"Roots of Faith, Roots of Freedom" provide Oakland’s African American community with opportunities to promote healing through a series of observances that honor the history of slavery and emancipation.
Using traditional song and movement, the history of African Americans is linked to Africa by means of Lucumi and Ifa spiritual practices whose roots are found in West African religious practice. Public presentations and ritual observances take place during Black History Month; Juneteenth commemoration which marks the emancipation of slaves by Abraham Lincoln; the Maafa observance held in the fall to commemorate the tragedy of the passage of slave ships to the new world; and Watch Night, an African American ritual derived by a similarly named observance of Methodists. In the African American tradition, Watch Night represented a somber possible last time a slave family might be together before someone was sold to pay a landowner’s debt after Christmas time. |