Lamòling Bèaka: Immanence, Rituals, and Sacred Objects in an Unwritten Legend in Alor

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2018, Vol 9, Issue 7

Abstract

This paper recounts a parallel story of the Lamòling myth. The original analysis of the legend addressed the relationship between two gods, Lamòling and Lahatàla, from the Abui traditional religion. The myth evolved from ancestral times to the arrival of Christianity in Alor, with the resultant association of the ‘bad’ god as a demon and, finally, as the devil. This paper completes the myth as handed down from traditional ‘owners’ of the narrative and storytellers by telling a parallel version centered around an Abui ‘prophet’, Fanny, who was the only person able to travel to Lamòling Bèaka, ‘the land of the Lamòling gods/servants’. We also focus on a number of sacred objects and rituals associated with this religious myth and on their symbolic meaning for the Abui. This account tells a different version of the killing and eating of an Abui child by these gods/supernatural entities and of how Fanny came upon the gruesome feast. The paradoxical absence of Lamòling in this version of the myth depicts him as an immanent being, pervading and sustaining all that is real and created in nature, existing anywhere and nowhere at the same time.

Authors and Affiliations

Francesco Perono Cacciafoco and Francesco Cavallaro

Keywords

Related Articles

‘The Way of Our Streets’: Exploring the Urban Sacred in Three Australian Poems

This article examines three contemporary Australian poems that concern themselves with matters of the sacred within the modern Australian city. Noting that Australian poetry and the sacred have often been studied in te...

Redefining Religious Nones: Lessons from Chinese and Japanese American Young Adults

This analysis of Chinese and Japanese American young adults, based on the Pew Research Center 2012 Asian American Survey, examines the religious nones of these ethnic groups. Rather than focusing on their beliefs and b...

Spirituality and Quaker Approaches to Substance Use and Addiction

The Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) has held a consistent testimony of abstinence and moderation regarding alcohol and other substances. This paper outlines the historical background, and describes modern Quaker...

From Fitnah to Thaura: The Metamorphosis of the Arab-Muslim Protest Movements

Since 2011, the Arab world has entered a period of political turbulence accompanied by widespread growth of protest activity. The events that were metaphorically called the “Arab Spring” referring to the “Spring of Nat...

Impact of Religious Affiliation on Ethical Values of Spanish Environmental Activists

We analyzed the impact of religious affiliation on the ethical and environmental values of Spanish environmental activists, based on an internet survey and a working seminar held with representatives of major environme...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP26072
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel9070211
  • Views 371
  • Downloads 12

How To Cite

Francesco Perono Cacciafoco and Francesco Cavallaro (2018). Lamòling Bèaka: Immanence, Rituals, and Sacred Objects in an Unwritten Legend in Alor. Religions, 9(7), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-26072