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Praxis Dialogue: Catholic Rituals in Native American Contexts

Author

Editor

  • Patrik Fridlund
  • Lucie Kaennel
  • Catharina Stenqvist

Summary, in English

Using rituals as a means of dialogue has been a vital strategy for cross-cultural interchange. Starting with the study of ritual practices, this article discusses the dialectic interface between the Canadian Mi’kmaq Indian traditions and Catholicism, the latter brought into Mi’kmaq territory by French missionaries as early as the beginning of the 17th century. To fully understand the Mi’kmaq relation to Catholicism, four different contexts are considered. The Mi’kmaq have practised Catholicism within a colonial framework, but they have not passively adopted power structures and colonial religion into their communities. Instead, they have interpreted the new conditions by building models both of the world and for the world. In these creative cultural processes, rituals have played a decisive role in moulding a Mi’kmaq way of being in Canadian society.

Publishing year

2009

Language

English

Pages

37-54

Publication/Series

Plural Voices: Intradisciplinary Perspectives on Interreligious Issues

Document type

Book chapter

Publisher

Peeters Publishers

Topic

  • History of Religions

Keywords

  • Rituals
  • Catholicism
  • Canadian Mi'kmaq Indians
  • Praxis dialogue

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 978-90-429-2072-9