Religious Mythology in African Traditional Thought Systems
Religious Mythology in African Traditional Thought Systems
Religious Mythology in African Traditional Thought Systems
Abstract:
What explanation can we give for the seeming struggle between good and evil?
Why does the chameleon change its colour and walk as it does? The answers are
naturally clothed in stories which serve as necessary tools for preservation and
subsequent handover from one generation to the next. Hence the collection of
myths, stories, images and legends symbolizes the mythological aspect of religion
because it is through them that the supersensible world is represented. The African
has the important role of utilizing any modern means available, to preserve and
transmit these rich cultural traits to generations yet unborn. African myths deal
with organization of the universe in relation to man’s existence, life and destiny.
This article is an attempt to present the African traditional thought systems as
reservoirs for understanding African human reality as a whole and
our connection with the Supreme Being.
**
Preliminary Remarks:
The task of philosophy is not to overlook the views held by the common man on the grounds that
such views might be unreflective. Philosophical investigations and reflections are supposed to
discover and unveil the inherent difficulties in the common sense view, redefine, refine and
1
Fr. Victor C. Yakubu is priest of the Catholic Diocese of Zaria, Nigeria. He can be reached on
viccheny@chendekemen.com. This article was first presented as a Presidential Paper 1993/1994 to the members of
the Philosophical Society of St. Augustine’s Major Seminary Jos, Plateau State – Nigeria. Special thanks to late Sr.
Sharon Dei, SSND [Baltimore] who edited the paper and made some useful suggestions. May her soul rest in peace,
amen! The paper is published in the internet by the author for wider use. It can be cited in any work provided the
source is acknowledged.
1 Mythology in Africa
remodel these thoughts. 2 When the Ashanti says, “No man’s path crosses another’s”, the
philosopher should understand this as saying that everyone has a direct path to the Supreme
Being. When he says, “No one shows a child the sky”, he means that the sky above is the abode
of the Supreme Being so much so that a child needs no one to inform him. 3 In the light of these,
the philosopher is concerned with thoughts and ideas which enlarge the scope of his own
thinking. The world is what it is today because ideas developed in various philosophies and
cultures. Therefore, it is a sine qua non for the philosopher to discover new material about
African thought systems within the capability of his philosophical reasoning.
Recent study by African scholars has unearthed new materials about African thought systems
initially misconceived by European travellers and sit-at-home scholars. This alone is a
development and the philosopher, am sure, will learn more from African thought patterns
because “a people’s religion or worldview should better be interpreted as the people themselves
would explain or interpret it.” 4 African scholars inadvertently have a most challenging task of
undertaking a prolonged research in areas of religious beliefs, cosmological theories, moral
ideas, social organization, social values and philosophy. What do we mean by African thought
systems? We mean the process of thinking and the content of that thinking as expressed in ideas,
beliefs or body of knowledge. Bourdieu reminds us that, “every individual unconsciously brings
to bear general tendencies. .. and patterns of thought which organize reality by directing and
organizing thinking about reality and make what he thinks thinkable for him as such and the
particular form in which it is thought.” 5
In order words, these thought patterns are culturally oriented and directed. Professor John S.
Mbiti has summarized the religious zeal of the African when he said that for the African, “it is
religion, more than anything which colours their understanding of the universe and their
empirical participation in that universe.” 6 This is quite true of the African behavioural patterns
2
Ola Adeyinka, “A Critique of the Empiricists’ and Rationalists’ Theories of Knowledge”, [M. A. Thesis
University of Lagos, 1918, p. 58.]
3
Daryll Forde, [ed.] African Worlds. [London: Oxford University Press, 1970], p. 192.
4
E. A. Ade Adegbola, “History of Thought” in John B. Taylor, ed., Primal World Views, [Ibadan: Daystar Press,
1096], p. 68.
5
Otonti Nduka, “African Traditional Systems of Thoughts and Their Implications for Nigeria’s Education”, Social
Order, 3[January 1974]1, p. 96.
6
John S. Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy. [London: Heinemann, 1969], p. 262.
2 Mythology in Africa
as confirmed by Professor E. Bolaji Idowu. He said that to remove religion from the African
would be like disembowelling him. 7 The Ashanti believe that “the universe is full of spirits,” 8
while the Yoruba society has nearly two thousand divinities [orisa]. 9
Robin Horton has also provided useful works on further understanding of African thought
systems. According to him there is a need for Western philosophical dialogue with African
thoughts. He argues that philosophical concepts can deepen our understanding of African
cosmogonies if we accept them as systems of “explanations, prediction and control” based on
“theoretical models.” A major factor of Horton is his insistence that there is a similarity between
African cosmology and science such that “African religious systems can be seen as the outcome
of a model-making process which is found alike in the thought of science and in that of pre-
science.” 10 This work therefore is a philosophical reflection on African traditional though
systems. It will focus mainly on mythology. The whole point to be understood is that African
traditional thought incorporates both implicitly and explicitly comparable ideas just as
philosophy links events on logical implications of ideas for appropriate usage.
7
E. Bolaji Idowu, African Traditional Religion: A Definition. [London: Heinemann, 1973], pp.76 – 78.
8
Daryll Forde, Op. cit., p. 191.
9
E. Bolaji Idowu, Olodumare: God in Yoruba Belief. [London: Longmans, 1962], pp. 67 – 68.
10
Robin Horton, “Ritual Man in Africa,” Africa 34, no. 2[1964]99 and “African Traditional Thought and Western
Science.” Africa 37 nos 1 & 2[1967].
11
Samuel H. Hooke, Middle Eastern Mythology [England: Penguin Books, 1963], p. 11.
3 Mythology in Africa
most perplexing questions posed by the supernatural and natural in creation. How did the world
come about? How do we explain man’s unique position in the world? Who is responsible for
creation? Why do we have day and night alternating and attracting the attention of man? What
explanation can we give for the seeming struggle between good and evil? Why does the
chameleon change its colour and walk as it does? 12 The answer to these questions is what Idowu
sees as being embodied in myths. According to him, myths are the necessary vehicles for
conveying certain facts or basic truths about man’s experiences in his encounter with the created
order and with regard to man’s relation to the supersensible world. A myth endeavours to probe
and answer such questions about origins and meanings and purposes. The answers are naturally
clothed in stories which serve as a necessary tool for preservation and subseqquent handover
from one generation to the next. 13 Hence the collection of myths, stories, images and legends
symbolizes the mythological aspect of religion because it is through them that the supersensible
world is represented. According to Susanne Langer, a myth whether literally believed or not has
religious seriousness, either as historical fact or as a “mystic” truth. The personages in a myth
tend to fuse into stable personalities of supernatural character. Two divinities of somewhat
similar strength, heroically defeated and slain become identified. 14 Langer’s point is further
supported by that of Alasdair MacIntyre. “A myth is living or dead, not true or false. You cannot
refute a myth because as soon as you treat it as refutable, you do not treat it as a myth but as a
hypothesis or history. Myths which could not easily coexist if they were hypothesis or histories,
as for example rival accounts of creation, can comfortably belong to the same body of
mythology.” 15
Mircea Eliade describes a myth as “a true history of what came to pass at the beginning of time,
and one which provides a pattern of human behaviour.” 16 For Eliade a myth contains a lot of
significance. In a myth, the writer finds a thought expressing the absolute truth because it
narrates a sacred history, a trans-human revelation which looks at the dawn of great time. Like
Eliade, Nicholas adds that a myth is a representation of reality which though fantastic, claims to
12
Robert Tikpor, “Myths” in E. A. Adegbola ed. Traditional Religion in West Africa. [Ibadan: Daystar Press, 1985],
p. 367.
13
E. Bolaji, 1973, p. 84.
14
J. B. Pritchard ed., The Ancient /ear East, vols 1 & 2 [New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1975], p. 6ff.
15
Alasdair Macintyre, “Myth” in P. Edwards ed. The Encyclopedia of Philosophy [New York: Macmillan Company
& The Free Press, 1972 edition], p. 435.
16
Mircea Eliade, Myths, Dreams and Mysteries, p. 23.
4 Mythology in Africa
be accurate. It has a symbolism which contains certain aspects of reality, the deepest aspects of
which defy any other means of knowledge. 17
Hermann Baumann who had studies about two thousand five hundred African myths says that,
“a myth is the clear presentation of the outlook of a people living in communities. It is their
objective and permanent philosophy of life.” 20 Studies have shown that most of African myths
evolved during the pre-scientific age. Geoffrey Parrinder’s African Mythology is a beautiful
collection of numerous myths within Africa. However, myths are found the world over,
depending on the type of culture and civilization. There is one underlying fact about all myths.
Most of the forces are personified as a form of formalization of belief in religious ritual. In
addition, most of the myths begin naturally with creation of the world before other aspects of the
world. This is logical because there could be no myths about animals or people if there was no
world to live in.
The different definitions of myths leave us with some common interwoven facts;
[a] The universal recognition of the Supreme Being, no matter which name He is addressed
in any culture of the world.
[b] The Creator-creature relationship in general, and to man in a special way. 21
17
Nicolas Corte, The Origin of Man. [New York: Harthorn Books, 1961], pp. 11, 12.
18
Samuel H. Hooke, op. cit., 11.
19
Susanne Langer, Philosophy in a /ew Key. [Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard university Press, 1975], p. 177,
177n]
20
Quoted by Smith, E.W. ed., African Ideas of God. [London: Edinburgh House Press, 1966 edition], p. 6.
21
Robert Tikpor, art. cit., pp. 368 -9.
5 Mythology in Africa
Myth and History:
Myth is supposed to contain past events which are held to be real. That is why most African
myths are captured on oral tradition and non-oral traditional forms such as symbols or rituals.
Some anthropologists have held that myth was developed later on to explain ritual. 22 Myths
explain a great of the human conditions and life as people see it. Thus they have evolved from a
past full of events. African myths therefore would contain “history”. Myths and history generally
overlap and shape each other.
The blending of myths with history brings cosmic and archetypal events to bear upon the local
situations. Benjamin C. Ray says that, “It is important to see how African myth-history as a
whole gives meaning to the world, how the sacred and true events of the past serve to represent
and explain the world as it ultimately is, and how these same events may serve as ritual
archetypes for the renewal of the natural and human order.” 23
The myth-maker uses ideological implications to give credibility to his account using abstract
structures of social importance which the present audience is aware of. In fact, Isichie
summarized this by saying that, “much of his account may contain many elements that are true
representations of past happenings but is not primary purpose. In a sense, myth reverses the
procedures of history. History fixes a meaning to the present and is obliged to take a view of the
past that is compatible with it. 24 A myth by Isichie’s standard determines the fact of history
which the present ought to reflect. Ray adds that mythical symbols and rituals are instrumental in
the African past, because they say what reality is and shape the world to conform to this reality.
In this regard, religion plays an enormous role in African societies. 25
History could be divided into two stages, what Professor Mbiti has classified as Zamani and
Sasa. The Zamani is the forgotten period, the non-remembered, the non-recorded, but a period of
history nonetheless. The second stage Sasa is the living oral or written period. We can identify
22
Ian G. Barbour, Myths, Models and Paradigm. [London: SCM Press, 1974], p.22.
23
Benjamin B. Ray, African Religions. [Englewood Cliff, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1976], p. 28.
24
P. A. C. Isichie, “Two Perspectives of the Past: History and Myth.” Second Order, 4[July 1975]2, p. 13.
25
Benjamin C. Ray, op. cit., p. 17.
6 Mythology in Africa
Zamani with the mythical period, the story going back to man’s primitive age when man walked
about uncovered in paradise with unadorned beauty. The period when man stayed unmolested
with animals and conversed with them. Man can recall that story because it is his story, and can
turn the story in Sasa form that is from father to son from mother to daughter, colouring it into
song or poetry to facilitate oral transmission. 26 No wonder, Eliade stressed that when listening to
a myth, one visualizes the sacred time which has no duration. Man has to forget his profane
condition and think of his historical situation as we are prone to address it today, and image it in
pre-historic civilization in order to enjoy myth. 27
In his analysis of African myths, John V. Taylor in his book The Primal Vision demonstrated that
there are certain recurrent patterns in the numerous myths of culturally independent African
people. An important form of myth, according to Taylor, is that which seeks to explain why God
is so remote. There is a widespread conviction that though the Supreme Being exists, he no
longer concerns himself with human affairs. However, many African scholars do not share the
same view with him among who are Joseph B. Danquah and E. Bolaji Idowu. These two African
scholars of African Traditional Religion, attack European view of the Supreme God as a deus
incertus or deus remotus. Danquah in his book The Akan Doctrine of God argues that the Akan
religion knew only one God, and that the African Supreme beings were not “remote” or
“abstract” as Europeans thought they were. Like Danquah, Idowu argues that the concept of
supreme deity is the “one essential factor by which the life and belief of the Yoruba religion
cohere and have sustenance. . since He is so urgently real.” 29 Idowu upholds that Yoruba
26
John S. Mbiti, 1969, pp. 39 – 43.
27
Mircea Eliade, Images and Symbols. [London: Harwill Press, 1961], pp. 57-58.
28
Robert Tikpor, art. cit., p. 369.
29
E. Bolaji, 1962, p. 202.
7 Mythology in Africa
religion is a kind of “diffused monotheism,” having lesser gods as attributes and functionaries of
the supreme God. 30 However, emphasis in African mythology is centred on this question of
God’s remote existence and his creation of the universe. Other myths focus on war, institution
and values, the advent of death, heroes and leaders, kings and chiefs, animate and inanimate
things. Ian Barbour proposes that there are models which are embodied in myths. Models like
metaphors are used only momentarily while symbols and parables have only a limited scope.
Models are systematically developed and pervade a religious tradition. One model may be
common to many myths.31 Since there are many African myths, we cannot exhaust them here.
Again there is limited space for comparative study; however we shall take few common myths to
illustrate our main concern.
1. Mythology of Creation:
Most African myths are content that God made the world. In a Yoruba creation mythology,
Olorun, owner of the sky, lived in heaven with other divinities. There was nothing below only a
marsh where divinities sometimes come down to play. But one day God called a divine agent,
Orinshala or Great God, and gave him a snail shell filled with soil, a pigeon and a hen and sent
him below. When Orinshala reached below, he poured the soil on the marsh. He then scattered it
until the earth was formed. The original place was called Ife, which means “wide land”. This is
the origin of the Yoruba town Ile-Ife, the house of Ife. This myth of the primal creation, regards
Ife town the centre of the universe. 32
2. Origin of Man:
Some African myths say the first beings were created in the sky or in heaven and then lowered
down to the earth. They were both husband and wife from whose children the earth populated.
But the Ashanti say that on Monday night, a worm made a hole on the ground and out it emerged
seven men, some seven women, a leopard and a dog. The people were afraid at the sight of the
earth, but their leader calmed them down on Tuesday. Unfortunately on Wednesday, a falling
tree killed him when they were building huts. Then the dog went out to look for fire which they
30
Loc. Cit.
31
Ian Barbour, op. cit., p. 27.
32
Geoffrey Parrinder, Africa’s Three Religions. [London: Sheldon Press, 1969], p. 30.
8 Mythology in Africa
used to cook their food. The Ashanti celebrate an annual feast to commemorate these first
people. 33
4. Withdrawal of God:
Most African myths say that God lived so near that people could touch him. But because men
disobeyed him, he withdrew far above the skies. According to an Ashanti myth, Onyankopon
[that is the Great One] lived long ago near men. There was an old woman who constantly
pounded fufu [local food of mashed yam or plantain]. As she continued pounding the fufu the
pestle knocked against God. One day Onyankopon said, “because of what you have been doing
to me, I am taking myself away far up in the sky where men cannot reach me.” So onyankopon
left and no one could approach him. But the old woman insisted and told her children to collect
mortars and pile them one on top of another. They succeeded in piling these mortars but only one
33
Ibid., p. 34.
34
Mbiti, African Traditional Religion. [London: Heinemann, 1975], pp. 77 -8.
9 Mythology in Africa
remained to reach Onyankopon. The old woman instructed her children to remove the one at the
bottom and put it on top. On the process of removing the first one, all the mortars fell to the
ground killing many people. 35
35
Daryll Forde, op. cit., p. 192.
36
P. A. C. Isichie, art. cit., p. 14.
10 Mythology in Africa
[c] Myths express a saving power in human life:
When we examine any myth, we understand its basic goal and ground in life. The actual
condition of man’s separated self from the ideal by some distortion or defect, understood as sin,
ignorance, attachment, chaos, etc. But the saving power can overcome the defect and establish
the ideal as we can see from the Babylonian creation story of Marduk defeating Tiamat, putting
order out of chaos. The supreme function of myth here is to “fix” the pragmatic and paradigmatic
models for all rites and significant activities. Myths thus portend a power of transforming man’s
life, rather than theoretical explanation of it.
37
Benjamin C. Ray., op. cit., p. 17.
38
Ian G. Barbour, op. cit., pp. 20 – 21.
11 Mythology in Africa
In summary, the function of myths could be postulated thus, “Myths promote the integration of
society. They are a cohesive force building a community together and contributing to social
solidarity, group identity and communal harmony. They encourage cultural stability, for myth is
an active force which is ultimately related to almost every aspect of culture’ [Malinowski]. Myth
sanctions the existing social order and justifies its status system and power and structure,
providing a rationale for social and political institution. . . A common morality is supported by a
mythical tradition, which perpetrates both value-attitude and specific behavioural
recommendation.” 39 Like Barbour, Hooke sees the function of myth as expressing symbolical
terms by means of images what cannot be otherwise put into human speech. The function of
myths is not knowledge but action, action essential for the existence of human community. 40
Conclusion:
The importance of myths in African traditional society cannot be over-emphasized. Myths help
us to understand our rich cultural inheritance. Myths therefore, should never be taken literally,
but as primordial attempt of man to explain natural phenomena using a system perceivable to
him. The African has the important role of utilizing any modern means available, to preserve and
transmit these rich cultural traits to generations yet unborn. The philosopher cannot remain
passive to this development. He has to fully comprehend the religious thinking of the African in
order to know why the African thinks the way he thinks and behaves the way he behaves. If that
is understood, then my task of this presentation is accomplished.
***
39
Ibid., p. 23.
40
Daryll Forde, op. cit., p. 192.
12 Mythology in Africa