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Spiritism (term)

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First appearance of the term "Spiritism" in French literature. The Spirits' Book, p. 1, April 1857.

The term "Spiritism" (French: Spiritisme) emerged as a neologism created by the French educator Hippolyte Léon Denizard Rivail (known as Allan Kardec) to specifically name the body of ideas systematized by him in "The Spirits' Book" (1857).[1][2][3][4] Due to the existence of several commonalities, the terms "Spiritism" and "Spiritualism" have often been inappropriately used as synonyms.

The terms "Kardecist" and "Kardecism" are incorrect because the suffix "'ism'" implies ownership or creation. Since the Doctrine was organized (codified) by Allan Kardec, he is not the creator or founder of Spiritism (spirit+ism), but the codifier. Spiritism is universal, just like the spirits, so these terms are incorrect when referring to the Spiritist Doctrine. Those who follow the Spiritist Doctrine are called "Spiritists" and their practice is called "Spiritism".[5] Therefore, those who follow the teachings codified by Allan Kardec in the Fundamental works are simply called "Spiritists," without the addition of "Kardecist" or "Kardecism."

These expressions arose from the need of some to distinguish "Spiritism" (as originally defined by Kardec) from Afro-Brazilian cults like Umbanda. The latter, discriminated against and persecuted at various times in recent Brazilian history, began to self-identify as "Spiritists" (at one point with the support of the Brazilian Spiritist Federation),[6] in an attempt to legitimize and consolidate this religious movement due to the proximity of certain concepts and practices in these doctrines. However, more orthodox followers of Kardec did not like to see their practice associated with Afro-Brazilian cults, leading to the term "Kardecist Spiritist" to distinguish them from those who came to be called "Umbanda Spiritists." This is completely incorrect because a Spiritist is someone who follows the Spiritist codification, which does not apply to Umbanda, which has its own doctrine.

Meanings of the term

Spiritism

Allan Kardec

The term is most commonly employed in relation to Spiritism (also known as Spiritist Doctrine or popularly as Kardecism), a set of principles and laws codified by Allan Kardec in the mid-19th century.[7] It refers to a doctrine that deals with the "nature, origin, and destiny of Spirits, as well as their relations with the corporeal world and the moral consequences that arise from it."[8] It is based on the manifestations and teachings of Spirits.[9] The Spiritist Codification is systematized in the following works published by the French educator Hippolyte Léon Denizard Rivail, under the pseudonym Allan Kardec: The Spirits' Book (1857), The Mediums' Book (1861), The Gospel According to Spiritism (1864), Heaven and Hell (1865), and The Genesis According to Spiritism (1868).[10] Spiritism is also understood as a doctrine with scientific, philosophical, and religious aspects aimed at the moral improvement of humankind, believing in the possibility of communication with spirits through mediums.[11] Therefore, it is a branch of spiritualism with its own characteristics and identity. As a result, all followers of Spiritism are spiritualists, but not all spiritualists are Spiritists.

Spiritualism

Various philosophical and/or religious doctrines that have as their basic foundation the affirmation of the existence of the spirit (or soul) as the primary element of reality,[12] as well as its autonomy, independence, and primacy over matter,[13] referring to doctrines that are contrary to materialism and have existed for thousands of years.

Modern Spiritualism

In the United States, the United Kingdom, and other English-speaking countries, the term "spiritism" has commonly been used synonymously with Modern Spiritualism.

During the 19th century, before the advent of Spiritist Doctrine, a variety of manifestations of incorporeal entities spread throughout the world. According to modern spiritualists, such psychic phenomena are as old as mankind itself.[14] However, the growing media attention to psychic phenomena in that century, especially in Europe and the United States, drew the interest of numerous investigators of the time, leading to this movement becoming known as "Modern Spiritualism." Spiritism is closely related to this movement because it attracted the attention of various researchers, among whom the French educator Hippolyte Léon Denizard Rivail stood out. His attempt was to systematize the practices of modern spiritualism into a consistent philosophical system, as the movement was disorganized.[15] However, it is necessary to highlight some points regarding the significance. Spiritism emerged in 1857 with the publication of The Spirits' Book and represents a codified and structured doctrine. Modern Spiritualism does not have a specific date of origin since it is a movement, and various individuals are considered its founders.[16][17][18][19] In the United States, since its early appearance, Spiritism has more commonly been referred to as synonymous with Modern Spiritualism.[20]

Modern Anglo-Saxon Spiritualism

In the English-speaking world, there is also a well-known distinction between what is commonly referred to as "Latin Spiritism" and "Anglo-Saxon Spiritism" (the latter being particularly composed of the English and American populations).

This division of the term Spiritism arose as a consequence of the number of people who started using the designation of "Spiritists," as there were disagreements regarding reincarnation within both groups.

Allan Kardec addresses this issue in the Revue Spirite of 1864, in the chapter "The American Spiritist School.":[21]

Arthur Conan Doyle, who addressed the issue in his book "The History of Spiritualism - From Swedenborg to the Early 20th Century,"[22] published in London in 1926, was Honorary President of the International Spiritualist Federation, President of the Spiritist Alliance of London, and President of the British College of Psychic Science in the 19th and 20th centuries. He was British and believed in reincarnation:

Another example is illustrated by the V International Congress of Barcelona, 1934, which established that:

However, in France, "Anglo-Saxon Spiritism" is commonly referred to as "Modern Anglo-Saxon Spiritualism" (in French: Spiritualisme Moderne Anglo-Saxon). This substitution finds support in reality since Spiritism was a term coined by Allan Kardec and based on five fundamental works in which the idea of reincarnation is present.[24][25][26] While Modern Spiritualism specifies the set of mediumistic manifestations that spread in the 19th century, in some cases, with their own identity. This was the reason for the emergence of the designation Modern Anglo-Saxon Spiritualism.[27] The compound word "Anglo-Saxon" was added to specify certain beliefs adopted by modern spiritualists from English-speaking countries.[28]

Afro-Brazilian religions

In Brazil, the term "Spiritism" has historically been used as a designation by some houses and associations of Afro-Brazilian religions, and their members and attendees define themselves as "spiritists," particularly Umbanda, such as the current Congregação Espírita Umbandista do Brasil based in the state of Rio de Janeiro.[29] The Umbandists, discriminated against and persecuted at various moments in the recent history of Brazil, began to self-identify as spiritists (at some point with the support of the Brazilian Spiritist Federation[6]), in an attempt to legitimize and consolidate this religious movement, due to the existing proximity between certain concepts and practices of these doctrines. However, more orthodox followers of Kardec did not like to see their practice associated with Afro-Brazilian cults, thus giving rise to the term "Kardecist spiritist" to distinguish them from those who came to be called "Umbanda spiritists."


During the Brazilian Empire, the 1824 Constitution expressly established that the official religion of the State was Catholicism.

In the last quarter of the 19th century, with the diffusion of spiritist ideas and practices in the country, clashes were recorded not only in the press, but also at the legal and police level, particularly in 1881, when a commission of personalities linked to the Brazilian Spiritist Federation met with the Chief of Police of the Court and subsequently with Emperor D. Pedro II, and after the Proclamation of the Brazilian Republic, now under the Penal Code of 1890, when Bezerra de Menezes wrote to the then President of the Republic, Marshal Deodoro da Fonseca, in defense of the rights and freedom of spiritists.
Other moments of tension would be registered during the Estado Novo period, particularly in 1937 and 1941, leading to a kind of syncretism in the practice of Afro-Brazilian cults under the name "Spiritism," as it had done with Catholicism during the colonial era.

Regarding Umbanda, which emerged in 1908 in the state of Rio de Janeiro, the position of the Brazilian Spiritist Federation throughout history was ambiguous:


For example, the decision of the Federative Council of the Brazilian Spiritist Federation, in October 1926, concluded:


This stance changed in the 1940s, particularly with the recognition of Umbanda as a religion by the National Congress in 1945:


During this period, the social acceptance of the belief became increasingly widespread, as demonstrated when amendments to the Brazilian Penal Code were enacted in 1949, excluding the term "Spiritism" and maintaining only the offenses of "quackery" and "charlatanism" as serious crimes.[30]

FEB even published in 1953, in its official organ, that Umbandists could be considered "spiritists" with the following argument: "Based on Kardec, we can say: anyone who believes in spirit manifestations is a spiritist; now, Umbandists believe in them, so Umbandists are spiritists."[31] This reasoning caused controversy at the time. Years later, in 1958, the Second Brazilian Congress of Journalism and Spiritist Writers opposed considering Umbandists as spiritists. Two decades later, in February 1978, the same Reformador published that the designation of "spiritists" by Umbandists was "improper, abusive, and illegitimate".

In practice, briefly, the similarities between the practice of Umbanda and the Spiritist Doctrine are: communication between the living and the dead, both admitting the survival of the so-called "spirit" after death; the evolution of the spirit through successive lives (reincarnation); the atonement, which can be through pain and suffering, for past transgressions; and the practice of charity.[32]

Practitioners of Candomblé.

On the other hand, the main differences lie in Umbanda's acceptance of: liturgical ceremonies such as baptism and marriage; the presence of images in their rituals; the use of plants in their rituals; and the music of the pontos cantados for the entities.[33] In summary, any ritual or external worship differs from Spiritism, which does not have them. Afro-Brazilian cults are, therefore, distinct currents from spiritualism.[34]

Of all the Afro-Brazilian religions, the one closest to the Spiritist Doctrine is a segment (line) of Umbanda known as "White Umbanda," which has little connection with Candomblé, Xambá, Xangô of Recife, Tambor de Mina, or Batuque.

Regarding Candomblé specifically, it believes in the survival of the soul after physical death (the Egums) and in the existence of ancestral spirits who, when divinized (the Orishas, collectively worshipped), do not materialize; when not divinized (the egunguns), they materialize in proper attire to be in contact with their descendants (the living), singing, speaking, giving advice, and providing spiritual assistance to their community. The concept of "materialization"[35] in Candomblé is different from the concept of "incorporation" in Umbanda or the Spiritist Doctrine. In principle, the Orishas only appear during ceremonies and obligations to dance and be honored. They do not provide consultations to the attending public but may occasionally communicate with family members or members of the house to deliver a message to a child. Normally, the Orishas express themselves through the Ifá oracle (divination).

In Candomblé, the purpose of rituals during initiation ceremonies is to ward off any spirits or influences, using Ifá to monitor their presence. The ceremony only takes place when Ifá confirms the absence of Egums in the seclusion environment. Spirits are worshipped in separate houses within Candomblé houses and are honored daily since they, like Exu, are considered protectors of the community.

References

  1. "Centre National de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales - Etymologie du Spiritisme". French Ministry of Higher Education and Research. http://www.cnrtl.fr/etymologie/spiritisme. Retrieved 2012-09-28. 
  2. "Spiritism/Kardecism". University of Cumbria. Archived from the original on 2010-11-25. https://web.archive.org/web/20101125150129/http://philtar.ucsm.ac.uk/encyclopedia/latam/kardec.html. Retrieved 2012-06-29. 
  3. Barsa Electronic Encyclopedia - version 1.11 - CD - Encyclopaedia Britannica of Brazil Publications Ltd.
  4. Moreira-Almeida, Alexander (2008).Allan Kardec and the development of a research program in psychic experiences. Proceedings of the Parapsychological Association & Society for Psychical Research Convention. Winchester, UK. p. 138.
  5. "Esclarecimentos sobre o que é o Espiritismo". ipepe.com.br. Archived from the original on 2010-05-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20100514100910/http://www.ipepe.com.br/esclarecimentos.htm. Retrieved 13 April 2010. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 See: Sad episode occurred in 1953 Accessed on June 14, 2008.
  7. Encarta Encyclopedia, 1993-2001. Microsoft Corporation. Version 11.0.0.0816
  8. KARDEC, A. What is Spiritism. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: FEB, 1859. ISBN 978-85-7328-113-2. Definition by the author himself (Allan Kardec).
  9. "Larousse Dictionary - Entry "Spiritisme"". http://www.larousse.fr/dictionnaires/francais/spiritisme/74242. Retrieved 2012-09-28. 
  10. -The Spirits' Book- Published in 1857. -The Mediums' Book- Published in 1861. -The Gospel According to Spiritism - Published in 1864. -Heaven and Hell- Published in 1865. -The Genesis According to Spiritism - Published in 1868
  11. Houaiss Electronic Dictionary of Portuguese Language 3.0. Objetiva Ltda. 2009. .
  12. Merriam-Webster. "SPIRITUALISM, definition" (in English) (web). Encyclopædia Britannica Company. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/spiritualism. Retrieved 2012-12-15. "1. the view that spirit is a prime element of reality; 2.(a) belief that spirits of the dead communicate with the living usually through a medium, 2.(b) a movement comprising religious organizations emphasizing spiritualism" 
  13. Houaiss Electronic Dictionary of the Portuguese Language - CD - version 1.0.5
  14. "Jarrow SNU Spiritualist Church: The History of Modern Spiritualism". Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20141129090717/http://www.jarrowsnuchurch.btik.com/TheHistoryofModernSpiritualism. Retrieved 2013-09-15. 
  15. Brazilian Spiritist Federation (FEB): History of Spiritism
  16. "The Spiritualists' National Union". Archived from the original on 2013-10-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20131010002216/http://www.snu.org.uk/index.html. Retrieved 2013-09-15. 
  17. "The Spiritualists' National Union: The Pioneers of Modern Spiritualism - The Fox Sisters". Archived from the original on 2013-12-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20131207052114/http://www.snu.org.uk/spiritualism/pioneers/fox_sisters.html. Retrieved 2013-09-15. 
  18. "The Spiritualists' National Union: The Pioneers of Modern Spiritualism - Emma Hardinge Britten". Archived from the original on 2013-12-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20131207051731/http://www.snu.org.uk/spiritualism/pioneers/eh_britten. Retrieved 2013-09-15. 
  19. "The Spiritualists' National Union: The Pioneers of Modern Spiritualism - Andrew Jackson Davis". Archived from the original on 2012-08-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20120817021450/http://www.snu.org.uk/spiritualism/pioneers/ajdavis. Retrieved 2013-09-15. 
  20. IFRES - Institut Français De Recherche Et D'Experimentation Spirite: Le Spiritisme
  21. Revista Espírita de 1864
  22. The History of Spiritualism - From Swedenborg to the Early 20th Century
  23. Arthur Conan Doyle - excerpt from the website of the FEB
  24. Reincarnation is present in The Spirits Book, the first book of the Spiritist Codification; Chapter 4 - Plurality of Existences - Part Two - The spirit world or world of spirits
  25. Reincarnation is present in The Gospel According to Spiritism, the third book of the Spiritist Codification; Chapter 4 - No one can see the kingdom of God unless they are born again
  26. On Allan Kardec's tomb in Paris, there is an inscription that summarizes the Spiritist view on the subject: 'To be born, die, be reborn yet again, and progress without cease, such is the law' (the quote is also found in the book -What is Spiritism? - Published by Allan Kardec in 1859)
  27. Regarding the reasons for not adopting the principle of reincarnation by several American spiritualists, Allan Kardec wrote an article in the May 1884 edition of his Revue Spirite, entitled "The American Spiritist School"
  28. Reincarnation is part of the basic tenets of Spiritism, to the extent that several concepts of Spiritist doctrine would be contradictory without it. See -Works by Allan Kardec- -Reincarnation- -Necessity of Reincarnation- These references address the Spiritist view on reincarnation. (KARDEC, Allan. The Spirits Book. Translated by Evandro Noleto Bezerra. 2nd ed. Rio de Janeiro: FEB, 2010, question 132, p.147)
  29. GIUMBELLI, Emerson. "Kardec in the Tropics". in Revista de História da Biblioteca Nacional, year 3, no. 33, June 2008, pp. 14-19. - "Even though it encompasses Catholic, African, and occult elements, Umbanda was constituted as a form of Spiritism. This is indicated by the first books that identified the new religion. Its mentors established the Espírita Federation of Umbanda in 1939, and in 1941 they held the First Brazilian Congress of Umbanda Spiritism."
  30. GIUMBELLI, Emerson. "Kardec in the Tropics". in Revista de História da Biblioteca Nacional, year 3, no. 33, June 2008, pp. 14-19.
  31. Reformador, July 1953, p. 149.
  32. CARNEIRO, 1996:21.
  33. Op. cit., pp. 21-22.
  34. "Spiritism and Spiritualism". Archived from the original on 2013-09-15. https://web.archive.org/web/20130915215248/http://www.espirito.org.br/portal/doutrina/espiritismo-e-espiritualismo.html. Retrieved 2013-09-18. 
  35. Materialização de Egungun in Yorubana.com.br, Accessed on November 2, 2011.





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