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Sacred food as offering

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Short description: Concept within anthropology
Buddhist offering table with fruits, meat, rice, confectionery, flowers and candles at Bangkok City Pillar Shrine, Thailand.

Sacred food as offering is a concept within anthropology regarding the study of food as it relates to religious ritual.

Many religions have prescriptions about the correct preparation and cooking of food, besides the taboos about forbidden subjects. Many religions have special spellings for the food, which sacralize it and, therefore, who will eat it; but there are foods sacred by its inner nature. In Brazilian Candomblé by example, fish are sacred for their connection to Iemanjá, horns given the relation to Iansã. Consequently, those foods are considered offerings. This takes place in other religions too.

Examples

Some examples include:

In Mandaeism, there are multiple types of ritual meal offerings:[1]

  • Lofani (most common type of ritual meal offering and does not need to be performed by a priest)
  • Zidqa brikha (must performed by priests)
  • Dukrana (for commemorating the dead)
  • Pan de muerto (for commemorating the dead in México)

See also

References

  1. Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen (2002). The Mandaeans: ancient texts and modern people. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515385-5. OCLC 65198443. 





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