In Sundiata, an Epic of Old Mali, the jinn is introduced
In Sundiata, an Epic of Old Mali, the jinn is introduced
Ina Garten has become a household name for many. This professional chef was born on February 2, 1948, in New York City. In 1978, Ina Garten found herself working in the White House on nuclear energy policy. She remembers herself thinking, “There's got to be more to life than this!" She saw an ad for a small food store for sale in Long Island. She and her husband drove up to investigate and instantly made the owner an offer. Thinking she had days to think about her decision, she drove home. The next morning, the owner Two months later she began the job of owner of Barefoot Contessa, a small specialty food…
Inanna is a goddess from the Mesopotamian culture. She is the goddess of love, welfare, and fertility. There are various art pieces the depict different gods or goddesses but one piece I found that involves Inanna is a cylinder seal called the Assur cylinder (Sumerian). This clay art was created in 3500 BC and was made in Susa in south-western Iran. These were normally located in various countries where cuneiform writing was used. Cylinder seals are usually made out of stone and have engraved designs on them. These would be rolled out on clay and would leave a back to front impression onto the clay. There were actually quite a bit of uses for these seals. The main use was for signatures and identified ownership. Cylinder seals can tell us a lot about what was happening during the time(s) they were created.…
1 and 8 soldiers returning home have PTSD and not much is being done to help these soldiers. Sean Goblin decided he should do something about it. He served in the military for 12 years and has PTSD himself (“Linkedin and CNN”). He Created Warrior Hike’s, a nonprofit program to help soldiers deal with PTSD by hiking. This is a remarkable program helps people cope with PTSD and forget war. Goblin goal is to help as many people possible deal with their PTSD. He was driven to help, but getting to where he is was not easy for him. He qualifies as a hero because he went through the stages of the hero cycle, and he has demonstrated admirable qualities along the way.…
3. Within the myth of origin, how does this divinity compare with other divinities? How does this divinity interact with or compare to divinities of the same gender and to divinities of the opposite gender?…
Chise Hatori has lived a life full of sadness and despair. Her father took her little brother with him and left her with her mother. Eventually, her mother committed suicide and Chise wad sold as a slave by her relatives. Everything starts to change when a man with the head of a beast took her from a slave auction,…
Sundiata is about the kingdom in Mali. The king of Mali, Maghan, had multiple wives and he had two children by two different wives. Sundiata was his first born child, so he was the one that was suppose to take the throne. Unfortunately, Sundiata could not walk so the second son of Maghan had to take the throne. When Maghan died the second son took the throne and he ended up being very bad to the kingdom and to Sundiata. After Sundiata was treated badly he all of a sudden began to walk and vanished away from the kingdom of Mali with his mother. Sundiata and his mother went to another kingdom far away where they were accepted and treated nicely. Years after Sundiata has left Mali, news comes to him that Mail is…
Naré Maghann Konaté (also called Maghan Kon Fatta or Maghan the Handsome) was a Mandinka king who one day received a divine hunter at his court. The hunter predicted that if Konaté married an ugly woman, she would give him a son who would one day be a mighty king. Naré Maghann Konaté was already married to Sassouma Bereté and had a son by her, Dankaran Toumani Keïta. However, when two Traoré hunters from the Do kingdom presented him an ugly, hunchbacked woman named Sogolon, he remembered the prophecy and married her. She soon gave birth to a son, Sundiata Keita, who was unable to walk throughout his childhood. Despite his physical weakness, the king still granted Sundiata his own griot at young age; this was in order to have them grow together and provide constant consultation as was custom.[1] With the death of Naré Maghann Konaté (c. 1224), his first son, Dankaran Tuman, assumed the throne despite Konaté's wishes…
According to Mayan mythologies, all things, whether animate or inanimate, are imbued with an unseen power. In some cases the invisible power was amorphous. In other cases the unseen power was embodied in a deity, perceived to take animallike or humanlike form. This helped create world order for the Mayan people, something they spent their entire lives trying to obtain. Order stemmed from the predictable movements of the ‘sky wanderers,’ the sun, moon, planets, and stars that marked the passage of time. Each of these celestial bodies was animate, a deity by modern American definition. Human destiny was linked with these celestial beings, and when catastrophic events, such as earthquakes, occurred in the Mayan world, the sky wanderers and the calendar based books of prophecy would be consulted to find portents of change. “Once found and recorded, such portents explained the disorder that had fallen upon the world and thus allowed the world order to be restored” (Callahan, Mayan Religion).…
The previous belief was that of a polytheistic nature; they believed in many deities who each had their own origin myths and rituals. The sheer number of gods and goddesses created a safety net of sorts. Then unexplainable phenomena could be reasoned as the doing of one god or another (Teeter, 2016). The gods were personified to allow the people a tangible connection with them; hands to give or take away, feet to move, mounths to speak and eyes to see. By making an abstrtact idea such as sunlight a god, which does not posses human characterisitcs, Akhenaten successfully removed the people’s ability to interact with the gods (Teeter, 2016). Communicating with the gods was a privillege reserved for the Pharaoh and the royal family alone. And as Akhenaten claimed to be the only gateway between mortals and gods, the previously limitless ways to contact the gods through prayers and offerings was reduced to appealing towards the Pharaoh’s ego in…
Deities and Lesser SpiritsGods represented in mythology possess different characteristics. Lesser gods or deities may have ultimate power, finitude, good, or evil tied to the stories that tell about their lives and existence. The purpose of this paper is to define the terms ultimate power, finitude, good and evil and identify four mythological deities that personify these terms.…
Civic duty never meant much to me until I involved myself in the Ro Khanna for Congress Campaign. It began with a 6 hour shift to run a booth and ended with a celebration two weeks ago for Ro’s success in winning the congressional election. I have made phone calls and knocked on people’s doors to talk about why they should vote for Ro. As my volunteer activity increased, I became my high school’s team leader for the election. My responsibilities included gathering more volunteers, contacting old ones, discussing with community members, and finding methods to increase voter turnout. As I spread awareness throughout Santa Clara about Ro, I realized how influential and beneficial he will be for those in our community. I wanted to see change and our current congressman wasn’t providing that.…
This article discusses the male divine and the myths surrounding him. This article starts by defining the male divine, then taking the reader back to the early myth of the gods and then showing how gods and the male divine still play an important part in today’s society and modern religion.…
The Native American or Indian peoples of North America do not share a single, unified body of mythology. The many different tribal groups each developed their own stories about the creation of the world, the appearance of the first people, the place of humans in the universe, and the lives and deeds of deities and heroes. Yet despite the immense variety of Native American mythologies, certain mythic themes, characters, and stories can be found in many of the cultures. Underlying all the myths is the idea that spiritual forces can be sensed through the natural world—including clouds, winds, plants, and animals—that they shape and sustain. Many stories explain how the actions of gods, heroes, and ancestors gave the earth its present form.…
Traditional Apache natives and elders alike, believe in a different version then you or I would as far as creation is concerned. Apache peoples believe that it all began with the Creator or giver of life, in which he made the earth, animals and beasts, but there were no people. Changing Woman, the first representation of woman, or mother of the Apache people decided the earth needed to be populated because she was lonely. During this time, there were supernatural people who lived inside the earth, who were Apache ancestors. They were called Mountain People. Each had different powers. Some warriors, hunters, and also some medicine men. These are the ones impersonated in the Gaan Dance. The dancers who perform may look like normal Apaches, but have supernatural powers to help the tribe. During this time that the earth was barren, Changing Woman was praying directly into the sun. She was impregnated by the Creator and struck with lightening four times. After that, the Child of the Water was born. Apache people believe this was the first of their people. They believe they came from the earth itself. There was another person on earth and he was the Slayer of Enemies. He represented the warrior spirit of the Apache people. Together the Child of the Water and the Slayer of Enemies battled with the beasts of the earth and one by one defeated them. After the beasts were defeated the Child of the Water, the Slayer of Enemies let the game animals and sea animals loose to help the survival of the…
There are many unique religions of the ancient world, each with their own different origins. Although, because of the interactions of people through trade and other influences, many similarities between religions were brought up. Many of theses religions shared common traits and beliefs such as monotheism, religious ceremonies, and prophets. But, there were few religions that were set apart from other religious influences either geographically or mentally. Although monotheism was a popular belief, few people attempted to change into worship of a single god, but were rejected. Some may not have even involved gods, but simply relied on moral conduct or on an all powerful “spirit”. These, and other topics, will be described to show the similarities…