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The Kongo Conception of the World

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2024

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One of the most remarkable features of the Church’s life today is its persistent and widespread effort to return to the springs of that life. In every domain—biblical, liturgical, catechetical—there is a desire to rediscover the sources in their freshness, to re-animate the Church with the primitive vitality, and power which enabled it to reach out all over the world. So far as biblical studies go, this effort finds one concrete expression in archaeological and anthopological research into the history of the Jewish people. The object of this research, as Fr Joseph Bourke, o.p., suggested in his recent ‘Survey of Old Testament Studies’ in this review, is to reconstruct the ‘living context’ in which the Old Testament traditions were originally formulated.

It is remarkable to find that this concern for the revival of the past also exists in the African continent. Anthopologists in Africa are more and more interested in the study of African culture, and particularly African religion and ritual, not in order to reject them but to re-discover virgin Africa. Seized by the passion for négritude, this movement to renew negro-African culture, occurs just at the moment when Africa is opening out into modern life, and seeks to advance but realizes it cannot do so without returning to the authentic roots of its history.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1962 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 These movements have been widely described by Efraim Andersson, ‘Messianic Popular Movements in the Lower Congo’. Studia Ethnographica Upsaliensia. XIV, Upsala 1958.

2 This division is a schematical one and only helps to facilitate understanding, for Nzambi, for example, as we shall see, is not a part of the world at all.

3 ‘Earthly’s is not to be taken in opposition to ‘heavenly’. I use this term only to make the difference between the village of living people and the village of dead men.

4 The African family is more wide than the European: all near relations, as uncle, cousins, etc., also belong to the family.

5 I speak of the common estate as far as the main boundaries are concerned. Inside these boundaries there may be found other divisions. Among the ba- Kongo property is a complicated thing. See Karl Laman who gave a chapter to Ownership (among the Kongo), in his book: ‘The Kongo’. Studia Ethnographica Upsaliensia. VIII. T.II, Chap. 6. Upsdala 1957.