ZOMBIES
The phenomenon of zombies, the living dead, is
one of the most popular aspects of Haitian voodoo
that has created a morbid interest and has inspired
myriads of movies. Voodoo is more than the
sorcery or magic that is portrayed in movies or
literature; voodoo is a religion, cult, healing process,
and body of magical practice.
In voodoo practice, the Bokor is a sorcerer
who uses evil forces to bewitch, and he can
change a human being into a zombie. Essentially
every Hougan, who is at the same time a voodoo
priest, a doctor, and the intermediary between the
community and the spirit world, is more or less a
Bokor. In fact, the major difference between a
Hougan and a Bokor is the nature of the
bewitchment he or she performs.
To better understand the concept of zombies,
one must first understand the Haitian conception
of the duality of the soul. The n'âmm (soul) is
principally divided into two distinctive parts: the
gro bonanj ("big guardian angel") and the ti
bonanj ("little guardian angel"). The gro bonanj,
which represents the consciousness and the
personality, is a spiritual substance connected with the
world of living. When the individual passes away,
the gro bonanj survives and joins the world of lwa
(spirit) to eventually become a lwa himself. The
second part of the soul, the ti bonanj, is the
conscience or the spiritual energy of the person. This
corresponds to the individuality of each human
being and also corresponds to the individual will.
The most popular and well-documented
hypothesis concerning how a person is changed into
a zombie state is that of poison. The Bokor "work
of the left hand" possesses the knowledge to
constitute a powerful poison with a mixture of venom
like tetradoxine, which is found in several puffer
fishes. The victims sink into a state of catalepsy
and passes for dead; however, it seems that the
person is still aware of what occurs around him or
her. The person is then buried alive.
At night the Bokor comes to help the person
get out of the grave and captures the ti bonanj. He
then administers an antidote that enslaves him.
The Bokor can use the services of the zombie to
carry out work in the fields or he can sell or rent
his slave's services. This kind of zombie is the
soulless body and the victim is "deprived of will,
memory, and consciousness, speaks with a nasal
voice and is recognized chiefly by dull, glazed
eyes and an absent air" (Ackerman 1991, p. 474).
The ethnobotanist Wade Davis suggests that
zombie laborers were created to install order against
antisocial individuals.
There exists a type of zombie of the soul, a
disembodied soul of a dead person. In this case, the
sorcerer uses the gro bonanj or the ti bonanj of the
victims for magical purposes. The soul may belong
to an individual who died in an accident or the
sorcerer may use the soul of a sterile woman or
even a soul that has been captured by a magical
process and is enslaved. In any case, the soul must
be stored in a bottle or jar and then the Bokor can
either use it or sell it.
Whether myth or reality, zombies inspire an
intense fear among the peasant Haitian population.
The terror that is engendered by zombies is not the
fear that they can be evil, but the fear that one
might become one of them. In Haiti, a country that
has known a long period of slavery with the
Spanish and French colonizations until their
independence in 1804, the fear of becoming enslaved has
remained a part of their collective consciousness.
The fear of being changed into a slave for the rest
of one's life is a fear of being constrained to live
without individuality, will, and conscience.
Bibliography
Ackermann, Hans W., and Jeanine Gauthier. "The Ways and Nature of the Zombi." Journal of American Folklore 104 (1991):466–494.
Davis, Wade. The Serpent and the Rainbow. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1985.