Title
Indigenous Religious Traditions in Ghanaian Pentecostalism: The Mame Wata Healing Churches of Half Assini,Used
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Goddesses in African religions are spirits that affect humans and demand reverence from them. They are also embodiments of ideas that African people have about women, their powers and their roles in society. This study focused on Mame Wata, a goddess in Half Assini, an Nzemaspeaking coastal community in western Ghana. It sought to resolve a paradox, that is, the fact that, the goddess is at the center of a Pentecostalist tradition even though traditional Pentecostalism in Ghana views her as an agent of the devil. The study involved fieldwork in this community of the goddesss female worshippers led by Agyimah, a charismatic man, and an agent of the goddess. The study interpreted the goddess as a postcolonial invented symbol personifying both precolonial and emerging ideas about female power. Findings from the study also show that through Mame Wata the followers celebrate the spirituality of the female.
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