New Exhibition: Sacred Arts of Orisha Traditions

Axe for the oricha Changó

Orisha religions are a world-wide network of spiritual traditions originating among the Yoruba people of Nigeria and spread across the Americas by enslaved Yoruba men and women in the nineteenth century. Orishas themselves are spiritual powers associated with royal lineages, forces of nature, and, often, the saints of popular Catholicism.

Sacred Arts of Orisha Traditionsfeatures objects collected over nearly forty years by Joseph M. Murphy, the Paul and Chandler Tagliabue Distinguished Professor of Interfaith Studies and Dialogue. For devotees of Orisha religions, these items represent and invoke sacred powers as emblems of particular Orishas. They illustrate the religious pluralism which is a distinctive and creative feature of many Orisha religions.

The creativity revealed by these objects reflects the diversity of the Catholic experience and its embrace of dialogue among religious traditions. The exhibition will be available for viewing through September 30.