Petro god: Difference between revisions
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==Behind the scenes== | ==Behind the scenes== | ||
*[[David A. McIntee]]'s distinction of good and evil is not one used by most vodouisants. The [[Rada Loa|Rada]] and Petro's rites are both used together and there aren't separate priests. [[Clairvius Dubois]] is as much a sorcerer as Lemaitre because he ''also'' produces zombies. | *[[David A. McIntee]]'s distinction of good and evil is not one used by most vodouisants. The [[Rada Loa|Rada]] and Petro's rites are both used together and there aren't separate priests. [[Clairvius Dubois]] is as much a sorcerer as Lemaitre because he ''also'' produces zombies. | ||
*The phrasing in ''White Darkness'' obscures whether he means that the rites or the gods themselves come from the Congo. McIntee's primary source, ''The Serpent and the Rainbow'', refers to them as being connected to the violence of the colonial era, not in any way to Africa like the Rada Loa. [[Lawrence Miles]]' ''[[Faction Paradox (series)|Faction Paradox]]'' comic books included essays which described the [[18th century]] as creating "new and hungry gods" that were "gods of the Revolution" in the French Americas. In [[Hispaniola]], [[Makandal]]'s followers believed he became one of the loa at death. When Miles included content from his unfinished comic book series in [[EDA]]: ''[[The | *The phrasing in ''White Darkness'' obscures whether he means that the rites or the gods themselves come from the Congo. McIntee's primary source, ''The Serpent and the Rainbow'', refers to them as being connected to the violence of the colonial era, not in any way to Africa like the Rada Loa. [[Lawrence Miles]]' ''[[Faction Paradox (series)|Faction Paradox]]'' comic books included essays which described the [[18th century]] as creating "new and hungry gods" that were "gods of the Revolution" in the French Americas. In [[Hispaniola]], [[Mackandal|Makandal]]'s < followers believed he became one of the loa at death. When Miles included content from his unfinished comic book series in [[EDA]]: ''[[The Adventuress of Henrietta Street (novel)|The Adventuress of Henrietta Street]]'', he didn't use the word "loa" or refer to the follower's religious beliefs. | ||
*Baron Samedi is a member of the Guédé Loa, a group usually held distinct from Rada or Petro. | *Baron Samedi is a member of the Guédé Loa, a group usually held distinct from Rada or Petro. | ||
Revision as of 20:03, 27 August 2012
The Petro gods were a group of loa in Haitian vodoun identified by Howard Phillips as the "evil gods". The priest Gilles Lemaitre was said to have been a sorcerer who practiced the darker rites of the Petro gods from the Congo whose ceremonies could produce zombies. In 1915, people from villages throughout Haiti were afraid that Baron Samedi and the Petro gods roamed the countryside.
Lemaitre and his associates Carrefour and Henri Duval served the Great Old Ones, specifically Cthulhu. (NA: White Darkness) Hermes indicated a group of Immortals acted as gods in Haiti but didn't refer to groups. (PDA: Deadly Reunion)
Behind the scenes
- David A. McIntee's distinction of good and evil is not one used by most vodouisants. The Rada and Petro's rites are both used together and there aren't separate priests. Clairvius Dubois is as much a sorcerer as Lemaitre because he also produces zombies.
- The phrasing in White Darkness obscures whether he means that the rites or the gods themselves come from the Congo. McIntee's primary source, The Serpent and the Rainbow, refers to them as being connected to the violence of the colonial era, not in any way to Africa like the Rada Loa. Lawrence Miles' Faction Paradox comic books included essays which described the 18th century as creating "new and hungry gods" that were "gods of the Revolution" in the French Americas. In Hispaniola, Makandal's < followers believed he became one of the loa at death. When Miles included content from his unfinished comic book series in EDA: The Adventuress of Henrietta Street, he didn't use the word "loa" or refer to the follower's religious beliefs.
- Baron Samedi is a member of the Guédé Loa, a group usually held distinct from Rada or Petro.