African Indigenous Religious Belief

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...of thought," it is also "experience, expression, motivations, intentions, behaviors, styles, and rhythms." Long, Charles H. Significations, Signs, Symbols and Images in the Interpretation of Religion. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1986, p. 7. As this suggests, by understanding how a particular people view religion, it also possible to gain a better comprehension of how they view the world in general and react to that world. While African belief was long regarded in the West as simply superstition, this attitude has been recognized as saying more about the ethnocentrism of nineteenth century missionaries and social scientists than about African faith. The following examination of African indigenous religious belief demonstrates that this framework, for the most part, has proven to be extremely adaptable for African peoples, providing them with a medium for staying connected with their past while preparing for the future.
Historical background
The scholarly study of African religions began roughly a century ago with the first comprehensive accounts of African belief systems, which were recorded...

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