ANANASI
(Various tribes) The spider. A trickster. A creator god. Something of a scoundrel,
but quite well liked. Many amusing and fanciful stories are told of him.
ANYIEWO
(Ewe) The Great Serpent who comes out to graze after the rain. The rainbow
is his reflection.
BUKU
(Various West African peoples) A sky god sometimes worshiped as a goddess.
Buku created everything, even the other gods.
DANH
also DAN AYIDO HWEDO
(Dahomey) Snake god. The Haitians know him as Dan Petro. The Rainbow Snake
who encircles the world, Danh is often portrayed with his tail in his mouth
as a symbol of unity and wholeness.
DXUI
(Bushman; to the Hottentots, TSUI; to the Xhosa and Ponda, THIXO) A creator
god. In the beginning, Dxui took the form of a different flower or plant every
day, becoming himself at night, until he had created all the plants and flowers
that exist.
ESHU
(Yoruba) A trickster. A shape-shifter, Eshu can change his form at will, and
can even seem to be both huge and small at the same time. Eshu confuses men
and drives them to madness. But Eshu also knows all human tongues and acts
as a go-between for mortals and the gods.
GUNAB
(Hottentot) The enemy of Tsui-Goab, Gunab lived under a pile of stones. Gunab
kept overpowering Tsui-Goab, but the god grew stronger after each battle.
Because he killed so many, Gunab is sometimes identified with death. Creator
of the rainbow.
GUA
(Ga tribe
of West Africa) God of thunder, blacksmiths and farmers. Gua's temples are
often found at blacksmith's forges.
KIBUKA
(Baganda) A war god sent to save the Baganda people. The king of the Baganda
asked heaven for assistance in war, and Kibuka was sent to aid them. Warned
not to have anything to do with the enemy's women, Kibuka nevertheless made
love to a woman prisoner. Unwisely, Kibuka confided in her, and after escaping
she told the enemy how Kibuka could be killed, by firing arrows into the cloud
where he was hiding. Kibuka flew off to a tall tree to die, and a temple was
built at the place where his body was found.
LEZA
(Central Africa) "The One Who Besets." Known to a number of peoples,
Leza is the Supreme God who rules the sky and send wind and rain. Leza sits
on the backs of all people, and no one ever breaks free of him. Leza is said
to be growing old and so does not hear prayers as well as he once did.
MAWU-LISA
(Ewe) The great god and goddess of the sun and moon. Lisa is the sun and Mawu
is the moon.
MULUNGU
(East Africa) God, the Supreme Being. The concept of a supreme being and creator
is nearly universal in Africa, although there are few temples to him. The
titles which Africans have given God are wondrous in their variety. A few
of these are: Creator, Moulder, Giver of Rain and Sunshine, He Who Brings
the Seasons, He Who Thunders, Ancient of Days, the First, the Limitless, the
One Who Bends Even Kings, the One You Meet Everywhere, the Firelighter, Great
Mother, Greatest of Friends, the Kindly One, the Providence Who Watches All
Like the Sun, the Great Pool Contemporary of Everything, the Great Spider,
the One Beyond All Thanks, the Bow in the Sky, the Angry One, the Inexplicable.
NANAN-BOUCLOU
(Ewe) The original god of the Ewe tribe, both male and female, Nanan-Bouclou
is much too remote for worship. In Haiti Nanan-Bouclou is remembered as the
god of herbs and medicines.
'NGAI
(Masai) Creator god. At birth, 'Ngai gives each man a guardian spirit to ward
off danger and carry him away at the moment of death. The evil are carried
off to a desert, while the good go to a land of rich pastures and many cattle.
NYAME
(Ashanti) Supreme God of Heaven, both the sun god and the moon goddess. Nyame
created the three realms: the sky, the earth and the underworld. Before being
born, souls are taken to Nyame and washed in a golden bath, Nyame gives the
soul its destiny and places some of the water of life in the soul's mouth.
The soul is then fit to be born.
NYASAYE
(Maragoli, Kenya) Chief god of the Maragoli. Spirits aid Maragoli's work,
and they are represented by round stones circling a pole which represents
the god.
NZAME
(Fan people of the Congo) A vague and shadowy god whose likeness can't be
captured in wood, stone or metal. Nzame lived on earth with his three sons,
Whiteman, Blackman and Gorilla. Blackman, Gorilla and all their kinfolk sinned
against Nzame, and so Nzame took all his wealth and went to live with his
son Whiteman in the west. Gorilla and his kin went to live in the jungle.
Without the wealth, power and knowledge of Nzame, Blackman and his kin live
a hard life of poverty and ignorance, ever dreaming of the western land where
dwells Nzame and his favored son, Whiteman.
SAGBATA
(Dahomey; to the Yoruba, SHAGPONA) God of smallpox. Sagbata's shrines were
painted with a design of small spots. Sagbata's priests fought small pox with
both prayers and medical knowledge, and wielded great power over the people
because they had learned how to use dried scabs both to immunize themselves
against the disease and to spread it. Smallpox was considered a great disgrace
and its victims were ostracized.
TANO
(Ashanti) The second oldest son of God, and god of the river of the same name.
The gods of the other rivers and families in the same region are all his family.
Long ago Tano lost a singing match with Death. Tano and Death sang defiance
to each other for over a month, but neither could win so they had to compromise.
When someone is injured or falls ill, whichever god arrives first will claim
him. If Tano arrives first, the person will live, but if Death arrives first
the patient is lost.
TSUI'
GOAB (Hottentots)
"Wounded Knee," "Father of Our Fathers." A rain god who
lives in the clouds, a great chief and magician. Tsui' Goab made the first
man and woman from rocks. Several times Tsui' Goab died and rose again, to
great joy and feasting. Men invoke Tsui' Goab with the first rays of dawn
and give oaths in his name.
UNKULUNKULU
(Zulu) "Old, Old One." Unkulunkulu was both the first man and the
creator, a god of the earth who had no traffic with the heavens. Unkulunkulu
showed men how to live together and gave them knowledge of the world in which
they lived.
YO
(Dahomey) A trickster, neither god nor human. Yo's greed constantly gets him
in trouble. Mawu created him for no good reason. Yo is everywhere. You can't
kill him, you can't eat him, you can't get rid of him at all. Yo is the only
one of his kind. One is enough.