, which they use on
these occasions.) An obeah-man or woman (for it is practised by both
sexes) is a very wicked and dangerous person on a plantation; and the
practice of it is made a felony by the law, punishable with death where
poison has been administered, and with transportation where only the charm
is used." (42)
Clearly, then, at this period, according to the common opinion of the
slaves, obeah was essentially a preternatural agency that could accomplish
even death. Since they were convinced that Baptism was the only efficient
protection, it would seem that the Devil was regarded as the principal
agent in its operation. Without entering at present into the question of
the soundness of this popular belief, we are safe in describing the obeah
of the period as a form of witchcraft in which the ends were attained
{p. 85}
by means of superstitious fear, supplemented when necessary by the
subtle use of poison.
In connexion with this same period, we find The Edinburgh Review
for August, 1817, under the caption "Present State of West India Affairs,"
reviewing Medical and Miscellaneous Observations relative to the West
India Islands by John Williamson, M.D., Fellow of the Royal College of
Physicians of Edinburgh, and late of Spanish Town, Jamaica. (43) Herein
Doctor Williamson is quoted as follows: "On a property of that
description, we have rather to fear the lurking and concealed practices of
obi, the superstitiously depressing consequences of threats from a Negro
of weight and influence in the estate against a Negro not aware of the
futility of such pretensions." (44) He has been dealing with a stomach
evil, or mal d'estomac, which from the accompanying propensity of
what he calls "dirt-eating" is unquestionably the effects of hook-worm, a
circumstance which naturally he does not recognize, as the disease itself
was not understood until comparatively recently.
The review continues: "The effects of the obi sorcery have been glanced
at in one of these passages. Another extract will illustrate its
influence, and confirm the position, that there is almost always, if not
in every case, an intimate connexion between the stomach-evil and mental
suffering. After describing some cases of the complaint, our author goes
on to say, 'These cases were much aggravated on account of the obi
impressions which had unluckily laid hold of their minds. A particular
terror against
{p. 86}
returning to the mountain, where these superstitious apprehensions were
formed, seemed to gain possession of their minds. It is absurd to reason
with most Negroes on a subject of that kind; and very often, on grounds we
cannot fathom, they will not discover the individuals they have an obi
dread of.'" (45)
Another case quoted from Williamson runs as follows: "Agnes was sitting
alongside of the Negro doctress, and exulting in the advances she was
making to recovery. In that state she was in the evening. On the following
morning, she was accosted by an oldish Negro, named Dick, belonging to the
estate, who had established his name as a great obi-man. Agnes, not long
before, had declined his amourous addresses; on which occasion threats
were made by Dick; and she was so much impressed by apprehension from
these circumstances, that, on his addressing her, she fainted, and could
not be again fully restored to her senses. In course of that evening, she
passed fæces insensibly, and used Dick's name often in terror. In a few
days she sunk.
"A general outcry of the Negroes succeeded her death against Dick; and
such was their violence, that the overseer found it necessary to yield to
an inquiry. A party proceeded to his house, to search for obi implements,
which Dick and the overseer accompanied. The floor of his house was dug; a
small coffin was removed from it, which he said he had placed there to the
memory of a friend. This the Negroes denied; and pronounced it to be one
of the instruments of his obi practices.
"It is incalculable what mischief is done by such
{p. 87}
designing, crafty people as Dick, when they establish a superstitious
impression on the minds of the Negroes, that they possess powers beyond
human. Such persons gratify revenge against their own colour in a
destructive manner; and when bent on ruin to their masters, that malignant
disposition is gratified by also destroying the Negroes his property.
Mineral poison has been sometimes artfully procured; and it is believed
that there are vegetable poisons which are less likely to lead to
discovery. The agency of neither is often required; for the effect of a
threat from an obi-man or woman is sufficient to lead to mental disease,
despondency and death.
"The evidence against Dick was undoubted; and the Negroes regarded his
stay on the estate with horror. The whole was submitted to the proprietor;
and he was transported to some of the Spanish possessions." (46)
Here again we have it clearly set down by a witness whose sceptical
regards for the whole process really strengthens the value of his
evidence, that the real effective influence for evil on the part of
obeah-men consists in the fact that "they establish a superstitious
impression on the minds of the Negroes, that they possess powers beyond
human."
Another testimony of this same period appears in The Times of
London, for December 5, 1818, under the general heading "Colonial
Intelligence." Herein we read: "By a recent Act of the house of Assembly
(Barbados), an endeavour has been made towards more effectively
suppressing the practice of obeah. Our readers are aware, that by this
name is
{p. 88}
designated a kind of necromantic power, which is mostly exercised by
the Negroes for the attainment of the worst purposes. By the above Act,
however, it is decreed that 'any slave who shall wilfully, maliciously,
and unlawfully pretend to any magical and supernatural charm or power, in
order to promote the purposes of insurrection or rebellion of the slaves
within this island, or to injure and affect the life or health of any
other slave; or who wilfully and maliciously shall use or carry on the
wicked and unlawful practice of obeah, shall upon conviction thereof,
suffer death or transportation as the Court shall think proper. Also, that
if any slave wilfully and maliciously, in the practice of obeah, or
otherwise, shall mix or prepare, or have in his or her possession, any
poison, or any noxious or destructive substance or thing, with an intent
to administer to any person (whether the said person be white or black, or
a person of colour), or wilfully and maliciously shall administer to, or
cause to be administered to, such person any poison, or any noxious or
destructive substance or thing whatsoever, although death may not ensue,
upon the testimony thereof, every such slave, together with his or her
counsellors, aiders, and abettors (being slaves), knowing of and being
privy to such evil intentions and offences, shall upon conviction thereof,
suffer death, transportation, or such other punishment as the Court shall
think proper.'"
All this in principle is but the extension of the Jamaica Act on the
subject of obeah to the island
{p. 89}
of Barbados where conditions were pretty much the same as in the larger
Colony.
The past century may be briefly reviewed by a few citations which will
show that substantially obeah remains the same but that as time goes on,
the obeah-man has been appropriating to himself more and more of the
functions and the technique of the myal-man, until the latter as a
separate entity has practically ceased to exist.
As stated in Voodoos and Obeahs (47): Immediately after Jamaican
emancipation, and during the trying days of reconstruction of the entire
social order, with a readjustment to conditions that were so vastly
different from the accepted status of nearly two hundred years when the
word of the master usually stood against the world, free rein was given to
the religious frenzy that brought again into vogue the myalistic spirit so
long repressed. A spirit of exultation naturally drove the slave of
yesterday to take advantage of his freedom and sate himself with
long-forbidden joys and the outbursts of religious fanaticism became so
intermingled with nocturnal saturnalia, that for a time it was difficult
to distinguish the one from the other. The old objective of myalism
quickly reasserted itself. Now that the shackles had been stricken from
their bodies, why not strike the chains from their souls as well? To "dig
up obeah" consequently became widespread and persistent.
This gave witchcraft a set-back for a time, or rather made it even more
secretive and vindictive.
{p. 90}
As a consequence, there was no abatement in the general fear and terror
in which it was held by Negroes without exception. And it cannot be
surprising if occasionally the practitioner of obeah, for self-protection,
assumed the rôle of myalist, and "dug up" perhaps the obeah that he
himself had planted. In public, too, he might become a myalist doctor,
while in secret he was still the obeah-man. He could apply the healing
properties of herbs to counteract the very poisons he had occultly
administered. Finally, together with the vile concoction devised at the
midnight hour for harm and ruin, he might fashion the protective fetish as
a counter-irritant. And the myal-man would naturally be expected to
retaliate. Is it entirely improbable that he may have on occasion stooped
to unprofessional practices, and with his knowledge of vegetable poisons
played the rôle of his rival in herbal lore? In any case, from this time
on, we find an ever increasing confusion of obeah and myalism in the
accounts that have come down to us.
Doctor R. R. Madden was one of the six stipendiary magistrates who were
sent out to Jamaica in October, 1833. Writing from Kingston on September
8, 1834, he describes a case of obeah that had been brought before him at
Spanish Town, in which the obeah-man was alleged to have bewitched a child
by smoking a particular "bush" to windward of his victim who was overcome
by the fumes. In the course of the trial, the obeah-man "confessed that he
was a practiser of obeah, that he did it not for gain or vengeance, but
solely because the devil put
{p. 91}
it into his head to be bad." And again: "He had no spite against the
father or mother of the child, nor wish to injure them. He saw the child,
and he could not resist the instigation of the devil to obeah it, but he
hoped he would never do it any more; he would pray to God to put it out of
his head to do it." Doctor Madden adds: "Such was the singular statement
made to the attorney-general by the prisoner; and the attorney-general
informed me, made with an appearance of frankness and truth which gave a
favourable impression of its veracity." (48)
Here at least there is clear indication of the obeah-man's belief that
he is acting as a tool of the Devil, and it may be safely said that the
same point of view is taken by his victims generally.
Reverend Benjamin Luckock declared in 1846: "Obeahism, or obeah, as it
is most generally called in the islands, attains its power by a supposed,
or pretended, intercourse with spirits, both capable of inflicting and
controlling evil." However, he expresses the doubt: "There is some
difficulty in understanding whether the belief was given to Obi, or Obeah,
as a fancied personage, or to obeahism, as a system founded on the
imaginary influence of malignant spirits." (49)
He is face to face with the old difficulty of confusing the craft of
obeah with the evil spirit back of it that resulted in the transformation
of the Ashanti Sasabonsam into the Jamaica Obboney.
It is not surprising, then, to find Charles Rampini writing in 1873:
"Serpent or devil worship is by no
{p. 92}
means rare in the country districts; and of its heathen rites the
obeah-man is invariably the priest." (50)
Reverend R. Thomas Banbury, a native Jamaican, who was Rector of St.
Peter's Church, Hope Bay, published in 1894, a pamphlet of fifty pages
entitled Jamaica Superstitions; or The Obeah Book. As he
tells us in the Preface that this is a curtailment of what he had written
thirty-five years before, we may accept it as a fairly accurate exposition
of the superstitious beliefs and practices that were current in Jamaica in
the latter half of the nineteenth century, at least as regards the country
districts with which he was familiar.
Mr. Banbury opens his treatise with the following words: "OBEAHISM.
What wicked, immoral, disgusting, and debasing
associations are called up in the minds of those who are acquainted with
the baneful effects of this superstition in Jamaica at the mere mention of
its name. A superstition the most cruel in its intended designs; the most
filthy in its practices; the most shameful and degrading in its
associations. It has not only directed its baleful influence against
popular society in the island at large; but alas! it tends greatly to the
pulling down of the Church of Christ. There is hardly any of the people
connected with religion whose minds are not to some extent imbued with
it--who do not believe that the influence of obeah is capable of
exerting some evil effects either on their minds, bodies, or property; and
there are very few we have reason to believe, who do not directly practice
it. . . . Superstition is the parent of idolatry and all the concomitant
evils
{p. 93}
of this sin. What 'pestiferous Demon' has swept through the land
of Africa with 'tainted breath' devouring its inhabitants? It is
Superstition." (51)
In connexion with the importation of obeah from Africa, Mr. Banbury
makes the amusing observation: "It is stated that the African obeah-man
carried his obeah magic with him under the hair of his head when imported.
For that reason the heads of the Africans were shaved before being landed,
or if that was not done, he swallowed the things by which he worked in
Africa, before leaving." (52)
As regards the obeah-man himself, Mr. Banbury declares: "He is the
agent incarnate of Satan. The Simon Magus of these good gospel
days; the embodiment of all that is wicked, immoral and deceptious. You
may easily at times distinguish him by his sinister look, and slouching
gait. An obeah-man seldom looks any one in the face. Generally he is a
dirty looking fellow with a sore foot. But some few have been known to be
decent in their appearance, and well clad. He never goes without a bankra,
wallet or bag, in which he carries his 'things.' He is a
professional man that is as well paid as the lawyer or doctor, and
sometimes better. It is a well-known fact that in cases of lawsuit the
obeah-man is retained as well as the lawyer, and at times he not only 'works'
at home on the case, but goes into Court with his client for the purpose,
it is called, of 'stopping' the mouths of the prosecutor and his
witnesses and of influencing the judge and jury. The obeah-man is to be
feared in the system of poisoning which he carries on. He is well versed
in all the vegetable
{p. 94}
poisons of the island, and sometimes has them planted in his garden. He
is up to the knowledge that vegetable poison is not so easily detected
after death as mineral, and therefore prefers to do his diabolical
work with that. He takes advantage also of this to poison by the skin as
well as by mouth. He is known to make a thin decoction of these poisons
and soak the undergarments of people taken to him, which when taken back,
and put on by the unsuspecting owner, the poison is absorbed along with
the perspiration, and engenders some direful disease in the system. Many
have suffered in this way and have not been able to account for their
maladies." (53)
Before leaving the subject of obeah and going on to consider myalism,
Mr. Banbury makes the rather startling statement: "Whilst treating about
obeahism and other superstitions of Jamaica, we do not wish to leave the
impression on the minds of our readers that it is only the black people of
the country that have faith in them. The majority of the coloured people
also come under the category of the superstitious, and even some white
people are not exempted. As we have already hinted in setting out, there
are but few among the people whose minds are not imbued with a
superstitious dread of obeah influences, though they may not enter into
the practice of it." (54)
Five years after the appearance of Mr. Banbury's pamphlet, W. p.
Livingston declared: "Obeahism runs like a black thread of mischief
through the known history of the race. It is the result of two conditions,
an ignorant and superstitious receptivity
{p. 95}
on the one hand, and on the other, sufficient intelligence and cunning
to take advantage of this quality. The obeah-man is any Negro who gauges
the situation and makes it his business to work on the fears of his
fellows. He claims the possession of occult authority, and professes to
have the power of taking or saving life, of causing or curing disease, or
bringing ruin or creating prosperity, of discovering evildoers or
vindicating the innocent. His implements are a few odd scraps, such as
cocks' feathers, rags, bones, bits of earth from graves, and so on. The
incantations with which he accompanies his operations are merely a mumble
of improvised jargon. His real advantage in the days of slavery lay in his
knowledge and use of poisonous plants. Poisoning does not now enter into
his practice to any extent, but the fear he inspires among the ignorant is
intense, and the fact that he has turned his attention to particular
persons is often sufficient to deprive them of reason. Obeahism is a
superstition at once simple, foolish, and terrible, still vigorous, but in
former times as powerful an agent as slavery itself in keeping the nature
debased." (55)
Writing of this same period, a missionary who had worked for more than
a decade in some of the worst obeah districts of Jamaica, thus critically
sums up the situation: "Obeah may be defined in general to be a
superstitious belief that certain men and women, known as obeah-men and
obeah-women, can exercise certain preternatural power over places, persons
and things and produce effects beyond the natural powers of man, by
agencies other than divine.
{p. 96}
It seems to be a combination of magic and witchcraft. Magic, we are
told, is an attempt to work miracles by the use of hidden forces beyond
man's control, so it is in obi; it is an attempt to produce by some
undetermined, invisible power, effects out of proportion to and beyond the
capabilities of the things and activities employed. In witchcraft, we are
told. . . . there is involved the idea of a diabolical pact, or at least
an appeal to the intervention of the spirits. In the history and make up
and practice of obi there is involved the idea of association with the
devil. . . . His Satanic majesty is the invisible head of obeah. The
visible agent, head and front of obeah is the obeah-man or obeah-woman,
more often and more characteristically the obeah-man. Who and what is the
obeah-man? In general the obi-man or woman is any man or woman who is
supposed to have communication with some invisible agent through which he
or she can exert preternatural power over animate and inanimate beings.
You have obi-men of all sorts, just as you have professional doctors and
quack-doctors. As obeahism is so common among the people and is a form of
religion, it comes natural for any individual to practise it as he would
practise any religious rite. From this you can easily understand how any
rascal who wants to gratify his revenge, avarice or lust, can work upon
the superstitious, practise obi and get a following as an obi-man. Hence
obi-working is very common." (56)
Again the same writer tells us: "The obi-man's incantation is generally
the muttering of strange
{p. 97}
sounds, often meaningless, the pronouncing of some word or words over
the objects to be obeahed, joined with some grotesque actions. It may
consist in words or actions alone. The following lines which I find in my
notes on obeah, by a Jamaican poet describe an obi-man at work:
"Crouched in a cave I saw thee and thy beard
White against black, gleamed out; and thy gaunt hand
Mixed lizard skins, rum, parrots' tongues and sand
Found where the sinking tombstone disappeared.
Sleek galli-wasps looked on thee; grimly peered
Blood-christened John Crows with a hissed demand
Who art thou? then like ghouls to a dim land
Fled for they saw thee working and they feared.
"Compare this description of the obi-man making obeah or an obi-charm
with that given by Shakespeare in Macbeth of the witches making a
charm through which they raised spirits and deceivingly foretold to
Macbeth his future; and you will find that they have much in common." (57)
As was stated in Voodoos and Obeahs, (58) during the long years
of slavery, myalism might be regarded as dormant. There was no opportunity
of its development or branching out. It was preserved secretly and
cherished as the fondest tradition of the past. No doubt the hours of
amusement allowed to the slaves on their own cultivations preserved in
some: degree the myalistic rites, disguised as one of the social dances
that were countenanced by the planters.
The native African is essentially religious in his own way and as
formal ceremonies were debarred he
{p. 98}
found an outlet by associating with obeah an element of worship, if not
of Accompong, at least of Sasabonsam or Obboney. If he could not venerate
the Supreme Being through the minor deities and ancestral spirits, he
might at least placate the evil one, and bespeak his influence for
purposes of revenge or to coerce his master to grant him something that he
sought.
We find obeah thus really becoming a form of devil-worship in the
Christian sense, and when at length myalism entered into an alliance with
it for the overthrow of the white régime it naturally gained in the
popular estimation of the slaves, since its arch-enemy myalism had come to
recognize its power. And yet this public esteem was not one of devotion
but of unholy fear, which the obeah-man naturally played up to his own
advantage.
With Emancipation, myalism made haste to assert itself in an endeavour
to regain its pristine ascendance and made open war on obeah, at the
expense be it said of the general peace of the community. Its newly found
independence led to excesses of every kind and in course of years it
became as great an evil as obeah itself. Its old priestly class was dead,
for a generation none had come from Africa, and there had been no
opportunity of establishing a succession in the craft or of passing along
the ritual in practice. The traditions and nothing more could have
remained, and it is questionable whether the new leaders had any
legitimate claim to the exercise of the rôle that they assumed. It is
simple, then, to see that the decay of myalism as a religious force was
{p. 99}
inevitable. And it would certainly have soon been entirely eliminated
had not its spirit and much of its traditional ritual found new scope in
the kindred spirit of the emotional revivalism which was fostered for a
time by the Methodists and even more so by the Native Baptist
Congregations. But this recrudescence of myalism has found its climax with
the Bedwardites, so characterized by the peculiar hip-movement that is
clearly African, and which shows itself not only in their dances but also
in the religious processions, and gives a peculiar lilt to all their
hymns.
Here, strictly speaking, myalism disappears, and its very name is dying
out except as a mysterious something that has endured in its opposition to
the obeah-man who more and more assumes the dual rôle of myalist by day
and obeah-man by night, using the title as a safeguard from the law in the
prosecution of his real aim in life. As a further consequence, obeah is
assuming more and more of a religious aspect and it is now, not
undeservedly, classified by many as devil-worship.
In Chambers's Journal for January 11, 1902, there appeared an
article entitled "Obeah To-day In The West Indies." The course of the
narrative shows that the writer had been living in Jamaica for three years
at the time of writing. However, it should be observed that the term obeah
as used in this article includes voodoo and all other forms of West Indian
witchcraft. Thus it is asserted in accordance with the old theory that an
Egyptian origin is to be ascribed to the whole practice: "The name
{p. 100}
is derived from obi, apparently an evil deity worshipped on the West
Coast of Africa by the ancestors of the present West Indian Negroes before
they were shipped off as slaves to the plantations. The Reverend John
Radcliffe, a noted Jamaican scholar, has proved the word obi to
mean a snake, and to this day the snake is commonly used as a symbol of
the baleful rites." (59)
The article continues: "The obeah-man is generally a sinister,
terrifying figure-aged, decrepit, often diseased, and half-mad; but with a
baleful gleam in his bloodshot eyes, that does not belie his pretended
intimacy with the Author of Evil." (60)
In connexion with the prevalence of obeah practices, the author states:
"I have known coloured schoolmasters scatter these ridiculous trifles
about their schoolrooms with the idea of compelling the Government
inspector to give them good reports; and missionaries have told me that
members expelled from their Churches for evil living commonly work obeah
in order to be restored to the fold. When the minister enters his pulpit,
and, opening his bible to give out the text, finds a quaint assortment of
cats' claws, feathers, dried leaves, and egg-shells, he is by no means
puzzled as to the meaning of it all. He knows it expresses Hezekiah Da
Costa's wish to be received back into Church membership without abandoning
his career as the village Don Juan." (61)
In the foregoing passage, I fear, the author has drawn unduly on the
imagination. If such manifestations have actually taken place in rare,
isolated instances, they are so unusual that they should not be
{p. 101}
cited as if they were regular occurrences. Certainly I have never
encountered anything in even the most out-of-the-way sections of the
"bush" that could in any way support the story of Hezekiah Da Costa's
method of regaining good-standing as a Church member.
In any case, the following passage from the same article is deserving
of more attention in keeping with our present study: "In many countries
superstitious rites are practised to bring good luck; but that is not the
case as a rule with obeah. Its root idea is the worship and
propitiation of the Evil One: it is essentially malevolent. A Negro
usually goes to the obeah-man to harm his neighbour, not to do any good to
himself; and that is why the law regards the matter so seriously. The
principal exception to this rule is the not infrequent case of the young
Negress who goes for a love-philtre to make some 'high gentleman' marry
her. The obeah-man is often called upon to exorcise 'duppies' driven into
a man or woman by a brother in the craft. In former days this used to be
the exclusive work of the myal-man. It was the old story of 'white' and
'black' magic. One wizard did the mischief, and the other supplied the
antidote. Nowadays myalism is complete merged into obeahism, and the law
punishes both equally." (62)
Claude McKay, a native of Clarendon, who from a little-known Jamaica
poet has become one of the more popular writers of Harlem fiction, is in
general agreement with all this. Thus he writes: "Obeah is black people's
evil God." (63) And again: "Of the thousands of native families,
illiterate and literate,
{p. 102}
in that lovely hot island there were few indeed that did not worship
and pay tribute to Obi--the god of Evil that the Africans brought cover
with them when they were sold to the New World." (64)
May Robinson, writing in Folk-Lore. A Quarterly Review of Myth,
Tradition, Institutions, and Custom, on the subject "Obeah Worship in
West Indies" stated in 1893: "The mystery with which the professors of
obeah have always surrounded themselves, and the dread Negroes have always
had, and still have, of their power, have made it very difficult to find
out much about the worship or superstition." (65) However, she observes:
"Obeah practices of the present day seem similar to those of a hundred
years ago, and information about them has been kindly supplied to me by
Mr. Thomas, Inspector Jamaica Constabulary, and gleamed from his
interesting pamphlet, Something About Obeah. In addition to the Law
of 1760, another Law for the suppression of obeah was passed in 1845,
which gave to the executive authorities very comprehensive powers to deal,
not only with the obeah-men themselves, but also with those who sought
their services." (66)
The present legal aspect of obeah, may be briefly outlined as follows.
The Rules and Regulations for the Jamaica Constabulary of 1867 simply
enumerates among those that the constable is called on to arrest "every
person pretending to be a dealer in obeah or myalism." (67)
The Sub-Officers Guide of Jamaica, published in 1908, is more
specific when it defines the implements
{p. 103}
of obeah as follows: "Grave dirt, pieces of chalk, packs of cards,
small mirrors, or bits of large ones, beaks, feet, and bones of fowls or
other birds, teeth of dogs and alligators, glass marbles, human hair,
sticks of sulphur, camphor, myrrh, asafoetida, frankincense, curious
shells, china dolls, wooden images, curiously shaped sticks, and other
descriptions of rubbish." (68)
However, the mere possession of the paraphernalia of obeah is no longer
sufficient ground for prosecution under the law. This was settled by the
following decision of the Supreme Court of Jamaica: "Unlawful
possession of implements of Obeah. This is an appeal from a conviction
by a Resident Magistrate charging the appellant with being in the unlawful
possession of implements of obeah. A person found in possession of such
implements is deemed by Section 8 of Law 5 of 1898 to be a person
practising obeah until the contrary is proved, but such possession is not
in itself a substantive offence, and can only be used as evidence in
support of a charge of practising obeah. In the circumstances the appeal
must be allowed and the conviction quashed. (R. v. Bulgin (1919), S.C.J.B.
Vol. 10, p. 86, A. M. Coll, C. J., Beard, p. J. and Brown, Ag. J.)." (69)
Towards the close of the last century, the Reverend Mr. Banbury was of
opinion: "The laws affecting the punishment of this superstition (obeah)
in Jamaica are too lenient; otherwise it would not be so rife. The Courts
of Justice are apt to laugh at the thing, and treat it as mere nonsense."
(70)
But the very opposite view is taken by a recent
{p. 104}
correspondent in The Daily Gleaner of Kingston, Jamaica. The
letter is dated January 15, 1934, and runs as follows:
"OBEAH LAW REPEAL SUGGESTED
The Editor:
Sir,--The time has arrived when the Legislature should eliminate the
Obeah Law from our Statute Book.
Jamaica passed that stage long ago. The constant reference in the
newspapers to this or that arrest for obeah is a reflexion on our present
day civilization and does the country harm.
I will concede that this African cult was brought here from the West
Coast by some of the poor slaves, but having no recruits it burnt itself
out as some diseases do, decades ago.
I will also concede that there exists some artful poisonings by the
so-called 'obeah-men', but the rascals when caught should be charged under
a different and more serious act, flogging and imprisonment being the
requirements.
The bulk of the rest so charged in our courts is merely receiving money
by false pretences or by a trick, and should be also flogged.
I discussed the subject with my friend the Honourable A. G. Nash only a
week before he died. He agreed with me and had intended in protection of
the fair name of Jamaica to have brought the matter before the Legislative
Council.
I am, etc.
A Jamaican."
{p. 105}
And yet, on February 26, 1934, The Daily Gleaner, under the
headlines: "Obeah and Voodooism. Still Practised in West Indies. Says
Judge Bullock." runs as a news item a digest taken from The
Brighton Herald of February 5, 1934, which concludes as follows: "The
lecturer supplemented his pictorial and geographical details of the
British West Indies with some fascinating stories of obeah worship, which
with voodooism, is still secretly practised among the native communities."
The lecturer, it is noted, was judge Willoughby Bullock, formerly Chief
Justice of St. Vincent, British West Indies.
Undoubtedly, the present-day practice of obeah particularly as found in
city and town does include a great deal of charlatanism pretty much as is
to be found in the spiritual séances in all large American communities,
together with an ingraft of superstitions that have been borrowed from the
Whites. Even modern books, professedly treating of the mysteries of magic,
are greedily assimilated and their formulae are attempted in practice. But
my personal observations throughout the "bush" which have aggregated in
all about six years, during the past quarter of a century, lead me to
conclude that the obeah-man as a rule takes himself very seriously and
honestly believes that he can and does exercise supernatural powers, and
assuredly the great mass of the populace, whatever their protestations to
the contrary may be, live in veritable dread of some nefarious influence
of the obeah-man whose enmity must be avoided at any cost.
Further, I am convinced that I have witnessed
{p. 106}
more than one death where the sole cause was an overpowering fear due
to the conviction that obeah was being worked against the sufferer who
literally pined away.
What is more, I am driven to the conclusion that just as in the days of
slavery, obeah was too long regarded with amused toleration merely as a
foolish superstition devoid of real efficient power to do harm, so to-day
there is a tendency in Jamaica to shut the eyes to the true nefarious
influence of the cult on the entire Negro population of the island, and to
regard this practice of the black art as an exuberance of superstition and
nothing more. The real menace comes not from the quixotic external
practices, professing by a sort of sympathetic magic to control ghosts, to
prosper some love affair, or assist in legal disputes and commercial
transactions, but from the underlying conviction of the potency of a
spiritual force which is nothing more nor less than an assumption that if
Properly invoked, his Satanic Majesty will exert an efficient directive
force in the affairs of man's daily life. Certainly, if you can persuade
anyone who has gone to an obeah-man for a love-philtre to disclose what
really went on in the nauseating process and the accompanying
incantations, the last doubt will vanish from your mind regarding the
diabolic association of the whole practice. In fine, obeah as such, in its
purpose and acceptance must be classified as a form of devil worship. (71)
This does not mean that a diabolic influence is actually controlled by
the obeah-man. In the ordinary
{p. 107}
course of events such a supposition, in my opinion, would be repugnant
to Divine Providence, although it might be permitted on rare occasions.
But the real obeah-man, as far as lies in his power, places his confidence
in the Evil One as he formally invokes his assistance, and his intention
if not the result classifies his act as one of communication with the
Devil. The client, too, approaches the obeah-man with the firm conviction
that the evil which he purposes is to be wrought through the machinations
of Satan and he forthwith puts himself under an obligation to the
arch-fiend, even if what he seeks fails of accomplishment.
As noted in Voodoos and Obeahs, (72) the obeah-man has a
wholesome fear of the priest and usually tries to avoid his presence.
There is a conviction among his ilk that the priest can exercise a more
powerful influence than any obeah-man. This belief is expressed by the
aphorism: "French obi, him strongest." The first priest to become well
known through the Jamaica "bush" was a Frenchman, and the Catholic Church
in consequence came to be known familiarly as the French Church. Hence,
"French obi, him strongest" really means that the Catholic Church
exercises the strongest obeah. It is also accepted as a fact by the
devotees of the obeah cult that the priest can give evidence of his
dominant power by "lighting a candle on them." This process is thus
described: "Fadder take pin and Fadder take candle, and him stick der pin
in der candle; and him light der candle on you. Der candle him burn and
him burn and him burn. And you waste and you
{p. 108}
waste and you waste. And when der flame touch dat pin--you die." So
that it is only necessary for a priest to make the playful remark to some
black fellow in the "bush," "I think I'll have to light a candle on you,"
to bring him to his knees with: "O Fadder, don't." On one occasion I was
actually approached by the most notorious obeah-man of a "bush" district
who in the real spirit of a Simon Magus professed his desire to become a
Catholic precisely in the hopes of acquiring this fictitious power of the
lighted candle.
{p. 109}
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