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Ta Makuenda Yaya - San Antonio de Padua, the Congo Saint in Cuba

It is only fitting, with the Feast of Saint Anthony of Padua just past to visit the subject of the devotion to this great saint
in the Americas, and to note his close association with not only devout Christians everywhere, but especially among
those who maintain Afro-diasporic religious traditions of Central African origin in the Americas, and note the important
historical connection this saint has with the ancient African Kingdom of Ntotela dia Kongo, or the Kingdom of Kongo,
who provided more of its sons and daughters to the vicious slave trade that fed the Americas than any other African
nation and which today sees its territory divided between several modern nation states - La Rpublique Dmocratique
du Congo, La Rpublique du Congo (Kinshasha), A Repblica de Angola, and La Rpublique Gabonaise, to name them all.
It may come as a surprise to some that Saint Anthony might be so closely related to both the history of a Central African
Kingdom of old, and the slave trade, or that he is a major figure in African Traditional religions such as Haitian Vodou,
Cuban Palo, or any number of Afro-Brazilian religions such as Candombl or Umbanda, to name but two. However, it
might come as even a greater surprise that in the old Kingdom of Kongo for a few years between the 1690s and 1706, he
became a she. In that, lies a tale.

Beatriz Kimpa Vita (1684-1706), was a Congolese prophetess and leader of a Christian movement, Antonianism, which
she founded. This movement taught that Jesus and other early Christian figures were from the Kongo Empire. Her
teaching grew out of the oral traditions of the Roman Catholic Church in Kongo.

Beatriz went to live among colonists sent out by King Pedro IV, one of several rival rulers of Kongo, to reoccupy the
ancient and by then abandoned capital of So Salvador. There was a great deal of religious fervor among these colonists
who were tired of the endless civil wars in the country. During an illness in 1704 she claimed to have received visions of
St. Anthony of Padua, and when, as she reported to Father Bernardo, she died, St. Anthony entered her body and took
over her life.
Much of her teaching is known from the Salve Antoniana. The Salve Antoniana taught that God was only concerned with
believers intentions not with sacraments or good works, and that Saint Anthony was the greatest one, in fact, a "second
God." In addition, she taught that the principal characters in Christianity, including Jesus, Mary and Saint Francis, were
all born in Kongo and were in fact Kongolese. She upbraided the Catholic priests for refusing to acknowledge this.

Kimpa Vita was captured near her hometown and burned at the temporary
capital of Evululu as a heretic in 1706 by forces loyal to Pedro IV. She was tried under Kongo law as a witch and a heretic,
with the consent and counsel of the Capuchin friars Bernardo da Gallo and Lorenzo da Lucca.
The Anthonian prophetic movement outlasted her death. Her followers continued to believe that she was still alive, and
it was only when Pedro IV's forces took So Salvador in 1709 that the political force of her movement was broken. Many
of her followers, the Antonians were sent as slaves to the English Colonies in the Americas, to Cuba, and to Brazil. In
North America, they may have been involved with the Stono Rebellion. In Brazil, there is both physical evidence of her
religion in the tradition of carved statues of Anthony used often for both devotional and magical purposes, and one of
her followers was arrested and ultimately died at the hands of the inquisition, charged with sorcery, and died calling on
Saint Anthony's protection.

In Cuba, the most lasting evidence of the devotion to Saint Anthony, the Congo Saint, and perhaps the most remarkable
to be found in all the Americas, lies in the small pueblo of Quiebra Hacha, not far from the port of Mariel just west of
the nations capital. Here, not only do we find a chapel dedicated to Saint Anthony, but that chapel, maintained by the
descendants of slaves, who practice the Congo inspired religion of Palo, maintain a statue that may have been brought
from the Congo, and it also is perhaps the last Congo religious house in Cuba to continue to use the rare sacred Kinfuiti
drums, a friction drum used only for ritual purposes.
Below I have embedded a video on both this saint, the ritual, and the Kinfuiti in Cuba. I'd like to thank my dear friend
and colleague, Ralph Alpizar for the inspiration to write this short piece.

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