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 Part 3

                                                         THE  CONCEPT  OF  GOD  

A lot has been written by the foreign missionaries and others, about and on the Kunama   people's  beliefs, their concept of a supernatural being  (God),  their remembrance, veneration of  and communications with their deceased akins.

Both the missionaries and all those other people who had attempted to study, tried to understand and  explain the Kunama  "belief in the existence of a supernatural ruling power",  categorized them as  PAGANS  or practicing  NATURAL  RELIGIONS  like:

ANIMISM,

SPIRITUALISM  and

 MONTHEISM  associated with the major religions:

JUDAISM

CHRISTIANITY  and

ISLAM

Leaving aside those Kunama people who, somehow, came in contact with and adhered to the doctrines of the three chief religions of the world, we would like to restrict our considerations only on the beliefs of the ordinary Kunama who, we think, had never been influenced by the teachings of those three religions.

The category of the Kunama on which our research on  "Kunama beliefs" is based are mainly the elderly Kunama as we consider them to be the  "depositary"  of our historical, social, cultural and religious values.

Though at times, it may appear to be a vague idea, any elderly Kunama  professes to have the notion of a  "superior being"  who has created and controls the world and whatever is in it.

This  "superior being"  is called  "ANNA = GOD".

To him the Kunama attribute also all events taking place on human beings, animals and objects.

"ANNA"  sustains the world and regulates everything in it.

He knows and judges  "good and bad".

       Taking the theory that the Kunama practice  "NATURAL  RELIGIONS"  in the sense that their  "religion and ethics are based on reason  (contrasted with religion from divine revelation)",

one could argue that the Kunama notion of  "ANNA"  is not a fruit of philosophical speculations and conclusions but of a simple sense of the existence of a  "superior power"  who had created  and keeps him in life.

The Kunama sense of morality is based simply on the consciousness that  ANNA  knows and judges good and bad.

The simplest form of notion of God the Kunama, very often, express is whenever they say:  "ANNAM  KOSKE"  meaning  "God exists, sees and judges".    

      If a  "PAGAN"  is a  "person who is not a believer in any of the chief religions of the world",  such a deinition does neither deny nor exclude that a person could independently believe in the same  "superior being"  whether he is called:  Anna, Eloi, God or Allah and whether his doctrine is simply innerly felt or revealed and contained in the  Torah, Bible or Kuraan.

If, however, the term  "pagan"  implies a person totally ignorant of and feeling free from any kind of dependence from a  "superior being", then the Kunama cannot be considered as such as they admit the existence of  "Anna"  influencing on their lives.

Besides, as the Latins used to state,  "timor fecit deos"  meaning,  "fear created/produced gods",  one has to point out that, whenever a human being somehow feels threatened or afraid of the natural forces, he or she automatically appeals to and asks for help and protection from  

that  "superior power"  who, after all, has a total control over those natural forces.  

"MONOTHEISM"  is defined as a "doctrine which sustains that there is only one God".

  Taking into consideration their notion and admission of one  "Anna"  to whom all powers are attributed,  the Kunama people are to be recognized as only "monotheists".

      Very often and for a considerable length of time, the Kunama people had been referred to as  "ANIMISTS"  in the sense that they  "believe that all objects have souls".

This theory has no foundation whatsoever in Kunama beliefs as they have a clear idea of and are able to differentiate the  "animate"  beings from the  "inanimate"  objects.

Due to their belief in the existence of human souls the Kunama infact, remember and revere their deads. They infact, sustain that though  the  "body dies, the human soul lives on".

On the other hand, there are no proofs of Kunama paying their respects to dead animals or destroyed objects.

      Many writers on Kunama beliefs have often been unable to distinguish the "SPIRITUALISM"  practiced by a certain group of Kunama women and the veneration and the deep respect the Kunama people in general pay to their deceased relatives.

"SPIRITUALISM" is defined as  "belief in the possibility of receiving messages from the spirits of the dead"

This claim is infact made only by a group of Kunama women called  "Andinna or Ashirmina/Ashilmina",  who, at a certain season of the year, usually between the months of November and March or April, assert to be obsessed by spirits and consequently come into a direct contact and communication with and  receive messages from the spirits of the dead.

These  "Andinna or Ashirmina"  women, both during their  "obsession"  period as well as in their normal life occupy and enjoy a privileged status in Kunama society.

They are regarded as  "middle persons" between the living and the deceased Kunama as well as possessing healing powers.  

(The phenomenon of the  Andinna  will be described in a separate future paper).

      Having clarified that  "SPIRITUALISM"  too is not a belief practiced by all Kunama, we re-iterate our assertion that the Kunama people are solely  "monotheists"  and practice only

"monotheism"  in the sense that they have the notion of and believe in the existence of one God called  "ANNA".

All the other kinds of beliefs so far attributed to them were either due to insufficient research done by the foreign missionaries and others or conclusions based on very superficial observations of Kunama during their social, cultural or religious performances.

The Kunama people do not have a  "fixed form of public worship" in a liturgical sense but they do elevate their personsl prayers and petitions to God whenever they are about to undertake their traditional ceremonies and other important duties.

      In our future considerations on Kunama beliefs, we shall be attempting to research and point out how we think the Kunama monotheism might have had its origins in Judaism.