| 1. | Haitian Vodoun Culture | | | Excerpts from the encyclopedic work on Haitian Vodoun compiled by Estelle Manuel. Vèvès, Langaj, samples of drum rhythm, and a catalogue of over 2000 songs. www.geocities.com |
| 2. | Vodun (a.k.a. Voodoo) | | | Historical and practical information on Vodoun, its panteon, and its rituals, from religioustolerance.org www.religioustolerance.org |
| 3. | Voodoo Pages | | | Information on New Orleans Voodoo, with lots of original photos of New Orleans historic cemeteries. Includes extensive references with commentary and links to other New Orleans web sites. www.geocities.com |
| 4. | Temple of Yehwe Home Page | | | Website for the Vodou temple, which is located in Washington D.C., and is an offshoot of Le Peristyle de Mariani, founded in 1974 in Mariani, Haiti, by Max-G. Beauvoir. Site includes much information about Caribbean herbology, as well as upcoming events and seminars, photos, and a discussion forum. www.vodou.org |
| 5. | The New Orleans Voodoo Foundation | | | Excellent educational resource about New Orleans Voodoo. Contains an extensive Voodoo Glossary,Vever Drawings, FAQ page, and a free service in which email questions are answered by Authentic practitioners. www.voodooshop.com |
| 6. | Afrocentric Experience: Origins of Voodoo | | | Voodoo is a derivative of the world's oldest known religions which have been around in Africa since the beginning of human civilization. Some estimate these civilizations and religions to be over 10,000 years old. This page is part of the large and multifaceted Afrocentric Experience web site. www.swagga.com |
| 7. | Dahomean Vodoun | | | The world's oldest Vodoun tradition alive in the diaspora. www.mamiwata.com |
| 8. | Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou | | | to the exhibit hosted by the American Museum of Natural History, in New York, from October 1998 to January 1999. Dozens of full-color images. www.amnh.org |
| 10. | Profile of a Belief System -- Vodoun | | | Introduction to Haitian Vodoun and New Orleans Voodoo by Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance and the editors ofÊthe e-zine PorchNus. members.aol.com |
| 13. | The traditional religion of Vodun (Voodoo) in Haiti | | | Collection of scholarly and informative documents, by various authors, on the history and practice of Vodun (Voodoo) in Haiti; part of an even larger site on Haitian history in general. www.hartford-hwp.com |
| 14. | New Orleans Voodoo Spiritual Temple Homepage | | | temple, run by Priestess Miriam Chamani. This temple is influenced by African-American Spiritualism, and Belizean Obeah, as well as by Haitian Vodou. www.voodoospiritualtemple.org |
| 16. | Vodou Spirit - Website of Kay Aboudja in New Orleans | | | Homepage for Kay Aboudja, a traditional house of Vodou, headquartered in New Orleans, LA. Content of the site includes articles on contemporary Vodou practice in the US, links, annotated reading lists and descriptions of Vodou services. www.vodouspirit.com |
| 17. | Vodoun (Voodoo) | | | Brief description of Vodoun as practiced in Benin, by a student of Martine de Souza [Research Manager of The Historic Museum of Ouidah, Benin]. Page also includes photos and artwork. home.online.no |
| 18. | Vodou, voodoo, and western cultural anxieties | | | Academic article by John Cussans about the misrepresentations of Vodou in the Western media. Originally presented as a lecture at the October Gallery, London, in fall 2000. haitisupport.gn.apc.org |
| 19. | Gede.org | | | Small but well-designed site which features pages of information about some of the major Vodou lwa, and also reviews of books about Vodou. www.gede.org |
| 20. | Windows on Haiti: Wisdom and Beauty in Haitian Vodou | | | Essay by Dr. Marie-José Alcide Saint-Lot, a scholar of Haitian popular culture with graduate degrees from Brooklyn College and CUNY. This paper first presented at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. haitiforever.com |
| 22. | Enroute to Guinea | | | Discussion forum for Haitian Vodou. Also features archives of essays, Haitian recipes, images of saints and herbal information. Best viewed with MS Internet Explorer. groups.msn.com |
| | |