

The book also covers initiation rites secret societies the Rara and Kanaval festivals the lougawou (werewolf) and animal transformation zombi vèvè, of which 32 are illustrated pwen the magic of the paket the sorcery of wanga, and traditional songs for the lwa.

Richard Ward examines the origins, character and syncretism of the principal Petwo lwa, and discusses the figures of the oungan, manbo and bòkò, and the semi-legendary founders of Petwo.

Petwo shares the same West African roots as the Palo traditions in Cuba and the Kimbanda lineages of Brazil, but aspects of Roman Catholicism, European Freemasonry, grimoire and Kabbalistic traditions, as well as the magic of the indigenous Taino people, have all been incorporated into the rite. Ward draws on over 20 years of contact with Vodou initiates to cut through the sensationalism, and carefully addresses the misconceptions of Western practitioners to tell the story of Petwo as the unifying spiritual and magical impetus to the establishment of the first Black Republic in the Western hemisphere. From that time onward, Vodou and the fate of Haiti, both culturally and politically, would be intertwined. Petwo is and always will be an incendiary rite. That was the time when it forged its path in Haitian history, cutting the air like the crack of a rawhide whip accompanied by the ignition of gunpowder, as powerful spirits were called to help free the enslaved. In comparison with the Rada rite, Petwo only truly comes alive at night. But the truth is complex and ambiguous Petwo is neither black nor white. The Petwo rite is uncompromising and aggressive, particularly when contrasted with the gentler Rada, but as Richard Ward shows, this is for good reason: Lurid tales of zombi, cannibalism and human sacrifice abound in the early literature. Petwo is concerned as much with magic and sorcery as it is with religious devotion thus it continues to be perceived as dark, even evil, by many Haitians, as well as outsiders. Richard Ward’s Born of Blood and Fire is a study of the origins, history, practices, evolution and influence of the Petwo rite that was pivotal in the Haitian slave revolts and subsequent revolution.
