
Candomblé (Portuguese pronunciation:[kɐ̃dõˈblɛ]) is anAfrican diasporic religion that developed inBrazil during the 19th century. It arose through a process ofsyncretism between several of the traditional religions of West and Central Africa, especially those ofthe Yoruba,Bantu, andGbe, coupled with influences fromRoman Catholicism. There is no central authority in control of Candomblé, which is organized around autonomousterreiros (houses).
Candomblé venerates spirits, known varyingly asorixás,inkice, orvodun, which are deemed subservient to a transcendent creator god,Oludumaré. Deriving their names and attributes from traditional West African deities, theorixás are linked with Roman Catholic saints. Each individual is believed to have a tutelaryorixá who has been connected to them since before birth and who informs their personality. An initiatory tradition, Candomblé's members usually meet interreiros run by amãe de santo (priestess) orpai de santo (priest). A central ritual involves practitioners drumming, singing, and dancing to encourage anorixá to possess one of their members, with whom congregants can then interact. Theorixás are given offerings such as fruit andsacrificed animals, while their will is deciphered throughdivination. Offerings may also be given to lesser spirits, includingcaboclos and the spirits of the dead, theegun. Healing rituals and the preparation of amulets and herbal remedies also play a prominent role.
Candomblé developed amongAfro-Brazilian communities amid theAtlantic slave trade of the 16th to 19th centuries. It arose through the blending of the traditional religions brought to Brazil by enslaved West and Central Africans, the majority of themYoruba,Fon, andBantu, with the Roman Catholicism of thePortuguese colonialists who then controlled the area. It primarily coalesced in theBahia region during the 19th century. FollowingBrazil's independence from Portugal, theconstitution of 1891 enshrinedfreedom of religion in the country, although Candomblé remained marginalized by the Roman Catholic establishment, which typically associated it with criminality. In the 20th century, growing emigration from Bahia spread Candomblé both throughout Brazil and abroad, while also influencing the development of another religion,Umbanda, in the 1920s. Since the late 20th century, some practitioners have emphasized a re-Africanization process to remove Roman Catholic influences and create forms of Candomblé closer to traditional West African religion.
The religion is divided into denominations, known as nations, based on which traditional African belief system has been its primary influence. The most prominent nations are theKetu,Jeje, andAngola. Candomblé is centred in Brazil although smaller communities exist elsewhere, especially in other parts of South America. Both in Brazil and abroad Candomblé has spread beyond its Afro-Brazilian origins and is practiced by individuals of various ethnicities.

Candomblé is a "neo-African"[1] or African American religion,[2] and more specifically anAfro-Brazilian religion.[3] It arose in 19th-century Brazil, where the importedtraditional African religions of enslaved West Africans had to adapt to a slave colony in whichRoman Catholicism was the official religion.[4] It is thus one of several religions that emerged in the Americas through the interaction of West African and Roman Catholic traditions, and for this reason is considered a "sister religion" of CubanSantería andHaitian Vodou.[5]
Candomblé's followers are calledpovo de santo (people of saint),[6] orCandomblecistas.[7] The termCandomblé itself probably derives from aBantu word for dances,kandombele, which also developed into the term for a dance style in Argentina and Uruguay,Candombe.[8] Another word sometimes applied to Candomblé ismacumba;[9] this generic term can be applied to Afro-Brazilian religions as a whole but is especially associated withsorcery orblack magic,[10] and thus some Candomblécistas distance themselves from it.[11]
Candomblé is not institutionalised,[12] with no central authority to determine doctrine and orthodoxy,[13] and no central sacred text.[14] It is heterogenous,[15] displaying regional variation in its beliefs and practices.[16] Each lineage or community of practitioners is autonomous,[17] approaching the religion in ways informed by their tradition and the choices of their leader.[18]
Most Candomblecistas also practice Roman Catholicism[19]—some priests and priestesses of Candomblé refuse to initiate anyone who is not abaptised Roman Catholic[20]—while other practitioners have also pursuedEvangelical Protestantism,[21]New Age practices,[22] orBuddhism.[22] Sometimes these non-Candomblist elements have been directly integrated into Candomblé itself; there are reports of a Brazilian practitioner including a statue of theMahayana Buddhist deityHotei on their altar,[23] and of a Belgian Candomblé group that incorporated characters fromWelsh andSlavic mythologies in their practice.[24] Candomblé has sometimes also been influenced bySpiritism, a French variant ofSpiritualism, although many Spiritists distinguish their religion from Afro-Brazilian traditions.[25]
Afro-Brazilian religions often mix with each other rather than existing in pure forms,[26] with many scholars viewing them on a continuum rather than as wholly discrete entities.[27] Candomblé shares the names of its deities, theorixás, withUmbanda,[28] a religion formed inRio de Janeiro in the 1920s.[29] Umbandista groups exist on a spectrum from those emphasising connections to Spiritism to those stressing links with Afro-Brazilian religions like Candomblé;[30] the anthropologist Diana Brown noted that the boundary separating Umbanda from Candomblé was largely "a matter of individual opinion".[31] Omolocô was founded in Rio de Janeiro as an intermediate religion between Candomblé and Umbanda,[32] with traditions merging these two systems sometimes labelled "Umbandomblé" by outsiders.[33] There are also other Afro-Brazilian religions rooted largely in specific regions, includingBabassuê inPará,Batuque inRio Grande do Sul, andTambor de Mina inMaranhão and Pará.[34]
Candomblé divides into traditions known asnações (nations).[35] The three most prominent areNagô or Ketu (Queto),Jeje (Gege) or Mina-Jeje, andAngola or Congo-Angola;[36] others include the Ijexá (Ijesha),[37]Egba, Efan (Ekiti)[38] and Caboclo.[37] Each derives influence from a different African language group; Ketu usesYoruba, Jeje adoptsEwe, and the Angola draws from the Bantu language group.[25] Informed by these ethno-linguistic origins, each Candomblé nation has its own lexicon, chants, deities, sacred objects, and traditional knowledge.[37] Although originating among ethnic differences, this has largely eroded over time, with members drawn to a nation for reasons other than ethnic heritage.[37]
An initiate can transfer from one nation to another, a process referred to astrocar as águas ("to change the waters").[39] Attitudes between nations can be negative; those groups which emphasise claims to "African purity" have often denigrated other nations they deem more syncretic,[40] with the Angola nation sometimes regarded as the most syncretic.[41] The Nagô nation is the largest,[42] reflecting howYoruba traditional religion became the dominant West African influence within Afro-Brazilian religions in the 19th century,[43] and even among nations other than the Nagô, Yoruba-derived terminology predominates widely.[44]
Candomblé teaches the existence of a supreme divinity calledOlorun orOlodumare.[45] This entity is regarded as the creator of everything but is thought distant and unapproachable, and thus not specifically worshipped in Candomblé.[37]

Candomblé revolves around spirits termedorixás (orishas)[47] orsantos ("saints").[48] In the Angola tradition they are sometimes termedinkice,[49] and in the Jeje traditionvodun.[50] The males are termedaborôs,[51] the femalesiabás.[52] Believed to mediate between humanity and Olorun,[53] theorixás have been varyingly conceived as ancestral figures,[54] or embodiments of forces of nature.[55] Their names may differ according to nation; in Nagô they commonly possess Yoruba names, but in the Jeje nation they are instead given Fon names.[56]
Theorixás are deemed morally ambiguous, each with their own virtues and flaws,[57] and are sometimes in conflict with each other.[58] Eachorixá is associated with specific colours, foods, animals, and minerals,[59] favoring certain offerings.[60] Eachorixá is associated with a particular day of the week;[61] the priesthood also states that each year is governed by a specificorixá who will influence the events taking place within it.[62] Their personalities are informed by a key conceptual opposition in Candomblé, that of the cool versus the hot.[63]
Oxalá is the chieforixá,[64] depicted as a frail old man who walks with apachorô sceptre as a walking stick.[65] Practitioners commonly believe that Olorun tasked him with creating humanity.[66] In some accounts, all of the juniororixás are the children of Oxalá and one of his two wives,Nanã andIemanjá.[67] This trio are associated with water; Oxalá with fresh water, Nanã with the rain, and Iemanjá with the ocean.[68] Other accounts present thiscosmogony differently, for instance by claiming that Oxalá fathered all otherorixás alone, having created the world from amingau pudding.[69] An alternative claim among practitioners is that Nanã is the grandmother of Oxalá and the mother of Iemanjá, the latter becoming both mother and wife to Oxalá.[69]

Xangô is theorixá associated with thunder and lightning;[70] one of his wives isObá, a warrior who has only one ear.[71]Ogum is theorixá of battle and of iron, often depicted with a machete;[72] his companion isOxóssi, the maleorixá of the hunt and forest.[73] Obaluaiê or Omolu is theorixá associated with infectious disease and its cure,[74] whileOsanyin is associated with leaves, herbs, and herbal knowledge.[71]Oya is theorixá of wind and storms.[75]Oxumaré is regarded as both male and female and is portrayed as a serpent or a rainbow.[76]Oxum is theorixá of love, beauty, wealth and luxury, and is associated with fresh water, fish, mermaids, and butterflies.[77] She is married to Ifa, regarded as theorixá of divination.[66]
Tempo is theorixá of time;[78] originating in the Angola nation, he is associated with trees.[41] Due to the link with trees, he is sometimes equated with the NagôorixáLoko.[41] TheorixáExú is regarded as a capricious trickster;[79] as the guardian of entrances,[80] he facilitates contact between humanity and the otherorixá,[81] thus usually being honoured and fed first in any ritual.[82] His ritual paraphernalia is often kept separate from that of otherorixás,[83] while the entrances to mostterreiros will have a clay head, decorated with cowries or nails, that represents Exú and is given offerings.[84]
Theorixás are regarded as having different aspects, known asmarcas ("types" or "qualities"),[85] each of which may have an individual name.[86] Child forms of theorixás are termederês.[87] They are deemed the most uncontrollable spirits of all, associated with obscenities and pranks.[88] The child forms oforixás have specific names; theerê of Oxalá is for instance called Ebozingo ("Little Ebô") and Pombinho ("Little Dove").[65] The material image of anorixá is called anigbá.[89]
Eachorixá equates with a Roman Catholic saint.[90] For instance, Omolu, anorixa of sickness, is often equated withSaint Lazarus the leper.[91] Oxalá has been conflated withOur Lord of Bonfim,[69] Oxum withOur Lady of the Immaculate Conception,[92] and Ogum withSt Anthony of Padua.[93] Due to his association with time, Tempo is sometimes equated with the Christian idea of theHoly Spirit.[94] In Candomblé altars, theorixás are often represented with images and statues of Roman Catholic saints.[95]
This process may have begun as a subterfuge to retain the worship of African deities under European rule,[96] although such syncretisms could have already been occurring in Africa prior to the Atlantic slave trade.[97] From the later 20th century, some practitioners have attempted to distance theorixás from the saints as a means of re-emphasising the religion's West African origins.[98] Theanthropologist Robert A. Voeks observed that it was the priesthood and more formally educated practitioners who preferred to distinguish theorixás from the saints, whereas less formally educated adherents tended not to.[99]
In Candomblé, relationships are thought rooted in reciprocal obligations,[100] andCandomblecistas see the relationship between theorixás and humanity as being one of interdependence.[101] Practitioners seek to build harmonious relationships with theorixás,[102] thus securing their protection.[103]
Candomblé teaches that everyone links to a particularorixá,[104] one that influences that individual's personality.[105] This is theirdono da cabeça:[8] the owner or master of the person's head.[106] The gender of this tutelaryorixá is not necessarily the same as their human's.[107]
The identity of a person'sorixá can be ascertained through divination,[108] and failing to know one'sorixá is sometimes interpreted as the cause of mental illness.[109] Depending on theorixá in question, an initiate may choose to avoid or to engage in certain activities, such as avoiding specific foods or wearing specific colours.[59] Some practitioners also believe in furtherorixá linked to an individual; a second is known as thejuntó,[110] while a third is called theadjuntó, thetojuntó, or thedijuntó.[111] Some believe that a person can also have a fourthorixá, inherited from a deceased relative.[112]

Another spirit group in the Candomblé worldview are theexus,[83] sometimes termedexuas when female,[113] orexu-mirims when children.[114] Deemed closer to humanity than theorixás and thus more accessible,[115] theexus are often regarded as the "slaves" of theorixás.[116] In common parlance they are often described as "devils",[117] although in Candomblé are not regarded as a force for absolute evil but rather thought capable of both good and bad acts.[115] Practitioners believe that theexus can "open" or "close" the "roads" of fate in one's life,[118] bringing about both help and harm.[119] Candomblé teaches that theexus can be induced to do a practitioner's bidding,[118] although need to be carefully controlled.[119] Theexus are recorded as having been part of Candomblé since at least the 1930s and probably arose earlier.[120]
Also present in Candomblé are thecaboclos,[121] their name probably stemming from theTupi language termkari'boka ("deriving from the white").[122] These spirits are typically those of indigenous Americans or ofboiadeiros ("cowboys" or "backwoodsmen"),[123] although in rarer casescaboclos are portrayed as being from the sea or from foreign countries.[122] Almost exclusively male,[124] thecaboclos are believed to dwell in a forest land called Aruanda,[125] and are characterised as smoking cigars and favoring beer.[126]
Thecaboclos are particularly important in the Candomblé de Caboclo nation.[127] This tradition has long been denigrated as inferior by other Candomblecistas, especially from the Nagô tradition.[40] Many practitioners reject interaction withcaboclos;[128] this is the case for those who have tried to "re-Africanize" Candomblé since the late 20th century and who tend reject thecaboclos as being of non-African derivation.[129] As a result, some Candomblecistas have veneratedorixás in theterreiro but only engaged with lesser spirits like thecaboclos in the home.[130] Where an individual has come to Candomblé via another Brazilian tradition like Umbanda, they are sometimes deemed to have broughtcaboclos orexus with them. In these instances, attempts are sometimes made to "Africanize" these spirits, ritually "seating" them in a material object, giving them an African-derived name, and then considering them a pledged slave of theorixás.[131]
Candomblé adopts its cosmology largely from Yoruba traditional religion.[132] The material world of humanity is calledaiê (oraiye);[133] the realm of the spirits is termedorun,[134] and is divided into nine levels.[135] Death is personified in the figure ofIku.[136] A person's inner head, in which their tutelaryorixá is believed to reside, is called theori.[71]
Spirits of the dead are calledeguns.[137] The recently deceased are termedaparacá;[51] after they have been "educated" by receiving sacrifices they becomebabá.[138] After death, theegun can enterorun, although the level they reach depends on the spiritual growth they attained in life.[135] Sometimes,eguns will seek to help the living but inadvertently harm them;[139] given this potential, Candomblé stresses precautions in dealing with these entities.[140] Contact with theegun is accompanied by rituals to neutralise their harmful power or pollution.[141] Thecontra-egun is an armband made of plaited raffia which is sometimes worn to ward off dead spirits.[142] Although thought possible, possession byeguns is considered rare,[143] and is generally discouraged by Candomblé groups, who deem it spiritually polluting, a viewpoint that distinguishes Candomblé from Umbanda.[144]
Candomblé teaches the existence of a force calledashe oraxé,[145] a central concept in Yoruba-derived traditions.[146] The scholar Sheila Walker describedaxé as "the spiritual force of the universe",[147] and the anthropologist Joana Bahia called it "sacred force."[148] Jim Wafer termed it "vital force",[149] while Voeks favored "vital energy".[63] Scholar of religion Paul Johnson characterised it as "a creative spiritual force with real material effects."[150]
Practitioners believeaxé can move,[149] but can also concentrate in specific objects, such as leaves, roots, and specific body parts.[151] Blood in particular is deemed to containaxé in its most concentrated form.[152] Humans can accumulateaxé, but also either lose or transfer it,[153] with this force expressed through songs, prayers, and speech.[154] Specific rituals and obligations are believed to maintain and enhance a person'saxé,[155] while other ritual acts are designed to attract or share this force.[156]Dendê, a sacred palm oil used to cook ritual meals, is considered to be a materialized form ofaxé.[157]

Candomblé generally has no fixed ethical precepts,[100] although its teachings influence the lives of Candomblecistas.[158] Rather than stressing a dichotomy between good and evil, emphasis is placed on achieving equilibrium between competing forces.[100] Problems that arise in a person's life are often interpreted as resulting from a disharmony in an individual's relationship with their tutelaryorixá;[109] harmony is ensured by following theorixá'seuó (taboos) regarding issues like food, drink, and colors.[159]
Male/female polarity is a recurring theme throughout Candomblé.[160] Many roles within the religion are gendered. For instance, animal sacrifice and the shaving of an initiate's head are usually reserved for male practitioners, while women are typically responsible for domestic duties in maintaining the ritual space.[161] Such divisions mirror broader gender norms in Brazilian society.[161] Restrictions are also placed on women while menstruating.[162] However, women can still wield significant power as the heads of theterreiros;[163] mostterreiros in Bahia are led by women.[164] Accordingly, it has been called a female-dominated religion,[165] with scholarly debates taking place over whether it can be labelled matriarchal.[166]
There is evidence that Candomblé is more accepting of sexual and gender non-conformity than mainstream Brazilian society.[167] Many gay men are followers[168]—in Rio de Janeiro manyterreiros are integrated into the city's gay social network[169]—and a pervasive stereotype associates Candomblé with gay men.[170] Homosexuals have described the religion as a more welcoming environment than Christianity,[171] and have cited stories of relationships between maleorixás, such as Oxôssi and Ossain, as affirming same-sex attraction.[168] Some practitioners have involved themselves in political causes includingenvironmentalism,indigenous rights, and theBlack Power movement.[172]
Candomblé is a practice-oriented religion;ritual correctness is considered more important than belief.[173] Rituals often focus on pragmatic issues regarding prosperity, health, love, and fecundity.[174] Those engaging in Candomblé include various initiates of varying degrees and non-initiates who may attend events and approach initiates seeking help with various problems.[175]
Candomblé is an initiatory religion,[176] one which is organized around a structured hierarchy based on initiatory status.[177] Knowledge about Candomblé's beliefs and practices is referred to as thefundamentos ("foundations"),[178] and is guarded by practitioners.[179] It makes use of secrecy,[180] and so Johnson has characterised it as asecret society.[181] African-derived terms are used in ritual contexts;[182] in general, words of Yoruba origin predominate in the Nagô nation, those from Ewe-Fon languages in Jeje nations, and words from the Bantu languages in the Angola nation.[183]

Candomblé places of worship are calledterreiros ("houses"),[184] orilês.[185] Eachterreiro is independent and operates autonomously.[186] They range in size from small houses to large compounds,[175] and also vary in terms of their wealth and fame.[187] Aterreiro's importance is generally regarded as being proportional to the number of initiates and clients that it has;[188] the greater the number of initiates, the greater its ownaxé.[147] Enmity often exists betweenterreiros,[65] especially as they compete for members,[189] with defection of individuals from one to another being common.[190]
Aterreiro may be concealed, so as not to attract unwanted attention.[179] The interior consists of a series of rooms, some off-limits to non-initiates.[80] They contain an altar to the deities, a space to perform ceremonies, and accommodation for the priests or priestesses.[175] Thebakisse is the "room of the saints", a storeroom containing both ritual paraphernalia and theassentamentos, or seated objects, of theorixás,[191] with mostterreiros offering veneration to between twelve and twenty of these spirits.[192] Another room, theroncó ("retreat room") orcamarinha, is used during initiations,[193] while thebarracão ("big shed") is where public rituals, including divination, take place.[194]Terreiros lacking abarracão may use a yard for public rites.[195] Thepeji, or shrines to deities, will often be located around the perimeter of thebarracão.[196]
The floor of theterreiro is deemed sacred, consecrated to the tutelaryorixá of the house.[197] Theterreiro will often have acumeeira, a central pole in the structure believed to link humanity's world with that of theorixás.[198] This stands above theentoto ("foundation") of theterreiro,[199] a space periodically "fed" with offerings.[200] An outdoor enclosure may have a tree dedicated to Tempo,[201] shrines to forestorixás like Oxossi and Ogun,[202] and abalé, a place set aside for the souls of the dead.[203] Plants used in rituals may also be grown in this outdoor area.[202]
Public ceremonies take place at theterreiros where both initiates and non-initiates can attend to celebrate theorixás.[204] Participants are expected to wear white; women wear skirts.[205] Ceremonies often begin long after the advertised starting time.[206] At these, food is offered to specificorixás while the rest is shared among participants, with the latter thereby gaining some of theaxé of theorixás.[204] These public rites are both preceded and succeeded by a range of private ritual acts.[204] Most of the rituals that take place at theterreiros are private and open only to initiates.[204] Walker believed that it was these that represented "the real core of the religious life of the Candomblé community."[204]

The community of aterreiro is called anegbé.[8] This is regarded as a "family",[207] its initiates being "brothers" and "sisters" in theorixás (irmãos de Santo orirmãs de santo).[208] Sexual or romantic relations betweenterreiro members is usually forbidden,[67] although it does happen.[209] Being initiated into aterreito connects an individual to the lineage of that house;[210] this lineage is linked to theaxé of theterreiro.[163] The founders of aterreiro are calledessas and their names are evoked in thepadê.[211]
A priestess running aterreiro is amâe de santo (mother of saints);[212] a priest who does so is apai de santo (father of saints).[213] Specific terms also indicate which nation a person belongs to;[214] in Nagô Candomblé, a male priest is called ababalorixá,[215] a female priestess aniyalorixá.[216] Serving as intermediaries between theorixás and humanity,[175] this priesthood is responsible for all important functions, including educating novices, adjudicating disputes, and providing healing and divination services,[217] these latter services often being their primary income.[218] Not constrained by external religious authorities,[219] these "parents of saints" often exert considerable control over their initiates.[220] The latter are expected to submit to their authority,[221] and to prostrate before them in an act called aniká;[136] however, conflicts between these "parents" and their initiates are common.[222] Aterreiro will often disband when its chief priest or priestess dies.[223]
Assisting themâe orpai de Santo is theiyakekerê ("little mother")[224] ormãe pequena,[225] and the "little father".[226] Other roles in theterreiro include theiyabase, who prepares food for theorixás,[136] and thealabê (musical director).[219] Initiates, called thefilhos (sons) andfilhas de santo (daughters of the saints), assist as cooks, cleaners, and gardeners.[217] Women initiates who do not enter trance but assist those who do are calledekedi; their male counterparts are termedogan.[227] Theogã are male members, often not initiated, whose role is largely honorific, consisting largely of contributing financially.[217]
An individual who has taken steps toward initiation but not yet undergone this process is termed anabiã orabian.[228]An initiate of less than seven years is aniaô oriyawó;[229] after seven years they may undergo thedeká ceremony and thus be regarded as anebomi, allowing them to open their ownterreiro.[230] Those who have performed seven years of initiatory rituals are calledebomi[231] orebame.[113] At the end of the seven years, they "receive thedecá" from their initiator, being given a tray of ritual objects; this enables them to go and form their own temple.[232]If another suchterreiro splinters off, it is believed that theaxé of the mother-terreiro transfers to the new one.[163]
An altar to theorixás is called apeji.[75] It contains an assemblage of objects termed theassentamento ("seat") orassento of theorixá;[233] this is regarded as the house of theorixá.[234] This usually consists of various items placed within an enamel, earthenware, or wooden vessel,[235] itself often wrapped in a cloth.[234] Theassentamento can be stored in the initiate's home,[200] or inside theterreiro'sbakisse room,[236] which is only opened by the priestess or priest in charge.[234] There, theassentamentos of the initiates may be arranged on a multi-level altar decorated with ribbons, colored lights, and flowers.[237]
The key part of theassentamento is a sacred stone known as anotá.[238] Thisotá possessesaxé,[239] and thus requires feeding.[240] Eachorixá is associated with a different kind of stone; those from the ocean or rivers are for instance linked to Oxum and Iemanjá, while those believed to have fallen from the sky are linked to Xangô.[222] Practitioners are expected to find these stones, rather than buying them, after which they will be ritually consecrated, being washed, given offerings, and "seated" in their vessel.[241] Alongside theotás, these spirit-vessels may containferramentos, or metal objects associated with specificorixás,[242] cowrie shells,[243] bracelets calledidés,[244] animal body parts,[244] hair from the initiate who keeps it,[200] statues of associated Roman Catholic saints,[237] and a mix of water, honey, and herbal preparations.[245]
Objects used in ritual are often sanctified with a herbal infusion calledamaci.[51] Ritual objects are regarded as loci and accumulators ofaxé, although the supply of this force needs replenishing at various intervals.[147] For this reason, they are given blood, to feed them with newaxé.[149] In Brazil, various stores specialise in paraphernalia required in Candomblé.[246]

Offerings to spirits are known asebós,[247] and can consist of food, drink, fowl, and money;[248] when animal sacrifice is not involved, a food offering is termed acomida seca.[8] These offerings are believed to generateaxé which then gives anorixá the power to aid their worshippers.[152] When a ceremony starts, practitioners typically provide apadé, or propitiatory offering, to theorixá Exu.[249]
As well as being offered in theterreiro, food is often placed at an appropriate landscape location; offerings to Oxum are for instance often deposited by a freshwater stream.[54] Specific foodstuffs are associated with eachorixá;[250] a mix ofokra with rice ormanioc meal, known asamalá, is considered a favourite of Xangô, Obá, and Iansã.[251] When placed in theterreiro, food is typically left in place for between one and three days, sufficient time for theorixá to consume the food's essence.[54] The ritual payment of money, often accompanying the sacrifices, is termeddinheiro do chão ("money for the floor"). As part of this, money is placed onto the floor and often splattered with blood, before being divided among the participants of the rite.[64]
Candomblé entails animal sacrifice,[252] which is calledmatanças.[217] The individual performing the sacrifice is known as anaxogun[253] (oraxogum[237]) or sometimes as afaca (knife).[217] Species typically used are chickens, guinea fowl, white doves, and goats.[254] The animal will often have its neck cut with a knife,[255] or in the case of birds, its head severed.[256] After the animal is killed, its blood is spilled onto the altar; its organs are often removed and placed around the "seat" of theorixá.[252] Following the sacrifice, is it common for divination to be performed to determine if the sacrifice has been accepted.[255] Other body parts will then be consumed by the rite's participants; the exception is if the sacrifice was foreguns, which is instead left to rot or placed in a river.[252] Some of the food may then be taken away, to be left in the forest, thrown into a body of water, or placed at a crossroads;[257] this is referred to as "suspending a sacrifice".[258] Outside Brazil, practitioners have faced challenges in performing animal sacrifice; in Germany, for instance, it is banned by law.[259]
Initiation is known asfazer cabeça ("to make the head")[8] orfazer o santo ("making the saint").[260] This is usually very expensive.[261]Initiates are known asfilhos de santo ("children of the saints").[262] At their initiation, they are given a new name, thenome de santo (saint's name), which usually indicates the identity of their tutelaryorixá.[263] Many feel that anorixá has demanded their initiation, with it being theirobrigação ("duty").[260] If a group of individuals are being initiated together, they are termed abarco ("boat").[264]
The length of the initiatory process varies between Candomblé houses but usually lasts from a few weeks to a few months.[265] The initiate is first brought to theterreiro, where they are left for a period of relaxation, thedescanso, so that they might become "cool".[266] They are dressed in white clothing,[267] and they will be given a string of beads associated with their tutelaryorixá.[59] The necklace is colored according to the latter; white for Oxalá, dark blue for Ogum, or red and white for Xangô, for instance.[268] Washed and sprinkled with the blood of a sacrificed animal,[269] these beads are sometimes believed to protect the wearer from harm.[270]
New initiates are secluded in a room in theterreiro called theroncô,[271] where they sleep on a straw mat,[272] eat only bland food,[273] and are often forbidden to speak.[273] During this period they are taught about their tutelaryorixá, such as its likes and dislikes and its associated drum rhythms and dances.[265] The time spent in isolation varies, although three weeks is typical.[274] They will be bathed in water mixed with herbs,[275] before being taken to the altar room, where drumming and singing takes place.[274] Animals are sacrificed, including a four-legged animal, and blood may be touched on the initiate's body.[276]
The initiate's head is then shaved and two cuts made into the apex of it with a razor, allowing theorixá entry into it; blood and herbs may be mixed into the wounds.[278] A cone of wax, theadoxu, may be placed on the cut to stem the bleeding;[279] the head will then be wrapped in cloth.[280] Depending on theterreiro, cuts may also be made on the initiate's tongue, back, upper arms, thighs, buttocks, and the soles of their feet.[281] With the incisions made, theorixá is "seated" within the individual's head during theassentar o santo ritual.[282]
The new initiate may be presented to the rest of the community through thesaida ceremony.[283] Along with their white clothes, their body will often be covered in white spots.[284] During this, they may be expected to give the name of themarca of their tutelaryorixá, which they are supposed to have discovered via a dream.[68] In thepanán, the initiate is symbolically re-taught mundane tasks,[256] a ritual sometimes followed by an auction in which the initiate is symbolically sold to their spouse or a member of their family, a reference to the era of slavery.[256] On the following Friday, they attend mass in a Roman Catholic church,[285] and finally, a seniorterreiro member will lead them back to their home.[256] Becoming an initiate implies a relationship of mutual responsibility between the individual and theorixás,[175] with the tutelaryorixá now forever inhabiting that individual's body.[286]Over the course of the following year, the initiate may conduct further "obligations" to build their relationship with theorixá.[287]
Candomblé includes additional, graded initiations, expected to take place one year, three years, and seven years after the original initiatory ceremony.[288] Over the course of this they are expected to learn to receive all of their tutelaryorixá.[289] In practice, many adherents cannot afford these ceremonies at the specified time and they instead take place years after.[288]

Music and dance are fundamental elements of Candomblé.[290] The drumming will often take place all night.[291] In the Nagô tradition, three main types of drum are employed, the largest being therum, the middle-sized being therumpi, and the smallest being thelé.[292] These drums are understood as living and need to be "fed".[293] The head drummer is thealabê.[294] Manyterreiros maintain that women should not be involved in this ritual drumming, although others reject this tradition.[295] In some rituals, practitioners will drink a concoction containingjurema, a mildly hallucinogenic plant, sometimes mixed with the blood of sacrificed animals.[296]
Although it is usually a dancer who becomes possessed, sometimes spectators will too.[297] A possessed person is called acavalo (horse);[298] being possessed by theorixá is deemed a privilege.[265] The state of vertigo signalling the onset of trance is known asbarravento.[138] As the trance begins, practitioners often experience a body spasm termed thearrepio ("shiver").[51] Practitioners believe that when an individual is possessed by a spirit, they have no control over the latter's actions.[299] A common way of referring to the possession isreceber ("to receive").[300] As it entails being "mounted", being possessed is regarded as being a symbolically female role,[301] and some Candomblecistas believe that becoming acavalo can turn a man homosexual.[302]
Practitioners may fully prostrate themselves before the possessed;[303] this is termed adobalé.[8] After an individual becomes possessed, they may be led into an anteroom to be dressed in clothes associated with the possessingorixá; this usually includes brightly colored dresses, regardless of the gender of those involved.[304] Those possessed by Ogun are for instance often given a metal helmet and axe, while those possessed by Oxum wear a crowd and carry a sword and theabebé fan.[305]
The style of speech adopted by the possessed will be influenced by the type of spirit believed to be possessing them.[306] Those possessed by anorixá may rarely if ever speak,[307] refusing to eat, drink, or smoke to emphasise their aristocratic disposition.[308] When they dance, it will often be stylized and controlled.[88] When they do speak, the person possessed by anorixá may deliver predictions and prophecies.[309] Those deemed to be possessed bycaboclos will often smoke cigars,[310] while those possessed by theerês child spirits may roll around the floor and squabble.[311] Once the possessing spirit departs, it is expected that the possessed person will have no memory of it.[312]

Although details of the liturgical calendar vary amongterreiros, Candomblé features a yearly cycle of festivals or feasts to theorixás.[313] These are sometimes private and sometimes open to the public.[314] These are typically held on the Roman Catholic saint's day associated with the saint linked to a particularorixá.[129] The main festival season begins in September, with the feast of Oxala, and continues through to February, when the feast of Iemanjá takes place.[313] In the Nagô nation, the Waters of Oxala ritual is performed at the start of the liturgical year; it involves bringing fresh water, sometimes from a well, to the terreiro to purify and replenish the assamentos.[313]
In some cases, Candomblé festivals have become widely popular with the public, especially those of Oxala and Iemanjá.[315] Hundreds of thousands of people congregate at the beach on Iemanjá's Day (2 February),[254] where they often load offerings to her onto boats, which then take them out into the water and cast them overboard.[316]
Amongterreiros that hold festivals for thecaboclos, this usually happens on 2 July, the day which marks Bahia's independence from Portugal.[317] Public festivals forexus are rarer.[306] The tone of the event differs depending on which spirit category is being honoured; those for theorixás have more of a fixed structure and a greater formality, while those for the caboclos are more spontaneous and have greater interaction between the spirits and the human participants.[318]
Initiates engage indivination, often as a key source of income.[319]:The most common form of divination employed is thedilogun orjogo dos buzios ("shell game"), which is performed by both men and women.[320] This entails throwingcowrie shells and drawing interpretation from their landing.[321] 16 shells are commonly thrown, with a further four to confirm the answer provided by the first throwing.[322] Each configuration of shells is associated with certainodu, or mythological stories,[323] then interpreted as having pertinence for the client's situation.[324]
Another common divinatory practice involves slicing an onion in two and dropping the pieces to the ground, drawing conclusions from the face onto which they fall;[325] alternatively a kola nut may be cut into quarters and read in the same way.[326]Ifá is another Yoruba divinatory system; however, by the start of the 21st century this was characterised as either extinct,[327] or very rare in Brazil.[328]
Healing forms an important part of Candomblé.[329] Priests and priestesses may offer healing for conditions ranging from obesity and hair loss to pneumonia and cancer;[330] in this capacity they are often calledcurandeiros.[331] In the Candomblé worldview, a person's problems may be caused by their disequilibrium with the spirit world,[332] because they are lacking inaxé and thus have an "open" body vulnerable to harmful influences,[333] or because they are being punished byorixás.[334] Alternatively, a person may be suffering because the spirit of a deceased person has attached itself to them,[335] or because another human has wished them ill,[333] either inadvertently, through themau-olhado (evil eye),[336] or through witchcraft and cursing.[332]

People with a problem often approach a priest or priestess, who will then use divination to ascertain the cause and the remedy.[337] A common first step in the healing process is thelimpeza, or spiritual cleansing.[324] This often entails an offering to a particularorixá or lesser spirit; asacudimento (leaf whipping), whereby leaves are wiped over the patient's body; or anabô (leaf bath), during which they are washed in water infused with various herbs and other ingredients.[338] If the individual's general health needs boosting, they may undergo thebori ceremony, in which food is placed on the patient's head to feed their tutelaryorixá.[287]
If anegum is thought to be troubling the person, they will often undergo the "cleansing of the body" rite.[339] In thetroca da cobeça rite, the sickness is transferred to another, especially a bird that may be wiped over the patient before being killed.[340] Healing may also necessitate the patient's initiation into the religion.[337] Staying healthy is then ensured by maintaining a state of equilibrium with theorixás, avoiding excess, and following lessons imparted in mythological tales.[332] In addition to offering these treatments, a Candomblé healer may also recommend that the patient seek help from a medical professional.[341]
Candomblé healers are often well versed inherbalism,[331] in which case they may be called amâo de ofá.[217] Herbs are deemed to containaxé which needs to be appropriately awakened:[342] leaves should be fresh, not dried,[342] and picked late at night or early in the morning to ensure maximum potency.[342] If taken from the forest, permission should be sought from the overseeingorixá and offerings left, such as coins, honey, or tobacco;[342] alternatively, healers often purchase them from thecasas de folhas ("houses of leaves") in markets.[343] Leaves may then be rubbed directly on the patient or brewed into a tea or other medicinal concoction;[344] practitioners may also producepó (powder), which may have a variety of uses, from healing to harming or attracting someone's romantic attention.[345]
Candomblecistas often wearamulets.[346] Common examples include horns or thefiga, a fist with the thumb in inserted between the index and middle finger.[347] Apatuá consists of a small cloth pouch containing various objects, plant parts, and texts.[347] Sprigs of thearruda orlaranja-da-terra plants may also be carried to protect against the evil eye.[348] Specific plants, associated with a particularorixá, are often kept by doorways to prevent the entry of negative forces.[348]
Following a senior initiate's death, theirterreiro will conduct theaxexé rituals; these transform the deceased into an ancestral spirit of theterreiro's own pantheon and ensures the dead person does not become a dangerous wandering spirit.[349] Offerings, including sacrificed animals, are given to the deceased and to accompanyingorixás during theaxexé.[350] A Roman Catholic mass will also be performed.[351]
Slavery waswidespread in West Africa; most slaves were prisoners of war captured in conflicts with neighbouring groups, others were criminals or those in debt.[352] Enslaved Africans first arrived in Brazil in the 1530s.[353] These 16th-century arrivals came largely from theGuinea coast, but by the 17th century Angola and Congo populations had become dominant.[354] Then, between 1775 and 1850, the majority of slaves were Yoruba and Dahomean, coming from theGulf of Benin, largely in what is now Benin and Nigeria.[355] After declaring itselfindependent from Portugal in 1822,[356] Brazilabolished the slave trade in 1850,[356] and thenemancipated all slaves in 1888.[357] In total, around four million Africans were transported to Brazil,[358] more than to any other part of the Americas.[359] In Brazil, they were concentrated predominantly in Bahia.[42]
On arriving in Brazil, slaves were divided into "nations" based largely on their port of embarkation.[360] This meant that Africans of different cultural backgrounds, regions, and religions were included together under a unifying term;[361] those from the Bight of Benin were for instance called "Nagô".[360] As the Yoruba and Dahomean people made up the last wave of slaves, they became numerically dominant among Afro-Brazilians and their traditional cosmology became ascendant over that of longer established communities.[362] The process of enslavement broke up the traditional links between African deities and specific regions, while also mixing deities from different peoples into a singular pantheon.[363] Of the thousands oforishas venerated in West Africa, far fewer continued to be worshipped in Brazil;[37]orisha associated with agriculture were abandoned, for instance, as slaves had little reason to protect the harvests of slave-owners.[364] By the 18th century, accounts of African-derived rituals performed in Brazil were common,[365] at which point they were referred to generically ascalundu, a term of Bantu origin.[366]
Incolonial Brazil, enslaved Africans were expected to give up their traditional religions for Roman Catholicism.[367] The Roman Catholic nature of Brazilian colonial society, which allowed for acult of saints, may have permitted greater leeway for the survival of traditional African religions than were available in Protestant-dominant areas of the Americas.[368] Many of the slaves learned to classify theirorixás in relation to the Roman Catholic saints and the calendar of saints' days.[369] There is no evidence that the slaves simply used the cult of saints to concealorixá worship, but rather that devotees understood the two pantheons as comprising similar figures with similar abilities to fix certain problems.[370] Some in the Roman Catholic Church saw the syncretisation as a positive step in the process of converting the Africans to Christianity.[371] The Christian teaching provided to enslaved Africans was often rudimentary.[372] Slave owners often believed that allowing the slaves to keep their traditional customs would expend energies that might otherwise be directed toward rebellion.[373]
Although African religions had been present in Brazil since the 16th century, the "organized, structured liturgy and community of practice called Candomblé" only arose later.[370] The earliestterreiros appeared in Bahia in the early 19th century.[374] According to what the scholar Stefania Capone called "the founding myth of Candomblé",[375] the firstterreiro was theIlê Axé Iyá Nassô Oká (also known as the Casa Branca or Engenho Velho), founded in Salvador in 1830, and from which the Nagô tradition descends.[376]
Various emancipated Yoruba began trading between Brazil and West Africa,[377] and a significant role in the creation of Candomblé were several African freemen who were affluent and sent their children to be educated inLagos.[378]
Brazil's republicanConstitution of 1891 enshrinedfreedom of religion.[379] However, Afro-Brazilian religious traditions continued to face legal issues; the Penal Code of 1890 included prohibitions on Spiritism, talismans, and much herbal medicine, impacting Candomblé.[380] The authorities continued to shut downterreiros, claiming they were a threat to public health.[381] The late 19th century saw the firstterreiros open in Rio de Janeiro, a city then seeing a rapid expansion in its population.[379] The period also saw various upper-class white Brazilians seeking out Candomblé.[382]

Candomblé became increasingly public in the 1930s, partly because Brazilians were increasingly encouraged to perceive themselves as part of a multi-racial, mixed society in the midst of PresidentGetúlio Vargas'Estado Novo project.[383] Vargas' Law Decree 1202 recognized the legitimacy ofterreiros, while the Penal Code of 1940 offered them additional protections.[384] The 1930s saw a proliferation of academic studies on Candomblé by scholars likeRaimundo Nina Rodrigues,Edison Carneiro, andRuth Landes,[385] most focusing on the Nagô tradition.[386] The growing literature, both scholarly and popular, helped document Candomblé while contributing to its greater standardisation.[387]
The religion spread during the 20th century. Growing Afro-Brazilian migration to São Paulo brought the rapid rise of Candomblé there; from virtually noterreiros until the 1960s, it had over 4000 by the century's end.[388] Some practitioners became increasingly well known; the priestessMãe Menininha do Gantois became nationally recognised.[389] Various organizations emerged to represent theterreiros, notably the Bahian Federation of the Afro-Brazilian Cults, the National Institute and Supreme Sacerdotal Organ of Afro-Brazilian Culture and Tradition, and the Conference of the Tradition and Culture of the Orixás.[223] Candomblé federations emerged in most Brazilian states,[390] representing practitioners in their dealings with the government and society more broadly.[391]
Growing links were also established with other African diasporic and West African religions. Brazilians took part in the first International Congress of Orisha Tradition and Culture inIfẹ, Nigeria in 1981; the second was held in Salvador in 1983.[392] The late 20th century saw some practitioners—most famously Mãe Stella Azevedo[393]—try to "re-Africanise" Candomblé by removing Roman Catholic elements.[394] This was an effort to attract prestige,[395] and proved popular among white middle-class practitioners who had little standing with the predominantly Afro-Brazilian Bahian Candomblé establishment.[396] Other practitioners rejected this approach, deeming Roman Catholic influences an important part of Candomblé.[397]
Candomblé was increasingly respectable by the late 20th century,[398] a situation fuelled by well-educated Afro-Brazilians embracing their cultural heritage,[399] by increased Brazilian trade with West Africa,[400] and by the growing number of intellectual and white initiates.[401] By the early 21st century, tourist literature increasingly portrayed Candomblé as an intrinsic part of Brazilian culture;[402]Varig Airlines used the tagline "Fly withAxé."[403] Conversely, the 2000s saw growing Evangelical Protestant opposition, including physical attacks on practitioners andterreiros,[404] to which Candomblecistas responded with protest marches.[405]

One census report indicated that around 1.3 percent of Brazil's population identified as Candomblé followers.[406] This likely reflects only the number of initiates, with a larger body of non-initiates sometimes attending ceremonies or consulting initiates for healing and other services.[406]
Candomblé is centred largely in and around the city of Salvador,[407] sometimes referred to as "Black Rome,"[408] and regarded by some followers as a holy city.[16] A 1997 census by the Bahian Federation of Afro-Brazilian Religions recorded 1,144terreiros in Salvador.[409] Practitioners in Rio de Janeiro and Sâo Paulo often regard Bahianterreiros as being more authentic.[313] Candomblé has also spread to other parts of South America like Argentina and Uruguay, as well as to European countries like Portugal, Spain, France, Belgium, Germany, and Italy.[410]
In Brazil, Candomblé is a largely urban phenomenon,[2] generally found among the poor,[411] with most followers being black women.[2] Membership is more diverse in southern Brazil, where there are large numbers of white and middle-class followers;[412] there are also followers amongBrazil's Japanese minority.[413] Women predominate in the Ketu nation, although men dominate the Angola and Jeje nations.[135]
Many Candomblecistas have a family link to the tradition, with their parents or other relatives being initiates.[169] Others convert to the movement without such connections, sometimes having already explored Pentecostalism, Spiritism, or Umbanda;[414] some Umbandistas feel that they can go "deeper" by moving towards Candomblé.[388] Many describe having been ill or plagued with misfortune prior to being initiated into Candomblé, having determined through divination that their ailments would cease if they did so.[415] It has been argued that Candomblé offers a sense of empowerment to the socially marginalised,[416] and has appeal for those who identify strongly with an African heritage;[169] someblack people in Germany, for instance, have been attracted to it because they feel it is more authentically African than Christianity or Islam.[57]

Candomblé has been described as a much maligned religion.[119] Practitioners have often encountered intolerance and religious discrimination:[179] their religion is given the negative labelmacumba,[417]terreiro leaders are often stereotyped as greedy and conniving,[418] andterreiros have been attacked.[419] More extreme hostile views of Candomblé have regarded it as devil worship, while milder critical views see it assuperstition that attracts the simple-minded and desperate.[420] Brazil's Roman Catholics have mixed opinions of Candomblé and the attendance of its practitioners at mass,[421] while evangelical and Pentecostal groups more uniformly target Candomblecistas as part of their "spiritual war" againstSatan.[422]
Candomblé has elsewhere been seen as "a treasured symbol of Brazilian cultural identity and an icon of African Diaspora culture and politics".[423] Various academics have sought to portray it in the best light possible to counter racist stereotypes about Afro-Brazilians.[288] Academic studies have in turn influenced the way that the religion is practiced, helping to establish "correct practice" among divergent groups;[424] manyterreiros own copies of academic studies about the religion, sometimes to convey an image of authority.[425]
Since the 1960s, Candomblé has featured in films such asThe Given Word (1962) andThe Amulet of Ogum (1974), as well as documentaries likeGeraldo Sarno'sIaô (1974).[426] It has also influenced novelists, appearing in works by writers likeJorge Amado,[427] andToni Morrison.[428] References to the religion also appeared in Brazilian popular music. For instance,Maria Bethânia andGal Costa's song "Prayer to Mãe Menininha" made it into the country's chart.[429] Objects associated with Candomblé first went on display in police museums but as the religion gained greater acceptance such material also begun to appear in museums devoted to folklore and Afro-Brazilian culture.[430] From the 1990s, practitioners began establishing their own museums within theirterreiros.[431] For instance, the bedroom of Mãe Menininha do Gantois, located in her Bahiaterreiro, was converted into a memorial in 1992 and then formally recognised as a heritage site in 2002.[432]
Due to the autonomy of each house of worship (and the moral ambiguity of the deities or divinities) some have been governed by individuals accused of emotional and psychological abuse, financial exploitation, rape, and harassment; and accused by multiple people since 2020, one individual reported that they were prevented from taking their psychiatric medicine and resolve to faith healing, which was rebutted with warnings of spiritual punishment.[433]
There were also reports of an Umbanda practitioner who presented himself doubly as a Candomblé leader, working in another terreiro; he was accused and arrested for "rape, sexual violence by fraud, sexual harassment, torture, extortion, threats and bodily harm" in 2025.[434][435]
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