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What is Oath Taking

Handbook of Research on Present and Future Paradigms in Human Trafficking
Ritual oaths and their accompanying use of juju are built on the fundamental theological view in ATR that God has appointed spiritual beings as rulers and judges to preside over the affairs of men. The worldview of the ancient Near East (ANE) shares incredible similarities with ATR’s cosmology and the practice of ritual oath taking. In her notable research on curses in the ANE, Kitz demonstrates how ritual oaths were used as points of contact between heaven and earth, as deities were expected to play a role in enforcing “the terms of an arrangement between two parties.” The use of spiritual power in the enforcement of oaths, a hypostasized curse, is nearly identical to observations on how juju is used.
Published in Chapter:
Oath-Taking and the Role of African Traditional Religion in Human Trafficking
Rahina Muazu (Harvard Divinity School, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-9282-3.ch010
Abstract
There is relatively little empirical research into the supernatural enforcement of an agreement between two parties through the swearing of ritual oaths before a deity that belongs to the African traditional religion cosmology. An emerging but vibrant body of qualitative work has explored different aspects of ritual oath-taking as a method of control used by certain traffickers to keep their victims in perpetual bondage. Employing the epistemological sources of tradition, reason, experience, and community's interpenetration and interpretation, this study demonstrates that traffickers are simply utilizing commonly held beliefs and practices within ATR to exploit their victims and encourage human trafficking. Findings reveal that despite the current trends toward civilization, globalism, and modernity, the role of the spiritual realm in human affairs (human trafficking) bound with the high place given to ritual and symbolism remains critical in trafficking enterprise in the African worldview, regardless of the religious affiliation.
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