verver
Haitian Creole
editNoun
editverver
- In Haitian vodou, a geometric design traced or painted on the ground with a mix of corn flour and ash, as part of a ritual of summoning or communicating with a deity.
- 1940, “The Vodun Service in Northern Haiti”, in American Anthropologist, page 238:
- Fais verver pour moun, s'ou plè. Make verver for me, if you please.
After making verver the officiant turns attention to the twins.- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1956, Bulletin du Bureau d'ethnologie, pages 40–41:
- Le premier geste du prêtre vodun est de tracer sur le sol des signes cabalistiques avec de la semoule de maïs, du sirop, du tafia (eau-de-vie de canne) et de la liqueur, en chantant une chanson sur la fabrication du verver.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1987, Fodor's Travel Publications, Fodor's Caribbean 1988, page 226:
- The verver, a geometric design traced on the ground in corn flour, is the emblem of the deity being summoned. The verver is also believed to be the original inspiration for Haitian painting.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 2010, John Szwed, Alan Lomax: The Man Who Recorded the World, page 101:
- Elizabeth... learned the rituals and deities, the two of them standing on the edge of the Vodou services, watching the houngan prepare a verver (a ground painting done with a mixture of ashes and cornmeal) appropriate to the deity addressed in the service...
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)