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Religion and Culture in Africa 6th Grade UBD - Unit 8 - Religion and Culture in Africa

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6 th Grade UBD - Unit 8 - Religion and Culture in Africa. Religion and Culture in Africa. Preview. Traditional Religion in Africa - For thousands of years, the native-born people of Africa have practiced traditional religions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Religion and Culture in Africa

Religion and Culture in Africa

6th Grade UBD - Unit 8 - Religion and Culture in Africa

Page 2: Religion and Culture in Africa

Preview

Traditional Religion in Africa- For thousands of years, the native-born people of Africa have practiced traditional religions.

The Influence of Christianity and

Islam- Christianity reached Egypt before 100 CE. Islam began to spread through northern Africa during the 600s CE.

Page 3: Religion and Culture in Africa

Reach Into Your Background

Religion is an important part of culture. What role does religion play in the United States? Explain your answer.

( 5 minutes)

Page 4: Religion and Culture in Africa

Partner ActivityWork with a

neighbor and compare your answer with theirs. What things are the same and what things are different? (3 minutes)

Page 5: Religion and Culture in Africa

Religion and RitualsVideo- Religion and Rituals

Page 6: Religion and Culture in Africa

Key Ideas- Traditional Religion in Africa

Most traditional religions are indigenous to Africa and are polytheistic. The traditional religions all recognize the existence of a supreme god. Most Africans who follow traditional religions seek guidance and help

from lesser gods and dead ancestors. Followers believe their ancestors act as go-betweens for the physical

world and the spiritual world. Africa’s traditional religions have not spread far beyond the specific

regions where they arose.

Page 7: Religion and Culture in Africa

Key Term

Indigenous- Native to or coming from a particular region. (Members of the Masai ethnic group in Africa perform a traditional dance that involves jumping for a ceremony.)

Page 8: Religion and Culture in Africa

Traditional Religion in Africa

The traditional religions of Africa are polytheistic.

They generally recognize that a supreme being exists, whom they worship, but they usually stress that people should also seek guidance from lesser gods and from their own ancestors.

Page 9: Religion and Culture in Africa

Key Term

Ancestor- One, such as a parent, grandparent, great-grandparent, who precedes another in lineage.

Page 10: Religion and Culture in Africa

Traditional Religion in Africa The African people who

practice traditional religions today often offer daily prayers and sacrifices, and they celebrate ceremonies that mark the passage of a person from childhood to adulthood.

Page 11: Religion and Culture in Africa

Traditional Religion in Africa Africans often

use masks representing cultural heroes, gods, and ancestors in their worship ceremonies.

Page 12: Religion and Culture in Africa

Talking to the Gods

In some traditions, dancing, chanting, or drumming are used to connect with gods or spirits. This is very common in groups that practice vodun.

Page 13: Religion and Culture in Africa

Talking to the Gods

Vodun followers believe that people who practice these rhythmic arts can become possessed.

Gods or spirits are believed to take over their bodies.

The spirits then communicate with the group through the possessed people.

Page 14: Religion and Culture in Africa

Traditional Religion in Africa

In addition, many African traditional religions use statuettes.

Believers think these objects to serve as mediators between the human and spiritual worlds.

Page 15: Religion and Culture in Africa

Traditional Religion in Africa African traditional

religions have not spread far outside of Africa.

Each religion remains relatively limited to the specific region of the ethnic group practicing it.

Page 16: Religion and Culture in Africa

Why Does It Matter?

Traditional religions continue to be practiced throughout Africa today. In Africa, the Christian and Muslim religions often mix in some of the beliefs and rituals of the traditional religions.

Page 17: Religion and Culture in Africa

How Religion Changed AfricaReading Handout- How Religion Changed Africa

Page 18: Religion and Culture in Africa

Key Ideas- The Influence of Christianity and Islam

Christians in Egypt formed the Coptic Church. During the early 300s, many people in Aksum began to convert to Christianity.

The Muslims had a large impact on North African culture. This is seen especially in math, science, literature, and architecture.

During the 800s, Muslim merchants from North Africa began to convert people in West Africa.

The pilgrimage of Mansa Musa spread news of the great wealth of Mali. As a result, many countries wanted to find the source of this wealth.

Page 19: Religion and Culture in Africa

Key Term

Coptic Christianity- A branch of Christianity that developed in Egypt in the first century.

Page 20: Religion and Culture in Africa

Coptic ChristianityVideo- Coptic Christianity

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Christianity Enters Africa

Christians entered Egypt around 100 and developed a type of Christianity called Coptic Christianity.

During the 300s and 400s, a conflict arose between the native Christian Copts of Egypt and Christian Romans living in Egypt. 

Page 22: Religion and Culture in Africa

Christianity Enters Africa

Copts believed Jesus had one nature that combined the human and divine.

Many Romans, though, claimed Jesus had two natures: one divine and the other human.

Page 23: Religion and Culture in Africa

Christianity Enters Africa

Eventually, at the Council of Chalcedon, Christian theologians confirmed the two-nature view of Jesus. The Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church agreed with the decision of the council. The Coptic Christian Church, however, rejected the decision and broke away from Rome, creating its own independent church.

Page 24: Religion and Culture in Africa

Mesquel FestivalVideo- Mesquel Festival

Page 25: Religion and Culture in Africa

EthiopiaReading Handout- Ethiopia

Page 26: Religion and Culture in Africa

Christianity Spreads to Aksum

During the early 300s, Roman Christians entered the kingdom of Aksum in today’s northern Ethiopia and Eritrea and began to evangelize the region.

Around 333, the king of Aksum, Ezana, converted to Christianity and then made it the state religion. 

Page 27: Religion and Culture in Africa

Christianity Spreads to Aksum

The Christian Church in Aksum followed the leadership of the Coptic Church in Egypt.

During the 600s, Muslims entered the region, evangelizing for their religion, but the people of Aksum remained Christian, and the kingdom was an isolated outpost of Christianity in Muslim East Africa.

Page 28: Religion and Culture in Africa

Christianity and Islam

While Christianity remained a minority religion on the continent, practiced mostly in small, coastal regions where European traders lived, Islam became a powerful force in Africa.

Page 29: Religion and Culture in Africa

Islam Spreads to Africa

Muslim Arabs conquered Egypt during the 600s, and quickly moved west to the sea, bringing North Africa into the Muslim empire.

The Muslims encouraged people they conquered to convert to Islam but usually did not force them to convert. 

Page 30: Religion and Culture in Africa

Islam Spreads to Africa

Muslim Arabs formed the ruling class of the areas they conquered. Below them were non-Arabs—native Africans—who converted to Islam. Non-Arabs who decided to practice another religion formed the next social class, and the lowest class consisted of enslaved people.

Page 31: Religion and Culture in Africa

Islam Spreads to Africa

Muslim Arabs brought Muslim culture and learning to North Africa, which included advances in math, science, medicine, literature, and architecture. 

Page 32: Religion and Culture in Africa

Islam Spreads to Africa

During the 800s, Muslim merchants began to trade on a regular basis with parts of West Africa.

Because of this trade, many of the merchants and rulers of West Africa converted to Islam.

Page 33: Religion and Culture in Africa

Mansa Musa

In West Africa, the Mali Empire formed around 1240 and gained considerable wealth and influence through the gold and salt trade.

In 1312, Mansa Musa became the emperor of Mali and converted to Islam.

Page 34: Religion and Culture in Africa

Mansa Musa

Mansa Musa established Islam as the official religion of his empire.

Soon Mansa Musa made an elaborate pilgrimage to Mecca via Egypt.

Page 35: Religion and Culture in Africa

Key Term

Mecca- The holiest city in all of Islam. Originally, the city was just an oasis along a caravan trade route linking South Arabia, East Africa, and South Asia to the Mediterranean countries. 

Page 36: Religion and Culture in Africa

Mansa Musa

Mansa Musa pilgrimage included about 60,000 of his followers carrying huge amounts of gold on camels.

The pilgrimage spread news of the great wealth in Mali throughout all the Muslim lands and even into Europe. Because of this, many countries sought to find the source of this amazing wealth.

Page 37: Religion and Culture in Africa

Mansa Musa

Mansa Musa established the city of Timbuktu in Mali as an important center of trade and learning.

He made the mosque of Sankore a school for the teaching of history, law, and theology.

Page 38: Religion and Culture in Africa

Why Does It Matter?

Christianity continues to be practiced in Ethiopia (formerly Aksum). Also, European countries took control of most of Africa during the 1800s. During this time, a large number of Christian missionaries entered Africa. They converted many of the local people. Despite this, Islam remains the main religion in many African countries.

Page 39: Religion and Culture in Africa

The People of AfricaVideo- The People of Africa

Page 40: Religion and Culture in Africa

Independent Activity

What has been the

“muddiest” point so

far in this lesson?

That is, what topic

remains the least

clear to you? (4

minutes)

Page 41: Religion and Culture in Africa

Partner Activity Work with a

neighbor and compare your muddiest point with theirs. Compare what things are the same and what things are different? (3 minutes)