Commodity Fetichismo The Holy Spirit,and the turn to Pentecostal and African Independent Churches in Central Mozambique |
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Authors: | Pfeiffer James |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Health Services, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington, Box 357660, Seattle, WA, USA |
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Abstract: | Pentecostal and African Independent Churches have rapidly spread throughout central Mozambique in the aftermath of war and
in the midst of a recent structural adjustment program that has hastened commoditization of community life and intensified
local inequalities. This extraordinary expansion signals a shift away from reliance on “traditional” healers to treat persistent
afflictions believed to have spiritual causes. Survey data and illness narratives collected from recent church recruits and
local residents during research in 2002 and 2003 in the city of Chimoio reveal that healers have increased fees and tailored
treatments to clients searching for good fortune in ways that have alienated many other help seekers in this changing social
environment. While traditional healing has been celebrated in the international health world, community attitudes are less
generous; many healers are increasingly viewed with suspicion because of their engagement with malevolent occult forces to
foment social conflict, competition, and confrontation for high fees. Church healing approaches offer free and less divisive
spiritual protection reinforced by social support in a new collectivity. One vital source of church popularity derives from
pastors' efforts to tap the already considerable community anxiety over rising healer fees and their socially divisive treatments
in an insecure environment. |
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Keywords: | Mozambique Pentecostalism African Independent Churches traditional healing structural adjustment |
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