Some Aspects of Ashanti Religious Beliefs
Some Aspects of Ashanti Religious Beliefs
Some Aspects of Ashanti Religious Beliefs
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI
RELIGIOUS BELIEFS
by Thomas Addae
INTRODUCTION
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158 THOMAS ADDAE
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 159
i) His Existence
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160 THOMAS ADDAE
The other typical drum verse acknowledges that God is the oldest
and the creator of the river which is older than the path. It runs like
this:
(4) R. S. Rattray, Ashanti Proverbs , Oxford Univ. Press, London, 1969, p. 20.
The word Onyankopcn is an Ashanti word meaning God. We shall see its full mea-
ning when we come to the part on the names and attributes of God.
(5) Ibid., p. 21.
(6) J. H. Nketia, Our Drums and Drummers , p. 43.
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 161
God plays a great role in Ashanti art. Designs and patterns made
on cloths and carvings have names which refer to God, or to his qua-
lities. One of these is the Gye Nyame (except God) design which
depicts the omnipotence of God. This design was even used by the
Ghana government on the three-penny postage stamps. Another de-
sign common on cloths is O God, everything which is above, permit
my hand to touch it . This pattern was stamped also on paper and
hung above the lintel of a door in the king's palace. The King of Ash-
anti used to touch this lintel, then his forehead, then his breast repea
ting these words three times (8). Still another design which alludes
to the eternity of God is the May God die before I die (9).
Another common fact to prove the existence of God, or of a Su-
preme Being, in Ashanti are temples erected in his honour, and some
years ago almost every Ashanti compound or house had its Onyam
dua (God's tree), a triple-forked branch of a tree set upright on the
ground and serving as an altar. On it a bowl for offerings rested and
sacrifices were offered at frequent intervals (10). Such altars may stil
be seen in Ashanti but not so common as they were some decades
ago (n). References to God appear also in symbols on ancient gold
dust weights, and this proves the antiquity of the belief in a Suprem
Being in Ashanti.
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162 THOMAS ADDAE
(12) The letter d and letter o are often used or dropped in prefixes for the
sake of euphony. For a non-Ashanti reader the letter 0 used in the Ashanti lan-
guage can be replaced by the letter o for easy reading as it has been done by Rat-
tray in his books on Ashanti.
(13) J. G. Christaller, Dictionary of Asante and Fante Language , p. 356.
(14) Ibid., p. 358.
(15) Ibid., p. 551.
(16) Ibid., p. 90.
(17) R. S. Rattray, Ashanti, pp. 18, 298.
(18) J. B. Danquah, The Akan Doctrine of God, pp. 40, 43.
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SOME ASPECTS F ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 163
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164 THOMAS ADDAE
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 165
nin = the Elder, which connotes not only seniority, but also exper
and wisdom (26); Nana = the Grandfather or Ancestor; Odssf
the Benefactor; Otumfoo = a Person of power and majesty; K
manto = One who does not break his pledge; Osaagyefoo = the W
rior who fights to redeem his people (a title which was used for K
Nkrumah, the ex-president of Ghana); Daasebre = the Merciful O
Kwame = a male person born on Saturday (27); Antoapoma =
ever-ready Shooter; Oteanankaduro = One who provides med
for snake-bite.
Finally, much of the lore about God is contained in sayings
proverbs from which the qualities of God can be deduced. Fo
purpose, we shall see a few of these sayings and proverbs in thei
glish translations: all men are God's children (the universal fathe
of God); it is to avoid cheating that God has given everyone a n
(God's justice); when God gives you sickness, he accompanies it w
its medicine, or it is Onyame who pounds fufu for the one-armed
(his mercy and providence); the wide world over, Onyame is the
(his seniority or eternity, his wisdom and experience) (28). Besid
God is seen as the master of life and death:
That he is recognized as the master of life and death is evident from the
custom, once prevalent in Ashanti, of making public supplications to him for
relief in times of drought and famine. On those occasions, the King of Ash-
anti himself was the chief suppliant. Again, every river that dries up an-
nually is named Asuo Dan-Nyame (depend-upon-God-river) (29).
To sum up, we can simply state that the Ashantis believe not only
in the existence of God but also in a number of attributes, some of which
cannot be applied to anybody or anything else but to God alone. The
attributes may not exhaust all the qualities of God, but they are enough
to enable us to conclude that the Ashanti idea about God is near to per-
fection.
(26) George Williamson, Akan Religion and the Christian Faith , p. 88.
(27) OnyankopDn receives the day-name, Kwame, because Saturday is reckoned
to be the Supreme Being's day of worship. This indicates that the Supreme Being is
thought of as personal. (Cfr. ibid., p. 87).
(28) For more proverbs dealing with God's attributes, see C. A. Akrofi, Twi
Mm3bus3m: Twi Proverbs , Macmillan and Co. Ltd., London, 1958; Captain Rattray's
Ashanti Proverbs , edited by Oxford University Press, 1969, is also useful.
(29) Peter Kwasi Sarpong, op. cit., p. 7.
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166 THOMAS ADDAE
Against these views, let us hear what Captain Rattray has written:
I had some year ago taken a stand against a school of thought which
denied that the conception of a Supreme Being in West African mind, and
his place in their religion, were due to any cause deeper or more remote than
the influence of christian missionary reaching. . . Further research, embodying
much investigation into Ashanti religious beliefs. . .has served to strengthen
the opinion which I had formerly expressed.
It is surprising to find that Ellis . . . was so greatly misled with regard to
such an important question (32).
Rattray goes on to say that Ellis should have been struck by what
his Dutch teacher, Bosnian, had written more than 150 years before
those German missionaries ever set foot upon the coast. Further
on, our Captain writes:
(30) A. B. Ellis, The Tshi-Speaking Peoples of the Gold Coast of West Africa ,
pp. 10 and 24-26.
(31) Richard A. Freeman, Travels and Life in Ashanti and Jaman , p. 290.
(32) R. S. Rattray, Ashanti , p. 139.
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 167
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168 THOMAS ADDAE
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 169
The names which are given to the lesser deities are genera
namely, Abosom ( Obosom being the singular form) an
man ( suman being the singular form).
It seems to some authors, like Christaller, that Obosom
rived from Oboo (stone) and Som (to worship, to serve
he was told that the fetishes which our forefathers served (by
them palm wine and sheep) were only stones (39). Meyerow
wever, is of the opinion that cbosom is the same word as
(the moon) because obosom... is the visible manifestation of
(soul, or vital force) of the moon (40). Christaller's opinion
is also that of Rattray) is more acceptable than that of Meyer
cause the word, obosom, agrees more with its etymologies
and som) than the word, bosome . Moreover, since man
older minor gods are in fact rocks, the benefit can be given to C
ler's opinion (41). These abosom are a category of non-hum
rits which can and must appropriately be called lesser gods or
gods (42).
The other class of minor deities is the asuman . These are among
the lowest grades of superhuman powers who derive their powers and
efficacy from the abosom (43). Broadly speaking, all these objects which
we would losely call charms, amulets, talismans, mascots, or fetishes,
the Ashantis call asuman, and the word fetish may be rightly con-
fined to designate such only (44).
Suman differs from obosom in that it is a manufactured object of
some sort that is worn on the body or hung in the house for protective
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170 THOMAS ADDAE
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 171
of his to the earth in order that they might receive benefits from
confer those benefits upon mankind. All these sons bore the
what are now two rivers and two lakes known as the Tano (a
Bosomtwe (a lake near jKumasi), Bea (also a river), and epo (t
the great lake). These are not all the sons of Onyame; every ot
or water of importance is also his son. The tributaries of th
rivers are grandsons of Onyame (46).
The following are a few of the various attempts that hav
made by various authors to describe the abosom of Ashanti.
Richard Freeman says that inferior to Onyankopon are th
deities or spirits called abosom. Of these there are two classe
who are friendly to man, and those who are mischevious an
to him. They are themselves invisible, but are commonly ass
with visible objects, such as mountains, rivers, big trees, rock
culiar appearance (47).
George MacDonald affirms that no part of the former Go
is without its particular deity which is supposed to inhabit p
animals, forests, mountains, trees, rivers, and so on. The Tan
just to take an example, was a favourite fetish of the Ashantis
tinues to say that domestic fetishes consisted of rude wooden
of people and animals of the most extraordinary shapes and
tions (48).
In clear and precise terms is the report of the Archdiocesan Com-
mittee, appointed to study African customs, on libation:
For the ordinary man all the 4 abosom ' are a certain class of preter-human
beings, clearly distinct from God, their Creator, and from the ancestors. Some
are good towards man; others, on the contrary, are bad and intent on in-
flicting evil. They claim from man a religious cult in the form of ceremo-
nies, prayers and sacrifices. There exists some sort of hierarchical order among
the various gods, some being of a very high rank. . .There are the sky and
thunder gods, the innumerable nature gods of the rivers (e.g. Tano), and the
lakes (e.g. Bosomtwe), and the gods of the forest an the sea. They may
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172 THOMAS ADDAE
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 173
nor the abosom, but the spirits of the departed of the clan.
these affirmations are true or not, we can say for certain that
rits of ancestors play a very important role in Ashanti religiou
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174 THOMAS ADDAE
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 175
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176 THOMAS ADDAE
(61) Cfr. Peter Sarpong, op. cit., p. 25, and the story he tells about an inci-
dent of this kind in his own village.
(62) The word Adae in pure Ashanti is written Adee and it possibly is just
a special application of the same word adaye , which means a place of resting, or lying
down. The first in importance of those customs dealing with propitiation, solicitation,
or veneration of the ancestral spirits is the Adee ceremony. No one is permitted to
work or go to farm on an Adee which is a rite observed twi;e in every successive
period of 43 days. The two ceremonies are known as the Big or Sunday Adee (cal-
led generally Kwasidee) and the Wednesday Adee (called Wukudee or Kuud-
apaakuo ). The interval between one Sunday Adee and the next one is 43 days, and
a like time also elapses between each Wednesday Adee. The period between one Sun-
day Adee and the following Wednesday Adee is 22 days exclusive, or 24 days in-
clusive, and between the Wednesday Adee and the next Sunday Adee is 17 days ex-
clusive or 19 days inclusive. A person (whether male or female) born on any one
of these days has this word suffixed to his or her own name-day; for example,
a child born on Sunday Adee is called Kwasi Adee, if he is a male, or Akosua Adee,
if she is a female. Cfr. R. S. Rattray, Ashanti , pp. 92-93.
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 177
person as an honour done to the ancestor in the hope that the bab
emulate the good deeds of the one after whom it is named and
wards go to join him in the spirit-world. The following tran
from a novel is a good example of the sort of prayer that acco
the pouring of libation that takes place on the occasion of the nam
a child:
(63) Cfr. Edwin Efa, Forosie, p. 21. The translation is taken from Peter Sar-
pong, op. cit., p. 28, with a few modifications of my own.
(64) Cfr. Edith Clarke, The Sociological Significance ot Ancestor- Worship in
Ashanti, in Africa , Journal of the International Institute of African Languages and Cul-
tures, Vol. Ill, No. IV, 1930, p. 462.
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178 THOMAS ADDAE
CONCLUSION
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 179
(70) Westermann, op. cit., as quoted by George Williamson, op. cit., pp. 97-98.
(71) Edith Clarke, in Africa , Journal of the International Institute oj African Lan-
guages and Cultures , 1950, pp. 431-470, as referred to by George Williamson, ibid.,
p. 98.
(72) J. B. Danquah, op. cit., p. 39.
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180 THOMAS ADDAE
The Ashanti, like other Akan tribes, esteems the Supreme Being and
the ancestors far above gods and amulets. . .The gods are treated with con-
tempt if they fail; it is the Supreme Being and the ancestors who are always
treated with reverence and with awe (73).
(73) K. A. Busia, The Ashanti of the Gold Coast , in African World View , 19
p. 205, as quoted by George Williamson, op. cit., p. 98.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
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SOME ASPECTS OF ASHANTI RELIGIOUS BELIEFS 181
Articles :
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182 THOMAS ADDAE
RIASSUNTO
RESUM
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