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African Religion, Climate Change and Knowledge Systems
Tarusarira, Joram
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African Religion, Climate Change,
and Knowledge Systems
Joram Tarusarira
Joram Tarusarira is assistant professor of religion, conflict and peacebuilding at the
University of Groningen in the Netherlands.
Abstract
This article argues that as humanity is now changing the composition of the atmosphere
at a rate that is very exceptional on the geological time scale, resulting in global
warming, humans must deal with climate change holistically, including the often
overlooked religion factor. Human-caused climate change has resulted primarily from
changes in the amounts of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, but also from changes in
small particles (aerosols), as well as from changes in land use. In Africa, the entire
relationship between humans and nature, including activities such as land use, has deep
religious and spiritual underpinnings. In general, religion is central to many of the
decisions people make about their own communities’ development. Hence, this
contribution examines religion as a factor that can be tapped into to mitigate negative
effects of climate change, discussing climate change and religion in the context of
development practice. It argues that some of the difficulties encountered in development,
including efforts to reverse global warming in Africa, directly speak to the relegation of
African cosmovision and conversely of the need to adopt new epistemologies, concepts, and
models that take religion into consideration.
Climate change is a development issue because global warming is a threat to sustainable
development. The earth’s average temperature has increased, some weather phenomena have become more frequent and intense (such as heat waves and heavy downpours), and others have become less frequent and intense, like extreme cold events.
Scientists have determined that human activities have become a dominant force, and
are responsible for most of the warming observed over the past 50 years. However, climate change is no longer the monopoly of meteorologists and physicists who deal with
concepts governing how the atmosphere moves, warms, cools, and precipitates, nor of
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DOI: 10.1111/erev.12302
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disciplines such as geomorphology and palaeontology. Christian religious actors
involved in earth mission and earth-keeping ministries, such as Marthinus Daneel
of the Zimbabwean Institute of Religious Research and Ecological Conservation
(ZIRRCON),1 have attested to this. African religion can do the same. The question has
emerged whether it still makes sense to pray for rain knowing that droughts in Africa
are related to weather events such as El Ni~
no that are aggravated by anthropogenic climate change, an assertion that represents other similar interventions that question the
relevance of religion and spirituality in a “scientificized” world. This article answers the
question in the affirmative. It shows that African religious beliefs are a prime source of
guidance and support for most people in Africa.
Increasing global temperature, rising sea levels, acidifying oceans, and other climate
change impacts are seriously affecting coastal areas and low-lying coastal countries,
including many of the least developed countries and small island developing states. The
survival of many societies, and of the biological support systems of the planet, is at
risk.2 The United Nations Millennium Project’s task force on environmental sustainability recommended a series of mitigating measures, including investment in costeffective and sustainable energy technologies, elimination of distorting subsidies
favouring fossil fuels at the expense of renewable alternatives, the development of
climate-friendly markets (e.g., carbon trading), targets for concentrations of greenhouse
gases, and rationalized consumption and production patterns.3 Religion and culture as
factors that can contribute to mitigating global warming are conspicuous by their
absence in this list. The secular and reductionist international development agenda has,
for the most part, ignored the fact that the majority of the world’s peoples do not view
themselves simply as material beings responding to material exigencies and circumstances, but rather as cultural and moral beings concerned with spiritual aspirations and
purposes.4
1
M. L. Daneel, “Christian Mission and Earth-Care: An African Case Study,” International Bulletin of Missionary
Research 35:3 (2011), 130–36, http://www.internationalbulletin.org/issues/2011-03/2011-03-130-daneel.html;
E. Conradie, “Missiology and Ecology: An Assessment of the Current State of the Debate,” Australian Journal of
Mission Studies 8:1 (2014), 10–16.
2
United Nations, Sustainable Development Knowledge Platform (2017), https://sustainabledevelopment.un.
org/topics/climatechange.
3
D. Melnick et al., Environment and Human Wellbeing: A Practical Strategy (summary version), UN Millennium Project, Task Force on Environmental Sustainability, 2005.
4
Baha’ı International Community, Science, Religion and Development: Some Initial Considerations, 2001, http://iefworld.
org/isgpsrd.htm.
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If development is to truly benefit the African people, it must reflect the cosmology and
beliefs of local peoples.5 Existing strategies and programmes to address climate change
fall short of taking into account the essential cultural, spiritual, or social dimensions of
life so fundamental to human welfare, except when it has Western and/or Christian
undertones. This might explain why Pope Francis’s encyclical Laudato Si’ received
much publicity worldwide.6 One aspect in line with the argument of this article that is
raised by the Pope is that the environmental crisis is not only a scientific, political, and
economic problem, but a moral and spiritual challenge. He also acknowledges the interconnectedness of human beings with nature.7 In Africa, religion is a crucial factor
whenever people define, initiate, adopt, oppose, or circumvent development processes.
Religion and spirituality are the substructure or foundation for understanding the
social, cultural, economic, material, and political.8 They are central in shaping indigenous health, agriculture, and environmental beliefs and practices.
African Religion and Development
While there are specific geographic, ethnic, linguistic, and spiritual characteristics
among peoples in Africa, African religion in general is the indigenous faith and practice
of African peoples, which is the product of their perception, encounter, reflection
upon, and experiences of the universe in which they live. Generally, the African world
exists in two spheres – the visible, tangible, and concrete world of humans, animals,
vegetation, and other natural elements; and the invisible world of the spirits, ancestors,
divinities, and the supreme deity. Yet it is one world, indivisible, with one sphere touching on the other. Its specific elements are basically the belief in the existence of God
and/or gods; the belief in spirits, both good and bad; and the belief in cultic prohibitions (taboos) and moral violations. Africans believe in sacrifices performed for various
5
J. McDonnell, “Challenging the Euro-Western Epistemological Dominance of Development through African
Cosmovision,” in Emerging Perspectives on ‘African Development,’ ed. George J. Sefa Dei and Paul Banahene Adjei
(New York: Peter Lang, 2014), 98–116.
6
Its economic justice concerns, however, have been attacked by free market capitalists and questions have been
asked whether the Pope’s love for the poor translates into concrete policy concerning the immediate problem
of climate change. Moreover, the fact that global warming gas emissions have increased as the global population
has increased calls into question the carrying capacity of planet Earth and also the church’s teaching on birth
control as it affects human population growth.
7
Pope Francis, Encyclical letter Laudato Si’ of the Holy Father Francis on Care for Our Common Home (Vatican
City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2015), http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/encyclicals/documents/
papa-francesco_20150524_enciclica-laudato-si.html.
8
G. J. S. Dei, “Revisiting the Question of the ‘Indigenous,’” in Indigenous Knowledges and Critical Education, ed. G. J.
S. Dei (New York: Peter Lang, 2011), 21–33.
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purposes (e.g., warding off evils, securing ancestors’ support, appeasing divinities and
supernatural beings, and expressing gratitude), in the continuing existence of the dead
in the invisible world (from which they can assist the living), and in judgment from
God or from the dead.9 African traditional religion gives meaning and direction to its
adherents. It is expressed in the way the Africans have always regulated their relationship with nature and with fellow human beings. As a result of this, in certain cases
some animals may be regarded as sacred to devotees of a particular divinity; or natural
phenomena such as trees, hills, or rivers may be deified.10
In this article, I refer to the case of the Shona people in Zimbabwe. The Shona people
believe in the supreme being known as Mwari. They also believe in ancestors known as
vadzimu who are, in the words of Mbiti, the “living-dead who live under the soil, own
and control it.”11 These vadzimu exist on different levels, namely, familial and territorial.
The Shona also believe in avenging spirits (ngozi) and alien spirits (shavi-singular,
mashavi-plural); as well as sacred places (natural and human-made) and sacred practitioners, including the chief (ishe), spirit mediums (masvikiro), and traditional healers
(n’anga). The Shona religion permeates all realms of the Shona people’s life. It is their
life, religion, and culture. To interact with their religion is to enter into their life and culture, and vice versa.
While this cosmological worldview is particular to the Shona, with slight variations it
also runs across Africa. It is impossible to separate the life of an African from their religion; hence, early writers like Kofi Busia and John Mbiti were prompted to affirm the
overly religious attitude of traditional African societies. Busia remarks that the African
is “intensely and pervasively religious . . . in traditional African communities it was not
possible to distinguish between religious and non-religious areas of life. All life is religious.”12 Mbiti asserted that “Africans are notoriously religious,”13 and B. E. Idowu
stated that “in all things [Africans] are religious” and “for the African to be is to be religious.”14 While these early writers might have exaggerated the religiosity of the African
person, their statements serve to demonstrate how much religion is central in the
9
John. S. Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy (Oxford, U.K.: Heinemann, 1969).
10
See Conserving Cultural and Biological Diversity: The Role of Sacred Natural Sites and Cultural Landscapes (Paris:
UNESCO, 2006), http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0014/001478/147863e.pdf.
11
Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy.
12
K. A. Busia, Africa in Search of Democracy (New York: Praeger, 1967).
13
Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy.
14
B. E. Idowu, “The Study of Religion with Special Reference to African Traditional Religion,” ORITA: Ibadan
Journal of Religious Studies 1:1 (1967), 3–12.
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African people’s lives. As a result, anything that is done within an African context has a
corresponding rite or ritual, or religious reasoning behind it.
African religion must not be perceived as a conservative cultural element that works to
resist change and hence is a barrier to development. Each community practises religious observances that direct the lives of that community, and in other areas, cults are
responsible for different developmental activities. Therefore, religious elements in the
African people’s cosmology have an effect on the process of development initiatives.
Since religion is integral to understanding the world and one’s place in it, it affects decisions: for instance, about who will treat a sick child, when and how people will plant
their fields, and whether to participate in any risky but potentially beneficial social
action. Just as social scientists and practitioners have recognized that gender, class, and
ethnicity, while potentially conflictual, are integral components of people’s identity and
must be taken fully into account in development efforts, so too must they recognize
religion, as it is also central to the life of the people.15
A fixed definition of development has always been elusive, as the definitions offered
have either been too limited, too broad and vague, or too amorphous. This has led
some scholars, such as Conradie, to ask provocatively whether it should be dropped
altogether or be replaced by the term “maturation,” which, while imperfect, allows for
the fulfilment of potential and a certain directionality.16 Despite this challenge, the term
“sustainable development” remains in vogue. Climate change and sustainable development cannot be placed in separate boxes, because development themes like land use
(natural resources and agriculture), health, poverty (vulnerability), economic development (including trade and finance), and energy (supply, demand, markets, security) are
climate connected.17 In the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, member
states expressed their commitment to protect the planet from degradation and take
urgent action on climate change. The agenda also identified, in paragraph 14, climate
change as “one of the greatest challenges of our time” and worried that “its adverse
impacts [would] undermine the ability of all countries to achieve sustainable
development.”18
15
K. A. ver Beek, “Spirituality: A Development Taboo,” Development in Practice 10:1 (2000), 31–43.
16
E. Conradie, “Why Cannot the Term Development Just Be Dropped Altogether? Some Reflections on the Concept of Maturation as Alternative to Development Discourse,” HTS Teologiese Studies/Theological Studies 72:4
(2016), 1–11.
17
Tariq Banuri and Hans Opschoor, Climate Change and Sustainable Development, DESA Working Paper no. 56 (New
York: UN–DESA, 2007), http://www.un.org/esa/desa/papers/2007/wp56_2007.pdf.
18
Sustainable Development Knowledge Platform.
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According to the United Nations Conference for Trade and Development (UNCTAD)
Report for 1996, “development has come to be understood as a multidimensional
undertaking, a people-centered and equitable process in which the ultimate goal of economic and social policies must be to better the human condition responding to the
needs, and maximizing the potential, of all members of society.”19 At the level of the
individual, it implies increased capacity and skill, greater freedom, creativity, selfdiscipline, responsibility, and material well-being. Goulet distinguishes three basic components or core values of development as life sustenance, self-esteem, and freedom.20
At a national level, development is measured in terms of gross national product, a measure of national income. The human needs approach conceives development as where
the level of satisfaction of various dimensions of human needs is considered to have
improved.
More recently, a concept of human development has come into vogue emphasizing
aspects that go beyond the dominant economic dimension. The human development
approach includes the spiritual dimension of life, in addition to low levels of material
poverty and unemployment, relative equality, democratization of political life, true
national independence, good literacy and educational levels, good health, relatively
equal status for women and participation by women, and sustainable ability to meet
future needs.21 The present-day discourse of development privileges the concept of
sustainable development, which came into prominence in the World Conservation
Strategy, presented in 1980 by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature
and Natural Resources. The World Commission on the Environment popularized it
through the study Our Common Future (1987). The most frequently quoted definition
states that sustainable development seeks to meet the needs and aspirations of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.22
As a coherent practice, development began after the Second World War. It was built
not only on the crumbling edifices of the war, but also on the legacy of colonialism that
had entrenched patterns of domination and established the concept of the world as a
single entity. In the post-war period of the 1940s, a liberal and secularist approach
flourished, emphasizing the achievement of development through the adoption of
19
UNCTAD, Trade and Development Report, 1996 (New York and Geneva: UN, 1996), 21, http://unctad.org/en/
Docs/tdr1996_en.pdf.
20
D. Goulet, The Cruel Choice: A New Concept on the Theory of Development (New York: Atheneum Press, 1971).
21
See A. Thomas and D. Potter, “Development, Capitalism and the Nation State,” in Poverty and Development in the
1990s, ed. Tim Allen and Alan Thomas (Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1992).
22
United Nations, Our Common Future, Chapter 2: Towards Sustainable Development, http://www.un-documents.net/
ocf-02.htm.
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Western economic systems and, as a result, an economic understanding of development dominated the debate during the 1950s; by the 1960s, it was epitomized in the
modernization paradigm. Development was seen as a linear process in which a country
moved from underdevelopment, which was characterized as backward/traditional/
primitive, to full development, which was identified as modern/rational/industrialized.23 Those who understand development to mean catching up with the material
standard of living of the industrialized societies perceive the worldview of certain cultures and religions, especially those of Africa and other developing countries, as
obstacles to this sort of progress. It is as a result of such perspectives that elements
such as African religion have been overlooked, thus subsequently relegated to the margins. If anything, such spiritual elements were only seen as the cause of the
“backwardness” of the African people. This marginalization took place on a number of
different fronts, including the theological, sociological, and scientific.
Whither African Religion?
Reductionist theories on African religion were advanced by people such as Edward
Taylor (1832–1917), often regarded as the father of British anthropology. He saw African religion and magic as primitive forces of science that must be replaced by Western
science. James Frazer (1854–1941) attempted to explain away African religion using an
evolutionary history of models of human thought – from magic, through religion, to
Western science. He regarded magic as a primitive form of science based on assumptions that knowledge of the laws of the universe could be used to control events. However, he argues that magical thought uses a faulty logic based on the “law of sympathy”
(by which like is supposed to influence like) and the “law of contagion” (by which
things once in close contact are supposed to influence one another). French philosopher Lucien Levy-Bruhl (1857–1939) explained the religious and magical beliefs of the
African people in terms of a “prelogical” mentality, one that does not always conform
to the laws of logic. The law of contradiction is sometimes violated when “prelogical”
thought operates according to the law of participation, according to which objects can
be both themselves and something other than themselves.
Recent scholarship on decoloniality offers useful insights into the epistemological
framework of these early anthropologists. Their epistemology of development and progress perceives African religion as barren of progressive technologies that can fashion
progress and development. Decolonialists call this frame of thinking “coloniality of
23
B. Haddad, “Theologizing Development: A Gendered Analysis of Poverty, Survival and Faith,” Journal of Theology
for Southern Africa 110 (2001), 5–19.
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knowledge,” understood as “a complex process of deployment of global imperial technologies of subjectivation taking the form of translating and re-writing other cultures,
other knowledges and other ways of being, and presuming commensurability through
Western rationality.”24 Mignolo argues that coloniality of knowledge silences and relegates other epistemologies to barbarian margins, a primitive or a communist or a Muslim past.25 Thus, the framework of coloniality of knowledge allows us to interrogate
how colonial mentality interfered with African modes of knowing, social meaningmaking, imagining, seeing and knowledge production through Eurocentric epistemologies that assumed the character of objective, scientific, neutral, universal, and only
truthful knowledge.26
Unfortunately, these deductions are faulty because they were not only based on the
European Renaissance and Enlightenment, but also on ethnographic information collected without taking into account the social context. These authors never came into
contact with the people they were writing about, even though observation is key in
research if writing about people.27 When the early explorers and writers on Africa
focused their attention on the religion of the African people, they made entries in their
journals, and these entries did not go beyond references to places, objects, or personages. Indigenous religious materials, especially ritual objects and symbolic forms, particularly caught their eye because of their exotic nature. They did not witness the religious
temples, churches, or mosques, and hence they raised serious doubts as to whether the
Africans had any religion at all. African religion as a result has been misrepresented,
underestimated, and stigmatized. As a consequence, people’s beliefs and the priorities
arising from them, their religious celebrations, their sacred sites, their way of organizing
their communities and making decisions are all seen as peripheral to development
issues. Efforts, in fact, are made to ensure they are done away with and replaced with
sound scientific thinking. Mezzana concludes that this mechanism would also prevent
perceiving the spiritual, cultural, and human energies that are essential to the search for
an African modernity for the continent’s development.28 References to the early
anthropologists may sound anachronistic in a debate on the current question of climate
24
S. J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, Empire, Global Coloniality and African Subjectivity (New York: Berghahn Books, 2013).
25
W. D. Mignolo, “Introduction: Coloniality of Power and De-colonial Thinking,” Cultural Studies 21:2/3 (2007),
449–514.
26
A. Escobar, “Worlds and Knowledges Otherwise: The Latin American Modernity/Coloniality Research
Program,” Cultural Studies 21:2/3 (2007), 197–210.
27
M. F. C. Bourdillon, “Theories in the Understanding of African Traditional Religion,” Journal of Theology for
Southern Africa (1975), 38–39.
28
D. Mezzana, African Traditional Religion and Modernity, https://www.abibitumikasa.com/forums/showthread.php/
38068-African-traditional-religions-and-modernity.
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change. This is not the case, because the empire that facilitated colonialism has not
faded away. It still exists, and at its centre is a modern world order that is best described
as racialized, colonial, capitalist, patriarchal, hierarchical, asymmetrical, imperial,
hetero-normative, hegemonic, Christian-centric, and Euro-centric.29
Modernity, which has been associated with development, is often associated with new
ideas and has been linked with Christianity on the basis that, as J. Platvoet puts it, African religions, as a group or type of human religion, are the oldest of humankind.30 As a
result, Christianity is seen as a “new” religion that resonates with modernity. As such,
Christianity was considered an exception in theories that censured religion. With its
working ethics and ideologies, which were metaphors of a privatized economy, Christianity was looked upon as a dynamic factor promoting modern development, and to
many people in the developing world, conversion to Christianity was a first step to civilization. This being the case, development has tended to be aligned with either Western
or Christian slants, neither of which recognize African religion. Those with scientific
and materialistic tendencies also fail to give African religion an opportunity or serious
consideration. Social science literature, upon which much of the development literature
is based, has historically tended to refer to spirituality and religion as belief systems
based on myths, whose negative effects on society would be replaced eventually by
sound scientific thinking. Thus development agencies have also avoided spirituality and
religion, and according to ver Beek’s analysis, organizations have no policies to deal
with religious issues in their programmes.31 Such a background has given rise to the
marginalization of African Traditional Religion in discourses on religion and climate
change.
The Environment Is the People and the People Are the Environment
Caring for the environment and the climate is not something foreign to the peoples of
Africa. Human motivation in such caring has always had religious and spiritual roots.
Walter Rodney confirms the influence of the African superstructure influencing the
development on the ground when he states,
29
W. D. Mignolo, The Darker Side of Renaissance: Literacy, Terrority and Colonization (Ann Arbor, MI: University of
Michigan Press, 1999); W. D. Mignolo, Local Histories/Global Designs, Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledge, and Border
Thinking (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2000); A. Quijano, “The Coloniality of Power and Social
Stratification,” Journal of World Systems 6:2 (2000), 342–86; S. J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, Coloniality of Power in Postcolonial
Africa: Myths of Decolonization (Dakar: CODESRIA Books, 2012).
30
J. Platvoet, “The Religion of Africa in the Historical Order,” in The Study of Religions in Africa: Past, Present and
Prospects, ed. Jan Platvoet, James Cox and Jacob Olupona (Cambridge: Roots and Branches, 1996), 46–102.
31
K. A. ver Beek, “Spirituality: A Development Taboo.”
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[E]ach element in the superstructure interacts with other elements in the superstructure as well
as with the material base. The religious belief that a certain forest is sacred was the kind of
element in the superstructure that affected economic activity, since that forest would not be
cleared for cultivation . . . it is also to be borne in mind that peculiarities in the superstructure
of any given society have a marked impact on the rate of development.32
African religion functions in symbiosis with the rest of our human faculties; hence
those combating global warming toward sustainable development should incorporate it
and not jettison it. African religion is important in that it enhances development by generating a sense of self-confidence. It gives meaning and direction to the practitioners. It
is a source of dynamism and creativity. What matters most is the capacity of religion to
generate self-respect and the ability to resist exploitation and domination, as well as to
offer meaning to what people produce and consume, to land, life, liberty, life, death,
pain, and joy.
As McDonnell argues, in line with the nature of the African cosmovision or cosmology,
“relationships between nature and humans, spirit and nature are not dichotomized or
compartmentalized, but are integrated into an interdependent system of existence that
is tied together through spiritual interactions.”33 Since the epistemology of the African
cosmovision sees the physical and spiritual worlds as integrated, this initiates a
“profound respect and reverence without exploitation” for nature34 and a commitment
to conserve and enrich nature.35 This means that nature and the environment are part
and parcel of life, or one with the people, because there is no separation. To destroy
nature and environment is to destroy oneself. Living in harmony with the natural world
translates to living in harmony with the spiritual world, as they are interconnected and
codependent.36 Thus, natural phenomena such as plants, rocks, and bodies of water are
32
W. Rodney, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (Harare: Zimbabwe Publishing House, 1972).
33
J. McDonnell, “Challenging the Euro-Western Epistemological Dominance of Development through African
Cosmovision,” in Emerging Perspectives on ‘African Development,’ ed. George J. Sefa Dei and Paul Banahene Adjei
(New York: Peter Lang, 2014), 98–116.
34
See Y. Turaki, Foundations of African Traditional Religion and Worldview (Nairobi: WorldAlive Publishers Ltd., 2006),
95.
35
G. J. S. Dei, “Learning Culture, Spirituality and Local Knowledge: Implications for African Schooling,” International Review of Education 48:5 (2002), 335–60; A. Mazrui and T. Wagaw, “Toward Decolonization Modernity:
Education and Culture Conflict in Eastern Africa,” in The Education Process of Historiography in Africa (Paris:
UNESCO), 35–62.
36
B. Haverkort and C. Reijntjes, eds., Conference Proceedings. Moving Worldviews: Reshaping Sciences, Policies and Practices
for Endogenous Sustainable Development, http://www.bibalex.org/Search4Dev/files/416884/362466.pdf.
C. Gonese, R. Tuvafurem, and N. Mudzingwa, “Developing Centres of Excellence on Endogenous
Development,” in Ancient Roots, New Shoots, ed. B. Haverkort (London: Zed Books, 2002), 169–80.
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respected and revered, acting as vehicles to the spiritual world, and having both visible
and invisible powers.37 This automatically ensures that nature and the environment are
protected. This stifles global warming, thus paving the way for sustainable development. Furthermore, as animals are understood as being a part of a larger spiritual system, they are respected and not killed unless in self-defence or to provide immediate
sustenance or sacrifice. Moreover, non-living elements, such as rain, are also deemed as
sacred and as powerful spirits, as they are needed to sustain life. Rainmakers, in their
ability to solicit the spirit world and call up or cease rainfall, are seen as vitally important
to the health and well being of the community.38 Thus, at the foundation of the African
cosmovision lies a deep reverence and respect for the natural world. Human beings are
seen as being spiritually connected to all that happens within the greater frameworks of
nature.
Religion in this case is not about upholding a transcendent, and alien, ideal for the
transformation of the world, but primarily an immanent, this-worldly, and local model
for the production and reproduction of human society in an immediate natural environment. Not to do so will destroy the animating point of the community, for this is
the source of energy and commitment. Religion is not an addition to life, but it permeates all aspects of life. It contains the meaning of life and what constitutes good life. It
is the matrix, the software of social life, and its symbolic engine. The religious awareness of the African people is not an abstraction, but a living component of their way of
life.39 One African proverb states, “Our world is like a drum; strike any part and the
vibration is felt all over.” When a borehole is sunk, it rings in the ears of the ancestors,
the owners of the land.
African religion informs the way adherents regulate their relationship with both nature
and fellow human beings. The way an African relates to the soil upon which development agencies erect buildings, sink boreholes, carry out farming, and the way they relate
to water and sanitation issues, to health issues, and to other development issues, cannot
omit African religion. This way of undertaking activities may seem absurd in the eyes of
Christians and Westerners, but it is full of meaning for Africans. It not only has the psychological and social functions of integration and equilibrium, but also a numinous
constellation with practical implications such as ensuring the protection of the environment, which is desperately needed in the contexts of global warming. Religion is the
37
Ibid.
38
Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy.
39
Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization, “Christian Witness to People of African Traditional Religions,”
Lausanne Occasional Paper 18, 18 June 1980, Lausanne Movement website, https://www.lausanne.org/
content/lop/lop-18.
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African Religion, Climate Change, and Knowledge Systems
guiding influence for political, social, and family life. It is neither an abstract principle
nor even a collection of such principles, but a leaven that makes principles work, vitally
involved as they are with the religious laws and ceremonies, which give external expression to this vitality. Religion is profoundly integrated into social and technical life.
African Religion as the Panacea to Development and Climate Change?
The preceding argument is not to suggest that African religion is the panacea for development and climate change, given the challenges associated with practical implementation. A question is often raised: How can African religion be included in a model for
action that sets objectives at the beginning and uses quantifiable data?40 African religion
is not something quantifiable. Other religions, such as Christianity, can be quantifiable,
since they are missionary in nature. For example, after every baptism in the Catholic
Church, the priest enters the names of the newly baptized in the baptism register. In
this way, the number of people in the church can be a quantifiable measure of the
growth of the church. This is not the case with African religion. Thus, African religion
risks being relegated because of the difficulty of including it in a model. But one can ask
whether it is necessary to count, and whether counting is the only way to establish
growth and effectivity.
Another problem experienced in African religion is the sense of fear that it causes: “A
sense of fear, arising mainly from constant threat of ‘principalities and powers’ on the
ontological ‘balance’ which primal man has to maintain if he is to survive. On a practical level, it is the fear of illness and death – hence the preoccupation with ‘protection’
(charms, anti-witchcraft medicines, etc.).”41 Practitioners of African religion believe
that they can do nothing without blessing from the ancestors or traditional healers. It
could be a simple journey or something small: there is a lack of confidence and commitment until and unless rituals have been carried out. All socio-economic and political
activities thus require religious approval: either from the ancestors or traditional
healers. Such engagement tends to depict the African as inherently lacking human
power.
If African religion is not the panacea and the Western/Christian epistemology is also
faulty, then what is the way forward? The decolonial turn recommends a pluriversal
approach to the pursuit of knowledge. A pluriversal, as opposed to a universal
40
World Faiths Development Dialogue, Cultures, Spirituality and Development (Oxford: World Faiths Development
Dialogue, 2001), https://s3.amazonaws.com/berkley-center/20010822cuturespdev.pdf.
41
Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization, “Christian Witness to People of African Traditional Religions.”
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approach does not privilege one knowledge system at the expense of another. Instead,
it provides an equal distance to all knowledge systems toward knowledge production
and dissemination. Thus the argument here is not to move from one end of the spectrum, where Western/Christian knowledge systems are privileged, to the other, where
African knowledge systems become privileged. Preventing climate change will not
come through knowledge predicated on universal modes of thinking. These have proven to be unable to deal with contemporary problems like climate change that they
have produced. A pluriversal approach is where many worlds fit toward other worlds.42
Conclusion
The abovementioned difficulties with African religion are not meant to overturn the
argument. It remains imperative for climate change approaches in Africa to take note
of the influence of African religion. Integrating religion can help in acquiring a less
reductive and all-embracing approach. All climate change advocates, therefore, have to
make special efforts to integrate African religion from the earliest stages. Integration
refers to respect and acknowledgement of the religious beliefs of the people to ensure
their programmes are not antagonistic to the beliefs of the people. It is important to
take stock of the belief of the Africans from the start so that the whole programme will
have a firm foundation. Achieving this develops a sense of self-confidence and mutual
trust. This will lead to increased participation, responsibility, and economic efficiency
and more sustainable poverty reduction.43 The programmes will be based on people’s
vision. Unless the vision to address climate change is articulated by those for whom it is
intended, it cannot inspire and sustain a people. Any climate change enterprise must
begin by considering how people’s full range of resources, including their spiritual or
religious resources, can be used for their general well being.
42
S. J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, Empire, Global Coloniality and African Subjectivity (New York: Berghahn Books, 2013).
43
World Faiths Development Dialogue, “Cultures, Spirituality and Development,” 22 August 2001, https://
berkleycenter.georgetown.edu/publications/cultures-spirituality-development.
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