Abstract

Human populations confront three distinct climate challenges: (1) seasonal climate fluctuations, (2) sporadic climate crises, and (3) long term climate change. Religious systems often attribute climate crises to the behavior of invisible spirits. They devise rituals to influence the spirits, and do so under the guidance of religious specialists. They devise two types of problem-solving rituals: anticipatory climate maintenance rituals, to request adequate rainfall in the forthcoming planting season, and climate crisis rituals for drought or inundations. The paper compares rainfall rituals in three different settings: Israel (Judaism), Northwest China (ethnic village religion), and Haiti (Vodou). Each author has done anthropological fieldwork in one or more of these settings. In terms of the guiding conceptual paradigm, the analysis applies three sequentially organized analytic operations common in anthropology: (1) detailed description of individual ethnographic systems; (2) comparison and contrast of specific elements in different systems; and (3) attempts at explanation of causal forces shaping similarities and differences. Judaism has paradoxically maintained obligatory daily prayers for rain in Israel during centuries when most Jews lived as urban minorities in the diaspora, before the founding of Israel in 1948. The Tu of Northwest China maintain separate ethnic temples for rainfall rituals not available in the Buddhist temples that all attend. The slave ancestors of Haiti, who incorporated West African rituals into Vodou, nonetheless excluded African rainfall rituals. We attribute this exclusion to slavery itself; slaves have little interest in performing rituals for the fertility of the fields of their masters. At the end of the paper, we identify the causal factors that propelled each systems into a climate-management trajectory different from that of the others. We conclude by identifying a common causal factor that exerts a power over religion in general and that has specifically influenced the climate responses of all three religious systems.

Highlights

  • Human populations through the ages have been confronted by three distinct meteorological challenges: (a) seasonal climate fluctuations, (b) sporadic climate crises, and (c) long term climate change

  • If the evolution of rainfall rituals in a society is causally linked to the level of rainfall insecurity, we would have expected Haitian farmers to incorporate into their religious systems an even greater emphasis on rainfall rituals than what we have shown for Israel or China

  • The rainfall rituals that we saw in Judaism and in the ethnic religion of Northwest China are absent from the otherwise rich ritual repertoire of Haitian Vodou

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Summary

Introduction

Human populations through the ages have been confronted by three distinct meteorological challenges: (a) seasonal climate fluctuations, (b) sporadic climate crises (such as droughts, inundations, hurricanes), and (c) long term climate change. There are climate crisis rituals that spring into action when the skies (and/or the spirits) are misbehaving, either by withholding rain or by sending catastrophic deluges or hurricanes In these pages we will be exploring the involvement of three distinct religious systems in climate issues. One would have predicted the disappearance of the rain rituals long ago Another system places rainfall under the control of particular animal spirits that in the western world are considered to be demon-driven enemies of the human species. Murray spent several months on the Gaza strip in a religious agrarian Israeli moshav shortly before it was demolished by the Israeli government He has participated in hundreds of synagogue rituals in the U.S and other countries and has taught courses in the Anthropology of Judaism. We will see that the exercise of State power has affected all three systems

Israel
Rabbinic Judaism and Its Predecessors
Rainfall Ritual in Judaism
Crisis Measures
Background to the Tu
Rainfall and Religion in China
Rain Rituals among the Tu
Haiti’s Climate Dilemma
The Spirit World of Haitian Vodou
The God of Haitian Vodou
The Ritual Gap
Exploration of Causal Factors
China: Modern Medicine and State-Supported Tourism
Haiti: The Impact of Slavery and Stratified Theological Syncretism
The Impact of State Power on the Evolution of Religion
Findings
Cautions about Causality
Full Text
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