Ethics
in African Culture and its Relation to the Baha’i Faith
Mojgan Derakhshani*
1.
Background for
Research
The following limitation and
assumption were made to facilitate the better possibilities of accessing
information and providing a paper that is not very lengthy:
a) The African
Region chosen for the Study: The Southern African region has been chosen for
study and research. The countries that make up this region are: Botswana,
Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi, South Africa, Namibia, Swaziland, Tanzania,
Lesotho and Angola.
b) The period of
time for the study: The years prior to coming of Christianity have been chosen.
The influence of Christianity has affected the culture and ethics of Africa,
therefore, it was decided to concentrate on the African culture in its
“original form” which by many standards is the culture of this region before
the coming of Christianity.
c) Areas of study in
African ethics and culture: The following areas will be the focus of research:
2.
Methodology: The methodology
used in carrying out this research was referring to available books and
interviews with relevant university professors, living historians and other key
people with knowledge in this area. The findings of each category will be
discussed first and the Baha’i views and principles concerning the same issue
will be introduced thereafter and discussed.
3.
The Question: The following
question is the purpose of this study; “How do the African Culture and Ethics
relate to the teachings of the Baha’i Faith?” I will take this question and
demonstrated how the understanding the African culture and ethics can
facilitate the understanding of the teachings and enhance the deepening of the
Faith so as to achieve the goals of the Four Year Plan to bring entry by troops
closer to reality.
To understand the topic we
will first define the words Ethic and Culture. The Oxford dictionary defines
Ethics as “a set of moral principles in human conduct or moral principles or
code”. In the same book we find the following definition for culture: “refined
understanding of the arts and other human intellectual achievements”.
The area of concentration
for background information of this paper is “Cultural Relativism”.
According to Tylor, “culture
is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law,
custom and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of
society”. He emphasized that culture is learned, that is shared with other
members of society and it makes interrelated whole. (Introduction to Culture,
E. Schsky & T. Culbert)
Cultural Relativism was
developed during the 19th century. The followers of this philosophy
believe that culture and nature are unique. Society and culture are real
entities whereas individuals are but shadows. Individuals are products of
culture. Supreme moral values become cultural and live in accordance with
rules/needs of the society. They say that the society is organic and not
mechanic. There is mutual inter-relation between different parts. Motion of
history and change are introduced into nature.
They believe that nature is
good and society changes and evolves. What corresponds to change and evolution
is good. There is unity within a particular culture and all cultures are
living. Cultural relativists were against revolutionary tendencies, because
they believed that natural processes must evolve gradually.
This doctrine went so far as
to emphasize cultural unity to a degree that individual freedom was destroyed.
It became anti-reason and anti-minority. Anything different had to be
repressed. Cultural relativists believe that to be sane or insane are only
characteristics of individuals and not of culture. Culture is an organic entity
that lives and evolves. Any aspect should be understood within confines of the
whole culture. For example, in the southern African culture if you are white
you cannot understand blacks and any outside idea is doomed to failure.
Separatism was created since not much inter-cultural communications was
possible. The cultural relativists could not have and objective basis for
defining morality.
Culture can make anything
right or wrong. What our conscience tells us depends solely upon our tribe or
social group. Values are forged by childhood training and by pressures brought
upon us to conform to the ways of the group. (Dewey, Meville – Herskovits)
According to Summer, “words
philosophy, life policy, right, rights, and morality are all products of the
folkways”. (Folkways, W. Summer, Boston, 1906)
Although many tribes
believed it was acceptable for a man to have more that one wife, Summer
discovered that in Tibet a woman was encouraged to have several husbands. He
also described how some Eskimo tribes allowed deformed babies to die of
exposure, and in the Figgie Islands, aged parents were killed.
He pointed out that these
diversities lead to the conclusion that culture alone is the sole arbiter of
moral values. Hershovits says that judgments are based on experience and each
individual in terms of his own enculturation interprets experience.
According to him cultures
are flexible and so we find that they change over time. Therefore the norm for
acceptable conduct within a culture may change as the culture shifts its
ethical base.
A given number may gradually
come to hold that a man may no longer have more than one wife, if so, polygamy
would be wrong within that group. But at the same time and in another culture,
polygamy may become acceptable. Therefore whatever a society accepts or rejects
at a certain point in time becomes the standard of morality.
The Inuit of northern
Canada, who used to live in extremely isolated communities, practiced a form of
polygamy that falls between the polygamous and polyandrous marriage. In this
type of relationship wives were shared with make visitors as an act of
hospitality and respect, with the result that both men and women had, over
time, multiple sexual partners. This gave each isolated community access to the
entire genetic poll of the region. It was this aspect of the culture that
minimized inbreeding, While the region remained out of contact with the rest of
the world. At present this social interaction has emerged as a form of sexual abuse
and population still practicing this pattern of behavior.
The question to ask from the
Cultural Relativists is “whose standards are absolutely right and correct?” In
the United States we find the most popular expression of cultural relativism
demonstrated in the opinion poll. For example, many people assume that when
fifty one percent of public believes that abortion on demand is morally
acceptable, then it becomes right. (The Necessity of Ethical Absolutes, Erwin
Leitzer, Michigan, 1981)
By
what step in reasoning is it possible to move from “what is” to what ought to
be”? Morals are rooted in human needs and human inclinations.
From the teachings of the Baha’i Faith we
understand that differences in people and cultures out to be respected. But
communities cannot be slaves to cultures and become totally static and dead.
Tradition should be alive and progressive. We also learn that the idea of unity
in diversity and having different cultures live harmoniously together is only
right if there are ethical absolutes. The Divine Manifestations of God provide
us with these absolutes. Therefore even if the practice of polygamy or the
killing of a child as a sacrifice to ancestors was accepted and appropriate
according to a cultural norm, with the appearance of the Sun of Reality and the
Manifestation of God and according to His set of laws, the culture has to be
reviewed, and in the case of our example, totally put aside.
1.
The Concept of
Spirituality – Belief in God
The contemporary studies
relating to the spirituality of the African people all agree that the Africans
are basically spiritual human beings. The earlier scientists, of course,
believed that the black race was devoid of a soul. This contrast between the
one universal God and many local gods has raised an important question about
the unity and structure of the African religions. Does the widespread belief in
a universal creator mean that African religions are fundamentally monotheistic?
Or do African religions consist rather in a kind of pantheism, based on an
underlying notion of “force” or “power” which permeates and controls even the
gods themselves?
There is an apparent
contradiction between the supremacy of the high-god and his withdrawal from the
concerns of the world. The attributes assigned to him heighten this effect of
contradiction. He is said to be at the origin of things, often as a creator, he
is all knowing and all-powerful, he introduces order into the chaos of the
universe, he is the final arbiter of right and wrong. But in spite of these
attributes the high-god is not usually directly worshipped. He has no priests
and no shrines dedicated to him and people may make a token offering to him in
every sacrifice but hardly do they ever offer a sacrifice exclusively to him.
One way of resolving this
problem is to adopt a perspective which makes the supreme god the underlying
core of the religious system. From this point of view it is possible to unify
African religions around the concept of monotheism. (African Religions. B. C.
Ray, Princeton University)
While supreme beings
generally remain in the background as objects of ultimate concern, daily
religious life is given over to more concrete forms of divinity. Unlike the
supreme gods, these powers are highly dynamic, communal. And vociferous. They
are immanent, not transcendent, and their relationship to man is fundamentally
reciprocal and interdependent. Indeed, their very nature is essentially bound
up with human experience. Hence, they require many temples, shrines, priests,
cult groups, images, rituals, and offerings to organize the frequent
transactions between them and mankind.
These gods are known through
personal encounter as living agents directly affecting people’s lives. But
since we cannot personally experience the gods in this way, we can try to
understand them as images or symbols to us. Such an approach is highly
interpretive, but it may help us to understand the significance of the gods in
relation to experiences of the self and society.
In most African societies,
there are certain types of religious authorities, such as diviners, prophets,
priests, and sacred kings, who perform specific ritual functions. Although
these authorities operate in different context and in different ways, they
serve a common religious purpose; the mediation between man and the sacred.
In the South African region,
there is a belief in a Supreme Being who is known as Mkhulumnqande. He
fashioned the earth and placed upon it flora, fauna and peopled it with human
beings. His footprints may be seen in rocks upon which he trod before they were
dry. He made the earth and then returned whence he came. Since then He has not
returned to the earth and he remains aloof except when occasionally sending a
Messenger known as Mlentengamunye.
The hierarchies remain after
death. In this world an ordinary man cannot approach the king. He has to go to
him through a messenger. This is the same in approaching God in the African
culture. The laws and customs also originate from the Supreme Being and are
enforced by the ancestors.
The Baha’i teachings tell us
that God is an unknowable, unreachable essence and we as men do not have the
capacity or understanding of comprehending that essence.
“The door of the knowledge
of the Ancient Being hath ever been, and will continue forever to be, closed in
the face of men. No man’s understanding shall ever gain access unto His holy
court. As a token of His mercy, however, and as a proof of His loving kindness,
He hath manifested unto men the Day Stars of His divine guidance, the symbols
of His divine unity, and hath ordained the knowledge of these sanctified Beings
to be identical with the knowledge of His own self. Whoso recognizeth their
call, hath hearkened to the Voice of God, and whoso testifieth to the truth of
their Revelation, hath testified to the truth of God Himself.” (Gleanings of
the Writings of Baha’u’llah, P 49-50)
“… Immeasurably exalted is
His Essence above the description of His creatures. He, alone, occupieth the
Seat of transcendent majesty, of supreme and inaccessible glory. The birds of
men’s hearts, however high they soar can never hope to attain the heights of
His unknowable essence. It is He who hath called into being the whole of
creation. Who hath caused every created thing to spring forth at His behest…”
(Gleanings of the Writings of Baha’u’llah, P 193)
The Baha’i approach to
spirituality and belief in God are in essence similar to the African belief.
The fact that there is only one God, a supernatural force who created the whole
world and is not knowable is shared between the two. Understanding that the
knowledge of God is only possible through His Manifestations is also a shared
belief. Therefore when teaching, reference should be made to these original
beliefs and the concept of progressive revelation will become clear and
understandable. This is based on what was discussed earlier about the African
religions. Since we cannot know or reach God, He sends us Messengers to guide
us to the right path. These messengers come at different times in humanity’s
growth and development and bring teachings which are suited to our needs at
that specific time in our history.
The African view of man
strikes a balance between his collective identity as a member of society and
his personal identity as a unique individual. In general, African philosophy
tends to define a person in terms of the social groups to which he belongs.
Mbiti in his book, African Religions, has aptly said, “the individual is
conscious of himself in terms of I am because we are, and since we are,
therefore I am”. Destiny and community always balance freedom and
individuality, and these in turn are balanced by natural and supernatural
powers. Every person is a combination of interacting elements of the self and of
the world, which shape, and are shaped by, his behavior.
The relationship between the
living and the dead in the African culture is most interesting. This
relationship, is commonly though somewhat misleadingly called ‘ancestor
worship’. It has powerful moral and psychological dimensions and plays a vital
role in the every day life of almost every African society.
What is important to
understand is the way in which the dead continues to be involved in the affairs
of the living. According to the African belief the soul of man is immortal and
after death it returns to its origin. Based on its social status and its moral
achievements in this life it can be a powerful force, which will guide the
living and protect them. This spirit will become a mediator between the living
people and God. Prayers are offered to God through the intercession of
ancestors. In times of difficulty or misfortune, special ceremonies are held to
invoke their assistance.
As mentioned above, in the
African culture, God rarely intervenes in the moral life of men on earth.
Although none of the scientists pronounce the Supreme Being unknowable and
unreachable, this is the explanation we can find when we study about God or the
Supreme Being. This One, who is the Creator, does not interfere with the day to
day affairs of people but from time to time sends Messengers to guide the
people and show them the right path.
It is the ancestors who act
as the official guardians of the social and moral order. This is especially
true of small scale, stateless societies whose sociopolitical rules are almost
entirely governed by a descent system based on genealogical frameworks. In such
societies, ancestors become the focus of religious activity. This is not
because of a special ‘fear’ of the dear or because of an especially strong
‘belief in souls’, but rather because of the importance of the system in
defining moral relations.
The ancestors are a
society’s projection of its authority system on to the supernatural sphere.
Through this system ancestor rites are seen to be a function of a society’s
need to maintain itself, by ritualization of its rules concerning social
relations.
The ancestors do not,
however, govern the whole of the moral order. They govern the narrower sphere
of moral obligation. They do not concern themselves with personal moral virtue
or with the performance of good deeds but rather with adherence to public
norms. In this sense, wicked persons may prosper, even in the eyes of the
ancestors, as long as they fulfill the social duties required of them. (African
Religions, B. Ray, Princetown University)
The argument presented above
is in contrast to the findings of Kuper who says. “Illness and other
misfortunes are frequently attributed to the ancestors, but Swazis believe that
the spirits do not inflict suffering through malice. They act as custodians of
correct behavior and tribal ethics. Ancestors punish, they do not kill.” (The
Swazi, Hilda Kuper, Oxford)
There is a story told in
some of the African tribes which may make the understanding of the ancestral
beliefs easier. Long ago, a great and noble Banto king was in the habit of
climbing a twin-peaked mountain at daybreak, there to intercede with the Great
One on behalf of his people. His son who succeeded him, was afraid to draw newr
to the Great God whom his father worshipped, so he called upon the spirit of
his father to intercede for him and his people before the Creator of all.
Gradually each head of a house adopted this method of approaching God until
each family had its own ancestral spirits as mediators first, then merely as
beings who brought good luck and who needed to be propitiated by sacrifice and
constant flattery and attention. (The Swazi, Marwick)
Each family and clan has its
own particular spirits who are its own male ancestors. The only other spirits
that concern a family are those of the king’s ancestors, who care for the whole
country.
The traditional Swazi
perception of the spirit world resembles the world of the living to such an
extent that it constitutes an almost true projection of the world of the
living. Hilda Kuper says that in that spirit world men and women, old and
young, aristocrats and commoners, continue the patterns of superiority and
inferiority established by earthly experiences.
The ancestors are praised,
invoked, or rebuked on various occasions. Following is a summary of these
occasions:
When a village is being
moved they are informed and asked to go to the new site.
In healing, they are invoked
so that those of the doctor and those of the patient will work together for the
latter’s recovery.
When the parents with to
have a child of a particular sex, they drink certain medicines and mentally
beseech the husband’s ancestors to send the child they desire.
When a girl goes off to be
married, her people praise their ancestors, asking them to extend their help to
the girl even at the village to which she is going. (The Swazi, Marwick)
The healers describe
‘ancestors’ as spirits, much like guardian angles. These are often one’s great
grandparents, grandparents, parents, aunts and uncles. Ancestor can also refer
to someone other than family, like a great teacher or an associate of your
family. One of the healers in Swaziland has a white lady who comes to her as an
ancestor. She herself did not know who this lady was and asked the elders about
it. She found out that her grandfather used to work for this white woman and
was very much loved and respected by her.
We learn in the Baha’i
writings that the spirit of man is created upon his conception in the womb of
the mother and will continue to live as long as God lives. It maintains its own
identity throughout its travels in this world and the other worlds of God
beyond this world. The spirit of a true believer continues its journey and
becomes part of the ‘Concourse on High’. We invoke the guidance and blessings
from the Concourse on High. We beseech them in our prayers to assist us. We
name our teaching and other projects after them to have their blessings and
guidance to the success of our projects. We pray for the progress of their
souls, as we are certain that they do the same for us. The writings teach us
about the immortality of the soul and life after death, but in no way can this
be called ‘ancestral worship’. We do not worship the soul that has passed on,
we are only requesting its intercession s we worship God. It is obvious that we
worship God and pray to Him. This sentiment is very similar to the African
beliefs and I feel that this concept alone can draw the spiritual and pure
hearts of the Africans closer to the Faith. “And now concerning thy question
regarding the soul of man and its survival after death. Know thou of a truth
that the soul, after its separation from the body, will continue to progress
until it attaineth the presence of God, in a state and condition which neither
the revolution of ages and centuries, nor the changes and chances of this
world, can alter. It will endure as long as the kingdom of God, His
sovereignty, His dominion and power will endure. It will manifest the signs of
God and His attributes, and will reveal his loving kindness and bounty.
(Gleanings of the Writings of Baha’u’llah, P 155-156)
“The nature of the soul
after death can never be described, nor is it meet and permissible to reveal
its whole character to the eyes of men. The Prophets and Messengers of God have
been sent down for the sole purpose of guiding mankind to the straight path of
truth. The purpose underlying their revelation hath been to educate all men,
that they may, at the hour of death, ascend, in the utmost purity and sanctity
and with absolute detachment, to the throne of the Most High. The light which
these souls radiate is responsible for the progress of the worlds and the
advancement of its peoples.” (Gleanings of the Writings of Baha’u’llah, P
156-157)
“Every soul that walketh
humbly with its God, in this day, and cleaveth unto Him, shall find itself
invested with the honour and glory of all goodly names and stations. (Gleanings
of the Writings of Baha’u’llah, P 159)
“As to the influence of Holy
Beings and the continuance of their grace to mankind after they have put away
their human form, this is, to Baha’is an indisputable fact. (Selection from the
writings of Abdu’l-Baha, Page 65)
It is unfortunate that when
the white people and missionaries came to Africa, they concluded that the
Africans were worshippers of ancestors. So they discouraged them and taught
them to concept of the trinity as the only means of knowing God. However, what
the Africans believe about the ancestors has not changed dramatically
especially among the rural population. Therefore, this concept can be used in
our teaching efforts.
In most African traditions
there is a belief that what causes an illness is an unbalance in the physical
and spiritual natures. The job of the healer in most cased with the assistance
of the ancestors is to cleanse the patient’s body and soul and restore his
natural balance. Sometimes the cause of the illness or misfortune may be
disobedience to God. This is also diagnosed and remedied by healers.
Herbs
and Treatment: The master healers use only natural ingredients in their medicines and
treatments. The possessed healer in Southern Africa may use a single plant or
combine it with roots, bark, leaves or other plants to prepare a treatment for
their patients. The treatments include powdered plants that are added to a
herbal tea. The patient often drinks the tea. Sometimes the powder is put into
a mixture for steaming. The patient would then place a blanket or clothe over
his head and breath deeply. This procedure helps the patient relax while the
steam opens and the herbs penetrate his skin. Sometimes they burn herbs and
barks and ask the patient to inhale the smoke while covered with a blanket.
Sometimes the ash is rubbed into an incision.
Another treatment
administered is wrapping the herb, then dipping it in water and squeezing the
drops gently into the eyes or nose. Herbal drinks to induce vomiting are
prescribed regularly, especially in a regiment to detoxify the patient’s
system. Other herbal teas are used in this type of cleansing procedure and act
as a diuretic.
The traditional healers use
herbal mixtures to treat endless numbers of disorders and diseases including
diarrhea, bladder infections, ulcers, headaches, high blood pressure, chronic
bronchitis, stomach ulcers and constipation, kidney problems, arthritis,
rheumatism, alcoholism. Drug addiction, and infertility – to name a few.
Here I would like to quote a
true story from a book written by Susan Campbell (Called to Heal). My purpose
in relating this story is to verify my earlier argument that illness and
misfortunes are caused by combination of causes. In most cases the traditional
healer uses herbal remedies, tries to understand the medical history of the
patient, uses his common sense and prescribes herbal remedies which are in
conformity with what the ancestors tell him to do. Here is the story as related
by the writer:
“I met with a healer, whose
specialty was “lucky charms”. I asked if this was a physical item that a person
wore on their neck. The healer laughed then explained how one’s “luck” was
changes.
A patient came to this
healer at her traditional clinic. He said he was unhappy with his current job.
He had been passed over repeatedly for promotions he thought he deserved. He
was having a run of “bad luck”. The healer decided to take the patient but told
him he must first return to his hob in the city and secure a week’s leave,
which he would spend at her clinic.
Returning to the clinic, the
patient was given a special diet. For the first three days he faced having only
herbal teas and juices. He tired easily and was allowed much rest and sleep.
Slowly the healer added mashed vegetables and fruit to his diet and by the end
of the week he was eating a diet of solid, nutritious foods. During the eating
regime, the healer asked the patient about his lifestyle and learned, to no
great surprise, that he was overeating, consuming fare too many fats and
sweets. She also learned that his urban lifestyle included no physical
exercise. After the third day of his new regime, he began to feel stronger and
wanted to walk. She encouraged him to take as many walks as he liked. The rural
area had many footpaths and was peaceful and quiet. Ready to return to work,
the patient wondered when he might expect his “luck” to change at work. The
healer asked him to continue with this simple diet and add some gentle walking
when he returned to the city.
A month later he came back
with an astonishing story. He had maintained his new balance diet and his
exercise. He noticed he was not as easily upset at work and was far more
relaxed at home with his family. As if that was not good enough, a new job
opportunity had just presented itself to him. It was a promotion from his old
job and the responsibilities better suited his strengths and interests. He
reported to he healer that indeed his luck had changed and her medicine had
been strong.
The healer explained “it was
not my medicine but the patient himself. He needed desperately to clean out his
system. The toxins were causing all kinds of disturbances for him. He was
irritable, not sleeping well. He could not see opportunities in front of him
until he cleared his thinking. My clinic gave him a place to rest and recover.
This is a difficult thing for my patients to understand. They usually believe
that it is my medicine or me that changes their luck. No, it is our own
ancestors who are waiting for us to welcome them. They are waiting to guide us
toward the right living. They are protecting us but the day we slow down, clean
our bodies, that is a happy day for the ancestors…”
There are several types of
healers. The most commonly used and known are traditional healers. These
primarily work with “trees” (roots, bark, and leaves) and other natural
substances, and enter the profession of their own accord. Other kinds of
healers are called ‘diviners’. Diviners have communication with the ancestors
and receive directions from them. The diviners diagnose the cause rather than
direct the specific cure and some rely on spirit possession for their insight.
Diviners are destined from birth or sanctioned by the powerful dead. Knowledge
of rituals and medicine are retained in certain families as an important part
of the inheritance. The owner imparts them to a favorite son, a younger
brother, or close kinsman who is ‘pushed by the heart to learn’, or, ‘receives
calling to heal’. The diviners also prescribe medicine that is mostly a
combination of herbs and roots. The ingredients of a medicine are frequently
chosen on the familiar principles of homeopathic cure.
The diviners are often
people of outstanding intelligence. They are the most powerful and respected of
specialists. In all situations requiring deep knowledge, people consult them
and seek the blessings of their ancestors through them.
An increasing number of
modern diviners ‘throw bones’, a technique associated with Sotho (Lesotho) and
Tonga (Mozambique) influence. The ‘bones’ may be the astragali of goats,
cowries shells found off the East coast, or oddly shaped seeds. The diviner,
pointing to the different pieces, interprets the combination of positions.
Exceptional divinatory devices include the ‘talking calabash’, a rattle that
shakes, of its own accord, and a magic wand.
There is a third type of
healer, or evildoer, who is known as a witch doctor. These are in constant
opposition to the first two types of healers and include witches and sorcerers.
They rely on poisons, conscious violence, and other techniques for the
deliberate destruction of property or people. Witchcraft however is not part of
the research of this paper. This short explanation is merely set out to avoid
confusion between healing and sorcery.
Various health and healing
practices in the African society hold similar grounds with teachings of the
Baha’i Faith.
“Resort ye, in times of
sickness, to competent physicians. We have not set aside the use of material
means, rather have we confirmed it through this Pen, which God hath made to be
the Dawning place of His shining and glorious Cause.” (The Kitab-I- Aqdas, para
113)
“know that there are four
kinds of curing and healing without medicine. Two are due to material causes,
and two to spiritual causes…” (Some Answered Questions. P 293-298)
“… by remedies and
treatments the equilibrium is re-established, the disease is banished…” (Some
Answered Questions. P 297)
“It is therefore evident
that it is possible to cure by foods, aliments, and fruits; but as today the
science of medicine is imperfect, this fact is not yet fully grasped. When the
science of medicine reaches perfection, treatment will be given by foods,
fragrant fruits, and vegetables, and by various waters, hot and cold in
temperature.” (Some Answered Questions. P 298)
The harmony of science and
religion (as it pertains to traditional beliefs and practices) must be
emphasized with regard to heath and healing. One should remember that although
healing is possible only through divine blessings, one should also refer to a
competent physician. This has been enjoined in the most Holy Book.
There is still a great deal
that the science of medicine will learn and much of it can be aquired from the
ways and medicines of the traditional healers. The fact remains established
that a combination of physical and spiritual remedies will produce expected
results and one alove may not suffice. More understanding of herbal medicines
and homeopathy can also enrich the physicians’ perspectives.
IV Family
Life and Patterns of Behavior – Social Stages from Birth to Death
According to Marwick (1940:
68-72) and Kuper (1963: 50-52), southern African people distinguish eight
periods of individual growth, birth to almost an ancestor. During the first
three months a baby is not given a name and is described as a ‘thing’. It may,
in this period, not be touched by a man and is not publicly mourned if it dies.
After three months the infant begins to develop as a person. After puberty a
boy reaches the stage of a young man. In this stage he must prove his worth to
society before being allowed to marry. As girls mature their main duty is to be
of services within the family environment and thereafter will marry after
puberty.
Marriage brings about a
significant change in status, with all the social, economic, political and
ritual privileges of full tribal membership associated with it. Man and woman
are highly respected and well cared for in old age. Many of the old is
particularly active in educating their children and grandchildren in the
observance of tribal traditions and ritual. Because of their knowledge and
experience their opinions are often sought.
It is considered to be lucky
to visit old people and to touch their forehead with one’s own. They are so
near to becoming de facto spirits,
that association with them seems to be paving the way to good relations between
the living and the dead. (Swazi Culture, J. S. Malam, University of North)
The basic social unit in the
African culture is the nuclear family, which consists of a man, his wife and
their children. As the building block of society it is the basis for the
formation of the family group, The lineage and the clan. Because of the rule of
clan exogamy the nuclear family is not an unlineal king group. The father and
children belong to the same clan, but the mother to another one. Various
extensions of the nuclear family are encountered as a result of polygamous
marriages and the institution of part-local residence.
In the African culture,
marriage is not regarded as a private affair between two individuals, but
rather as the establishment of a bond between two families. Marriage
negotiations are conducted between the jparents of the bride and the groom.
This includes agreement on the number of cattle or the cash equivalent of the
marriage goods (dowry).
‘lobola’ (dowry) is loosely
translated as ‘bride price’, but it is clear that a woman is not regarded as a
commodity by the people involved. On the contrary, she is a valued member of
the community, and her past status and future security are symbolized in the
transaction. By giving lobola, her children are made legitimate and become
entitled to the benefits of the father’s lineage; by accepting lobola, her
people are compensated for the loss of her services. The emotional ties and
ritual obligations towards her do not cease, and should she be ill –treated or
find herself and her children destitute, she may appeal to the recipients of
the cattle, who will be legally, as well as morally, obliged to assist her. The
husband does not acquire a beast, but a wife for himself and a mother for his
children, and he and his kin owe her definite obligations of support and
protection” (Kuper 1963: 23)
It is the homestead that the
familiar relationships 9husband and wife, parent and children, grandparents and
grandchildren, and, brothers and sisters) play out their roles in the domestic
sphere. Their behavior is patterned by mating and kinship system; these and not
any psychological quality account for the differences in the behavior patterns
prescribed for an African father or mother, and a father or mother in other
societies.
“The African classify kin
into a limited number of broad categories, embracing with a single term
relatives who, in more specialized and isolating societies are kept distinct.
Thus, the term ‘father’ is extended from one’s own father to his brothers, half
brothers, and sons of his father’s brothers. Similarly ‘mother’ embraces his
own mother, her sisters, her CO-wives, and wives of his father’s brothers. The
children to these ‘fathers and ‘mothers’ are his ‘brothers’ and ‘sisters’, and
their children are grouped in the same category as his own grandchildren. The
use of a common term does not mean that a particular key relationship is
unimportant. Indeed, within the category there are usually accurate
descriptions of degrees of closeness. “The fathers who bore me” is
distinguished from “my big father” (my father’s older brother) or “my little
father (father’s younger brother), but ones behavior towards all “fathers” is
molded on a single pattern.” (Ibid: P25)
We find many similarities in
the teachings of the Baha’i Faith about marriage and family life with the
African cultures and tradition. The fact that it is a necessary part of Baha’i
marriage to have the consent of all living parents is shared in both schools of
thoughts. We learn in the Baha’i writings that marriage should be the cause of
unity not only between the couple but their entire families. Like African
cultures, the Faith, we also believe that the purpose of marriage is to bring
forth children and train them to know and worship God and be of service to the
world of humanity.
Respect and loving care of
the elderly is emphasized in both cultures (African and Baha’i). Caring for the
old is regarded to such a degree that one of the edifices of the around the
Baha’i housed of worship must be a ‘home for the elderly’/ we are enjoined to
care for our parents in their old age and pay them due respect. The Guardian of
the Baha’i Faith, in response to a youth who wanted to go pioneering and had an
old father to look after, said that as important as pioneering is, it was more
important for the youth to remain home an serve his father. Baha’u’llah tells
us that after recognition of God and obedience to His commandments there are
two things that we must do in our life that are important; first is love,
service and obedience to one’s parents and the second is to have a radiant
countenance.
“As for the question
regarding marriage under the Law of God; first thou must choose one who is
pleasing to thee, and then the matter is subject to the consent of they father
and mother. Before thou makest thy choice, they have no right to interfere.” (Selection
from the writings of Abdu,l-Baha. P. 118)
“However, as you no doubt
know, Baha’u’llah has stated that the purpose of marriage is to promote unity,
so you should bear this in mind when dealing with your non-Baha’i relatives;
they cannot be expected to feel the way we do on questions of racial amity, and
we must not force our views on them, but rather lovingly and wisely seek to
educate them. (Family Life: P 411, Shogi Effendi)
Although there are
similarities between the African cultures and the teachings of the Baha’I
Faith, there still remain much within the African tradition that should be
changed. Removal of polygamy, establishment of full equality between men and
women, training and education of all children regardless of their sex or class,
re but a few.
The African concept of
regarding all clan as family and treating all relatives equally even if they
are not bound to you by blood, is admirable and something that we could learn
from. It is interesting that because of this system, until recently there were
no places known as orphanages in this region. The reason simply was that there
are no orphans. If your blood mother and father both die, you are still in the
same homestead receiving love and car from your ‘other mothers and fathers’ and
all other family whom live there with you.
I believe that the Baha’i
Faith can be adopted into the culture and as it is still in the period of
formation itself, can acquire a lot of good from the African Culture.
* This paper was originally
submitted as part of the Author’s MA studies at Landegg Academy in 1996