TRICKSTER AT THE CROSSROADS By
Erik Davis
Legba: "wise/protector"/"road
opener", and
"trickster." It was the latter image that Christian missonaries
associated
with their Satan. But they are not similar or related.
West Africa's God
of Messages, Sex, and Deceit
When we think
of tricksters,
we generally imagine folk characters and culture heroes, not gods.
Tricksters
either tend to be associated with animal spirits (such as Coyote), or
are
Promethean figures, archetypal "humans" who interact with and upset the
world of the gods. But one of the world's greatest and most interesting
trickster figures is not only a god, but a god of high metaphysical
content.
He is Eshu-Elegbara, one of the orisha, the West African deities that
are
worshiped in many related forms across African and the African diaspora
in the New World.
While he
embodies many
obvious trickster elements-- deceit, humor, lawlessness,
sexuality--Eshu-Elegbara
is also the god of communication and spiritual language. He is the
gatekeeper
between the realms of man and gods, the tangled lines of force that
make
up the cosmic interface, and his sign is the crossroads. In the figure
of Eshu-Elegbara, the West African tradition makes a profound argument
about the relationship among spiritual communication, divination, and
the
peculiar chaotic qualities of the trickster. But before we investigate
Eshu-Elegbara's character, we must first place him in the general
context
of orisha worship.
Meet the
Living Gods.
The orisha,
the gods of
the Fon and Yoruba peoples of West Africa, are some of the most vital
and
intriguing beings ever to pass through the minds of men and women. The
orisha are profoundly "living" gods, if by this we means archetypes, or
constellations of images and forces, that actively permeate the psychic
lives of living humans. On the simplest level they are alive because
they
are worshiped: orisha are prayed to, invoked, and ritually "fed" by
many
millions of people in both Africa and the Americas. Not only are the
gods
alive, but they are long-lived; unlike contemporary Neo-Pagan deities,
which have basically been reconstructed from the inquisitional ashes of
history, the orisha have been passed through countless generations of
worshipers
with little interruption.
More
profoundly, the very
nature of the orisha is to be alive in the most fundamental sense we
know
-- though our own human lives. Though they possess godlike powers, the
orisha are not transcendent beings, but are immanent in this life,
bound
up with ritual, practice, and human community. They are accessible to
people,
combining elements of both mythological characters and ancestral
ghosts.
Like both of these groups of entities, the orisha are composed of
immaterial
but idiosyncratic personalities that eat, drink, lie, and sleep with
each
other's mates. Though West African tradition does posit a central
creator
god, he/she is generally quite distant, and the orisha are, like us,
left
in a world they did not create, a world of nature and culture, of sex,
war, rivers, thunder, magic, and divination. The orisha are regularly
"fed"
with animal blood, food, and gifts, and during rituals the gods
frequently
possess the bodies of the faithful. Their behavior draws from the full
range of human experience, including sexuality, mockery, and
intoxication.
That the
orisha remain
outside the scope of many Western students of esotericism and even
polytheism
is understandable, given the historical domination of Africans by the
Europeans
of the New World. Black Americans were forced to hide their deities or
dress them up in Catholic garb, while whites cut themselves off from
all
but the most superficial appreciations of those African cultural values
that managed to survive. To even graze the heart of the orisha, white
Westerners
must overcome two obstacles: the storehouse of Hollywood's cartoon
representations
we carry in our subconscious, and the more pernicious underlying
Western
prejudices against traditional African worship, which run the gamut
from
the denigration of blood sacrifice to the absurd notion that polyrhythm
is somehow less sophisticated and more primitive than European musical
forms.
But why
bother? As one
esotericist I spoke to put it, "Why be interested in these grotesque
and
parasitic deities?" One could answer that these gods are fascinating,
vibrant,
and unique, and serve as a window onto the spirit and culture of Africa
and the black traditions that have had a major influence on New World
culture.
More to the point, however, they are not grotesque but rich in
character;
they are not parasites, but entities deeply and reciprocally bound up
with
the daily lives of their worshipers. When we look on West Africa, we
must
keep in mind that our "instinctive" sense that these alien practices
are
primitive, savage, and even demonic is the lingering afterimage of
thoroughly
European and colonialist images of tribal Others dancing in the hot
jungles
of sexuality, atavism, and perversion. Looking toward Africa, the first
thing the West encounters is its own dark mirror
The fact that
people tend
to simplify images of pre-colonialist Africa -- for example, imagining
simple villages where there were vast, cosmopolitan city-states replete
with bureaucrats, poets, and sewer systems -- is only one indication of
the lingering tendency to see Africa as the repository of the
primitive.
Even when looking seriously at West African spiritual traditions, white
Westerners run into two potential traps: the error of seeing such
systems
as purely traditional and not historically dynamic; and the temptation
to idealize tribal peoples and project onto them some prelapsarian
harmony
with Nature, a condescending and overly romantic error rampant, for
example,
in the New Age embrace of Native American spirituality.
Because the
West is such
a text-oriented culture, there is an understandable tendency to equate
civilization with the technology of writing, and the sort of reflective
interior consciousness that that particular machine apparently
constructs
in human beings. West Africa did not possess writing as we now it, and
the orisha disclose themselves not in books but in shrine, ritual, and
memory. For today's text-oriented seeker, there are no great Yoruba
books
to commune with, no Gita or Genesis. Though the Yoruba system of
divination,
Ifa, compares to the I Ching in terms of complexity, strucutre, and
poetic
sublimity, few know about it outside the tradition, partly for the
simple
reason that the "writing" of Ifa is carried in the heads of the
diviners,
the babalawo. (A complete edition of the Ifa has recently been
published
by Harper SanFrancisco).
But the images
of West
African spirituality that come most immediately to mind in Western
culture
are images of ritual possession. Though many esotericists have a
sympathy
for invocation and strong ritual, the performance of West African
possession
remains bracing, far different from the bloodless, "spiritualized"
rituals
of monotheisms, or from the almost literary rituals of modern,
reconstructed
Neo-Paganism. Possession by the orisha is a visceral fact. To the
intensely
exciting yet coolly controlled beating of drums, the possessed person
(usually
a dancer; in Haitian parlance, the "horse" who is to be "ridden")
shakes,
falls on the ground, rolls his or her eyes, perhaps froths at the
mouth,
and speaks in different voices. The particular orisha is recognized by
his or her mannerisms, is costumed appropriately in ritual rooms, and
proceeds
to prophesy, dance, ask for food or booze, and if it's Eshu, may start
pawing the ladies. I have attended Haitian voudun rituals, but even
from
photographs and film it is clear from the eyes of the possessed person
that a qualitatively different order of consciousness and personality
has
momentarily annexed the everyday persona, which invariably recalls
almost
nothing of the experience.
In its
rituals, the West
African tradition has learned to plug people directly into the realm of
archetypes, archetypes which are strengthened by interfacing with the
"lower"
traits of ordinary human personalities. One clue to the nature of this
interchange lies in the fact that possession often seems to be
triggered
by the master drummer playing particular patterns within the complex
web
of polyrhythmic drumming. Haitians calls these jarring, rhythmically
"dissonant"
patterns cassés (or "breaks," a phrase used in a similar musical
sense in today's hip-hop culture). Possession may result from the
cognitive
dissonance of the cassé, the alien beat that enters from another
plane and shakes up up the rhythms of the everyday. In any case,
possession
is a magnificently strange act, a radically immanent embracing of
spiritual
being that is both magical (a worldly invocation of spirits) and
religious
(as a selfless release to godhead). Possession by the orisha
concretizes
spirit and ties it to the cycle of ancestors and blood and the rhythms
of sex and family.
So too is
blood sacrifice,
the "feeding" of the orisha, an acute acknowledgement of the material
dimension
of spirit, of the fact that it is humans, not gods, that keep gods
alive,
and that our being is bound up with the excesses of mutual contract and
exchange. Molly Ahye, an important scholar of Trinidadian dance as well
as an orisha worshiper, speaks about how one "must have the blood,
which
is a life force, which spirit lives on. You think that spirit doesn't
need
sustenance, but spirit needs sustenance" (Ahye admitted, however, that
she did not kill animals herself).
Even if we
cannot accept
possession or animal sacrifice, we err in seeing the orisha as being
merely
superstitious products of animism, or as folk heroes elevated to the
level
of gods. The orisha are highly evolved archetypal patterns, and they
work
out metaphysical problems in the heart of life. They form a network, a
living and evolving system of forms and forces that from certain angles
resonates deeply with the perennial philosophy of the West.
And at the
interstices
of this network is the Yoruba deity Eshu-Elegbara (or Eshu for short),
perhaps the world's most sophisticated Trickster figure (a very similar
figure, Legba, exists among the Fon in neighboring Benin). More than a
well-hung culture hero (though he's that too), Eshu is a divine
mediator
of fate and information, a linguist, a crafty metaphysician. Eshu is a
trickster not just because he fools people and creates chaos, but more
profoundly because he's always escaping the codes of the he
simultaneously
reinforces. He gives the world the divination system of Ifa, but does
not
rule over its poetic prophecies, because he is always flowing through
the
cracks of fate. Eshu fully embodies the sophisticated metaphysics of
West
Africa, a metaphysics of change and communication, of the copulation
between
being and world, of the complex power of the crossroads. Eshu expresses
a spiritual principle of connection, and the chaos and trickiness of
exchange.
That he is a god, with stories and moods and lusts, only shows that in
the West African tradition, spiritual principles are most real when
they're
brought
into the fabric of daily life, of the recognizably human patterns of
money,
family, sex, power, and language
The Hermetic
Linguist
Of all
European pagan
deities, Hermes is the one most closely aligned with Eshu. Like Hermes,
Eshu is the divine messenger, and relays information between the gods
and
between humans and the gods. A small, very dark man, he walks with a
large
staff, and is often sucking on a pipe, candies, or his fingers. He the
"roadmaker;" he "sets the affairs of the earth in order,...is so swift
that he can be the messenger for many,...[and] can circle the earth in
an instant." Eshu's caprice, quickness, and agility of body and mind
are
all characteristics he shares with Hermes, perhaps reflecting the
perennial
spiritual characteristics of communication.
Because Eshu
is the messenger,
in orisha rituals (today performed from Nigeria to Rio to Montreal) one
must "feed" or call him first, before any other gods are invoked. For
the
Fon people, the primacy of Eshu (whom they call Legba) comes about
through
his linguistic ability, his proficiency at communicating. In the
beginning,
Mawu, the female aspect of Mawu-Lisa, the androgynous high god of the
Fon,
gives her seven children different realms to rule--earth, sea,
animals--and
gives them a language separate from her own. But she allows Legba, her
youngest and most spoiled child, to remain with her and to act as a
relayer
of information to her children.
So Legba knows
all the
languages known to his brothers, and he knows the language Mawu speaks,
too. Legba is Mawu's linguist. If one of the brothers wishes to speak,
he must give the message to Legba, for none knows any longer how to
address
himself to Mawu-Lisa. That is why Legba is everywhere.
As the hermetic
linguist,
then, Legba knows the cosmic language as well as the earthly language.
This is why humans must ritually acknowledge him before any other god.
In our monotheisms, God's information is distant, except for the
occasional
prophet, and the rest of us are lost in babble and books. But Legba is
always traversing that region of babble, and embodies the hope and the
peril of a more open channel: hope, because he allows us to speak with
the gods and for them to speak with us; and peril, because he tends to
play tricks with the information he has, to keep us perpetually aware
that
he oversees the network of exchange. His nickname is Aflakete, which
means
"I have tricked you."
In many tales,
Legba both
causes and solves a power play among the orisha, and he does so by
conveying
information. In one, Sagbata, the lord of earth, and Hevioso, the lord
of sky, are perpetually besting one another, though Hevioso is
generally
agreed to be superior. Legba lies and tells Mawu that there is no water
in the sky, which allows Hevioso to cut off the rain, causing a
horrible
draught. Then Legba goes to Sagbata and tells him to build a huge fire
on earth, which he does. Mawu becomes afraid that the flames will burn
even heaven, and she orders Hevioso to make it rain, reducing his
prominence
and tentatively reconciling the brothers. Among the tales of the Yoruba
gods, Eshu similarly propels the narratives of jealousy and power by
occupying
certain privileged places where he gives ideas and information--not the
whole story, but just enough to make the story happen. At one point,
Shango
the thunder god asks him, "Why don't you speak straightforwardly?" "I
never
do," Eshu responds. "I like to make people think."
Perhaps the
most famous
Yoruba story about Eshu concerns two inseparable friends who swore
undying
fidelity to one another but neglect to acknowledge Eshu. These two
friends
work on adjacent fields. One day Eshu walks on the dividing line
between
their fields, wearing a cap that is black on one side and red (or
white)
on the other. He saunters between the fields, exchanging pleasantries
with
both men. Afterwards, the two friends got to talking about the man with
the cap, and fall to violent quarreling about the color of the man's
hat,
calling each other blind and crazy. The neighbors gather about, and
then
Eshu arrives and stops the fight. The friends explain their
disagreement,
an Eshu shows them the two-sided hat--all this to chastise the friends
for not putting him first in their doings. The lesson of the tale is
obvious,
but just as interesting is where it places the god. Moving along the
seam
between two different worldviews, he confuses communication, reveals
the
ambiguity of knowledge, and plays with perspective.
So Eshu is a
master of
exchange, or crossed purposes, of crossed speech. This is why his
shrines
are found both at crossroads and at the market, for he is master of
such
networks of desire. For example, he uses his magician's knowledge to
make
serpents that bite people on the way to the market, and then sells them
the cure.
The Fon have a
wonderful
way of imagining Legba's mastery of crossings. Mawu tells the gods that
whoever can come before her and simultaneously play a gong, a bell, a
drum,
and a flute while dancing to their music would be chief of the gods.
All
the macho gods attempt and fail, but Legba succeeds, not just
demonstrating
his agility, but his ability to maintain a balance of crossed or
contrary
forms and forces (and incidentally providing a window into the unique
genius
of African music and rhythm). Legba dances not only to the beat of a
different
drummer, but to the beats of many different drummers at the same time.
As Robert
Pelton writes
in his excellent book, The Trickster in West Africa (the source of many
of these tales), the Fon are "dazzled by [Legba's] metaphysically fancy
footwork because they know that the pathways of new order that he opens
always skirt the edges of chaos."The creator of plots, the player of
many
instruments, the trickster Legba always risks unleashing a Pandora's
box
of powers. But it is only in risking such chaos that novelty is
continually
reborn, and the community is imagined to interact dynamically, rather
than
by some rigid structure. The potential for dynamic chaos is the
metaphysical
heart of the Trickster. There is a Yoruba prayer that goes:
Eshu, do not
undo me,
Do not falsify
the words
of my mouth
Do not misguide
the movements
of my feet.
You who translate
yesterday's
words
Into novel
utterances,
Do not undo me.
Eshu can
transform the
past into "novel utterances" because he knows that the power of
ambiguity
and the multiplicity of perspectives can change the fixed into the
free.
New connections always create a new world, and Eshu/Legba puts creative
chaos in the heart of tradition and shows what advantages can be taken
of it. As Pelton states, this god "finds in all biological, social, and
metaphysical walls doorways into a larger universe."
Of all the
lines that
Legba transgresses, the most visible ones are sexual. He is young,
small,
and spry, and has a ravishing sexual appetite. When Mawu punishes him
for
some transgression by commanding that his penis remain always erect, he
smiles and immediately begins groping the nearest female. In another
episode,
after tricking many suitors out of deflowering the daughter of a king,
he has sex with the woman himself. The happy king commands that Legba
may
sleep with any woman he chooses, and names him "the intermediary
between
this world and the next. And that is why Legba everywhere dances in the
manner of a man copulating." His priests, the legbanos , even mimic
copulation
with wooden phalluses.
Since the Fon
insist on
the primacy of humanity in all its aspects, we err in seeing in Legba's
more human behavior the limits of his divinity. For sexuality expresses
the trickster's need to always go beyond boundaries: new order is
always
created out of the partial collapse of a previous structure. More
profoundly,
copulation is the most fully experienced of connections, Legba's pet
project
everywhere. These two functions are deeply related, and Legba puts sex
in the heart of spirituality, not as transcendent tantra, but as the
more
immanent principle of connection. Of course, Legba's sexual appetite
causes
just as much trouble as his propensity to tinker with data, as in the
following:
We are singing
for the
sake of Eshu
He used his penis
to
make a bridge
Penis broke in
two!
Travellers fell
into
the river.
Eshu makes us
recognize
the fundamental relation between sex and the evolving, continually
reconnecting
cosmos. As Pelton writes, "He is the living copula, and his phallus
symbolizes
the real distinction between outside and inside, and the wild and the
ordered."
Garbling the
Book of Fate
The Legba of
the Fon cannot
be correlated exactly with the Eshu of the Yoruba. For the Yoruba, Eshu
can be a nastier, more malevolent being, though he still delights in
contradictions,
and, to a lesser extent, sex. Where there is confusion or arguments, he
is there. The violence and lawlessness of Eshu's desire is demonstrated
in an a tale related by Robert Farris Thompson about Eshu-Yangi, the
father
of all Eshu. (Like most orisha, Eshu exists in a countless multiplicity
of individual aspects.) Eshu's mother offers him a bounty of fish and
fowl,
and Eshu eats it all, and, not sated, eats his mother as well. But
Eshu's
father -- in this tale Orunmila, the god of divination -- is ready for
his hungry son when he came for papa with slavering jaws agape.
Orunmila
hacks Eshu into little bits, which fall all over the earth, becoming
individual
shards of laterite stone. Orunmila catches the remaining spirit of
Eshu,
and to placate his father, Eshu promises that all the stones will
become
Eshu's representatives. All Orunmila has to do is bless the stones, and
they will do his mystic bidding. Eshu then coughs up his mother.
this tale of
cosmic give-and-take,
reminiscent of the ancient Gnostic notion of the "shards" or "sparks"
separated
from the deity, Eshu demonstrates both his generosity and his caprice.
For the Yoruba, Eshu is the god who has access to ashé
(literally
meaning "so be it"), the immanent (but morally neutral) power of
creation
which the supreme being gives to the earth, and which can be possessed
by some people.
Eshu receives
ashé
when all the gods journey to the supreme god to find out who is the
next
most powerful. Each brings a huge sacrifice, carrying it on his or her
head. But Eshu consults the oracle before he goes, and finds that all
he
needs to bring is a bright red feather set upright on his forehead.
When
the supreme being sees this he grants Eshu the power of ashé,
because
Eshu had shown his unwillingness to carry burdens, as well as his
sensitivity
to the power of information. (To this day, Eshu figurines often have a
large phallic plume or nail on the head.) As Thompson says, Eshu shows
us that one must "cultivate the art of recognizing significant
communications...or
else the lessons of the crossroads--the point where doors open or
close,
where persons have to make decisions that may forever effect their
lives--will
be lost."
Of course,
these moments
of crisis, of significant communication, are oracular moments, and it
is
appropriate that Eshu has a subtle and complex relationship with the
Yoruba
(and, subsequently, Fon) system of divination, Ifa. The process of the
divination itself is eerily similar to that of the I Ching: The
babalawo,
or diviner, quickly passes sixteen palm nuts between his hands, and
depending
on how many are left, he draws either a broken or solid line in powder.
He (and the babalawo is always a he) draws two groups of four lines
each
to create one of 256 possible patterns. He then recites from memory the
numerous verses associated with that odu, and he and his client will
settle
on those verses which seem relevant. (Like the hexagrams of the I
Ching,
the verses are often ambiguous and enigmatic.)
Because Eshu
is the ties
between cosmic pattern and daily life, it is obvious why he would be
associated
with divination. Like the kabbalistic Tree of Life, Ifa is described as
having "roads," "pathways," or "courses," resonant linkages of images
and
meanings -- obviously Eshu's bag. For the Fon, whose system of Fa
divination
is very similar to the Yoruba's Ifa, Fa is destiny, the pattern of the
day, the individual and the cosmos. Each person has an individual Fa,
just
as each person has an individual Legba. Because Legba is the only god
who
knows the "alphabet of Mawu," he is "sent by Mawu to bring to each
individual
his Fa, for it is necessary that a man should know the writing which
Mawu
has used to create him."
Sometime
before Ifa existed,
a Yoruba myth goes, a declining human race had stopped sacrificing to
their
gods, and the gods were hungry. So Eshu decided to give humans
something
that would make them want to live. He journeyed to a palm tree, and
there
the monkeys gave him sixteen palm nuts and told him to go around the
world
so that he might hear "sixteen saying in each of the sixteen places."
He
did so, and then gave the knowledge to men through Ifa, the "sixteen
places"
being the sixteen primary odu and the sixteen palm nuts. This myth
again
demonstrate the reciprocal relationship between man and gods; it is
said
that without Eshu, the gods would always go hungry, for he tricks men
into
disastrous defiance so that they will then need to sacrifice to win
back
the gods' favor. But it also emphasizes Eshu's character as a mediator
and a speedy messenger, who places himself between different
perspectives
and collects messages.
Legba's
relationship with
Fa, and Eshu's with Ifa, shows an extremely subtle and lively
understanding
of divination and destiny. Eshu gives the world Ifa, and on the
babalawo
's divining tray, twin Eshu statues stare out at each other (again,
like
Hermes, Eshu is linked to twins). But he is not Ifa's master. In one
Fon
tale, Fa, the god of divination and fate, sneaks into Legba's home and
sleeps with his wife. Legba asks her why and she says that his penis
wasn't
big enough for her. Challenged, Legba eats an enormous amount of food
and
swears to have sex with her until she tires, all the while calling out
"the path of destiny is large, large like a large penis."Legba then
made
Fa stay in the house, while Legba takes his wife and hits the road,
vowing
that he will always be first, and will always be ready to fuck.
As Pelton
writes, "Fa
keeps a certain dominion over destiny, or inner space, but Legba's
elasticity
gives him mastery over destiny's paths...Legba can roam as he chooses,
going in and out to bring men to their destiny, but never ceasing to
widen
the path for them."By knowing the whole system, Eshu can escape,
slipping
through the cracks of fate. Eshu's Ifa odu is the seventeenth, the
first
one outside the system.
Why is
Eshu/Legba linked
to divination? Because, paradoxically, freedom is tied to divination,
if
only for the simple fact that oracles must always be interpreted, its
messages
decoded. As Eshu makes abundantly clear, such decodings are always
ambiguous
and partial. The literary critic Henry Louis Gates, Jr., whose
Signifying
Monkey uses Eshu to establish a model of African-American textual
analysis,
says that at the crossroads "there is no direct access, or contact,
with
truth or meaning, because Eshu governs understanding." And Eshu is a
tricky
governor, whose pathways of information are always surrounded by the
mud
of ambiguity.
New Wordly
Wisdom
When the
orisha were smuggled
to the New World on slave ships, they changed their character as the
concrete
situations of their followers changed. Mixed together, cut off from
traditional
structures, surrounded by Christianity and the whip, New World Africans
now had different spiritual needs. The world's most vibrant form of
syncretism
emerged, where Catholic saints and the orisha blended into one another,
and the worldly wisdom of West Africa continued disguised in song,
drum,
and celebration. Eshu himself went through many changes, and while
different
geographical groups of African descendents took him in opposite
directions,
all of his varied faces nonetheless further extend his peculiar
multivalent
being.
In Brazil,
Exu--as his
name is written in Portuguese--become a darker being. In condomble,
Brazilian
orisha
Eshu's
emphasis on trickery
and vengeance made him an ideal orisha for slaves, who imagined him as
the saint of revenge against the whites. Under these conditions, his
more
malevolent aspects were emphasized, as his various aspects were
multiplied
to cover a range of nasty magical acts. In umbanda, the urban, highly
eclectic
revision of condomble that relies heavily on nineteenth-century
spiritualism,
Exu quite simply becomes the devil.
In Haiti,
where the orisha
are known as the loa and the practice is known as voudun, Legba went
through
other drastic changes. He is still lord of the crossroads, the grand
chemin,
whose channel between earth and the gods is contained in the ritual
house's
peristyle, or poteau-Legba. The crossroads is seen in Legba's
vévé
(a complex cosmic diagram drawn with white flour that represents the
loa).
But in Haiti Legba has become an old, withered peasant, bent and
crippled
on his cane. In her superb Divine Horsemen, the American avant-garde
filmmaker
Maya Deren tells how terrible and twisted the possessions performed by
Legba are. In Haiti Deren describes a Legba who comes full circle, like
the answer to the riddle of the sphinx, no longer the virile child of
the
morning but the impotent old man of evening. He is still the omniscient
observer--as one Haitian told Deren, "We do no see him, he sees us. All
those who say the truth, he is there, he hears. All those who speak
evil,
He is there, he listens."[19] But his omniscience has become the
knowledge
of death.
As with
Brazil, the Haitian
Legba is known for his magic. One prayer goes "Sondé miroir, O
Legba,"
which means literally "fathom the mirror" and figuratively "uncover the
secrets."[20] As with most Haitian loa, Legba has two main aspects: a
Rada
and a Petro, the Petro being darker and more frightening. Legba's Petro
aspect is called Carrefour, the crossroads, and he is lord of black
magic,
linked to Ghédé and Baron Samedi, the fearsome baddies of
death and the grave. Legba's sacrifice is a white cock whose neck is
twisted;
Carrefour gets a black cock who is set on fire and allowed to run
around
in agony. While Legba's vévé emphasizes the four distinct
cardinal points of the metaphysical axis, Carrefour's emphasizes all
the
wayward points in between. But Carrefour's magic is for man to use, to
ward of demons or run the risks of invoking and using them. Wisely, the
West African tradition puts the onus on man, not some transcendent
deity;
as Deren points out, it is man who makes magic, not the loa.
In Haiti and
Cuba, Legba
is not the devil, but is syncretized with other saints, particularly
St.
Anthony, St. Lazarus (who is old and walks with a cane), and, sometimes
St. Peter, the gate-keeper. Again, these correspondences are not fixed
in stone, but seem to mutate as the context of the world changes. This
ability to adapt shows the deeply pragmatic wisdom of orisha worship,
for,
as esotericists know, all great magicians are revisionists, not
classicists.
But for all his different aspects, forms, and Christian names, some
followers
of the orisha insist on the central unity of the Trickster figure.
Molly
Ahye insists there is no difference between Haiti's Legba and the
Trinidadian/Brazilian
Eshu:
Eshu is Legba,
Eshu-Elegbara.
Legba is a contraction. Eshu is the connection, the spiritual
connection
between man and divinity....Eshu is a mirror of us. He embodies all the
forces, positive and negative. Eshu is the one who guards the secrets.
He has the power to manipulate man or to free man, because there is so
much of man in him. You are linked to him by your humanness and he
plays
on that. And you are linked to him by your divine spirit and he tests
that...How
do you know you're good and righteous if you haven't passed through the
fire? What is the force that will test you through that fire? Even is
that
thing has to bear your weight--infamous, evil, whatever--that is the
thing
that gives you the opportunity to test yourself. That is what Eshu does.
A Little Legba
in Us All
As is probably
apparent,
I feel that in Eshu/Legba we meet one of the world's most impressive
gods.
His lawlessness and tricks not only keep us on our toes, but point us
towards
the most creative components of destiny, the free zones of fate. In
him,
the Trickster becomes a kind of metaphysical principle. While never
losing
touch with the ground, he wanders perpetually, in search of information
or sex. For Pelton, Legba embodies Jung's synchronicity, and for Henry
Louis Gates, he is the Logos. But Eshu is also the being of the
network,
of the immanent language of connection.
The orisha are
not frozen,
static patterns of tradition, nor do they exhibit the more reactionary
tendencies found in overly transcendent, patriarchal models of spirit.
As a result, these "living" gods are able to continually come to terms
with the world as it is for people now. The character of Papa La Bas in
Ishmael Reed's Mumbo Jumbo is no less real a Legba than the ones in
anthropology
books, or the one Robert Johnson met and sang about in Mississippi. In
his book Count Zero , science fiction writer William Gibson put the
orisha
in the heart of cyberspace, his computer-generated astral data plane,
and
it worked far better than any hoary Egyptian deity or Irish fairy would
have. Gibson, who tossed in those gods when he was bored with his book
and happened to open a National Geographic article on voodoo, told me
in
an interview that he felt "real lucky, because it seemed to me that the
original African religious impulse really lends itself much more to a
computer
world than anything in Western religion...It almost seems as though
those
religions are dealing with artificial intelligence.". Gibson also
pointed
out how similar vévés are to printed circuits.
While Gibson
was talking
about fiction, what he's saying demonstrates the contemporary appeal of
the orisha to folks who may not willing to kill cock with their bare
hands.
And of all the orisha, Eshu hints at the most profound, and relevant,
connections:
between networks and truth, magic and perspective, messages and sex. Of
all the orisha, he is the one that speaks most to non-devotees, because
he is about the very process that we go through in order to hear him:
the
process of communication.
(by: Erik
Davis: originally
appeared in Gnosis, Spring 1991)
You can contact
Erik
Davis by e-mail: figment@sirius.com
or check out his essays, articles
and
whatnot @ http://www.levity.com/figment/
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