Aukan, Ndjuka in Guyana

Aukan, Ndjuka
Photo Source:  Anonymous 
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People Name: Aukan, Ndjuka
Country: Guyana
10/40 Window: No
Population: 800
World Population: 73,800
Primary Language: Aukan
Primary Religion: Christianity
Christian Adherents: 80.00 %
Evangelicals: 1.00 %
Scripture: New Testament
Ministry Resources: Yes
Jesus Film: Yes
Audio Recordings: Yes
People Cluster: Afro-American, Northern
Affinity Bloc: North American Peoples
Progress Level:

Introduction / History

The Ndyuka people, also known as Aukan people or Okanisi, are a Maroon ethnic group who speak the Ndyuka language. They are of African descent, having been shipped as slaves to Suriname about 300 years ago to work on English colonial plantations. Those who escaped, fled deep into the rainforests where they established communities along rivers in eastern Suriname and parts of neighboring French Guiana and where their culture adopted elements of Native American cultures. Though most live either in French Guiana or Suriname, there are some in Guyana.

What Are Their Lives Like?

Given the historically background of the Aukan, a value that holds the people together is the sense of insider/outsider. Having escaped the cruelty of slavery the Aukan had to band together against the colonist as the common enemy. These outsiders presented a serious threat to the security of early Aukan communities. One gains insight through the Aukan prayers at their shrines, by listening to the theme of cohesion in Aukan society that was forged in the runaway history. To this day security to the Aukan means the freedom to be descendants of their brave ancestors without threat of the outsider putting them in any real or perceived new form of slavery. So through the Aukan cleverness they "danced" the white man's dance but with the Aukan "drumbeat." They want very much to be in charge of their destiny and as long as this basic Aukan value of self-determination is not threatened the Aukan will warily cooperate with the outsider.

Women control the farmlands inherited from their matrilineal ancestors. The men often go to the coastal areas to work and bring some of their earnings back to their village families. The families are polygamous, but only men of means can afford to have more than one wife. It is not uncommon for a man to have a wife in his mother's village as well as another wife in her original village. The families are matriarchal, and a person's mother's brother is considered the "head of the house."

The primary family unit is a matriclan. A leading matriarch exercises authority over her daughters and her children. A husband has responsibility to provide transportation, kitchen utensils, clothes, and the basic food for his wife and children as well as his aging relatives on his mother's side. Male children leave the home in their late teens or early twenties but have significant social ties and responsibilities to their matriclan of birth. These responsibilities continue into perpetuity even after his mother's, grandmother's, and great-grandmother's generations have long passed away.

The whole relationship of the Aukan kinship structure follows through the female line through the concept of the womb "bee." The primary concept here is that there is a continuous genealogical line through the womb. All relatives descending from an ancestral womb have unbreakable family ties and marriage is nowhere near as strong as these ties. Financial support is shared primarily among members of the same matriclan "bee." Nontraditional means of support come from outside jobs as well as government doles. Ultimately, the individual seeks to meet his own needs and the traditional idealism of sharing, for instance, hunted game is rarely actually practiced. They often recount nostalgically how it used to be in the "good old days." But it is questionable whether a high level of sharing was ever practiced outside of the nuclear family.

Non-marital sex is quite open and practiced but not well accepted. Often after dances sexual pairs go off and family members identify who are "items." If the sexual relationship continues the man needs to state his intentions to the head of his sexual partner's family. If he desires to be married in the Aukan sense, an official meeting will be held of that matriclan and a verbal contract is agreed upon. This is marriage in the Aukan sense. Of course ancestors are consulted and for various reasons can accept or reject the marriage proposal. The woman agrees to bear his children, and the man agrees to provide for his wife. It is taboo to have a sexual relationship with anyone who might be considered to be a part of one's matriclan (descended from the same womb).

The proverb, "It takes a village to raise a child." is predictably the form of child-rearing practices among the Aukan. Having African roots, it is easy to see that the adults (even some teenagers) are all involved in disciplining children. It is not uncommon for a seemingly unrelated person to grab a switch and chase after a wayward child. Often you will hear the blood-curdling screams of the victim being chased by an irate adult with the switch raised high over her head. The intention is to cower the child into submission rather than to actually carry out physical abuse. By and large, it is much high drama but highly effective! Males are seldom involved in day to day child rearing. But should a child cross an adult male, a rebuke is swift and in some cases he will also give chase with switch in hand.

When a man marries, he gives as an "engagement ring" a carved and painted boat paddle. Aukan house doors are also painted, and boats are carved and painted. There are the verbal arts – and being able to tell folk tales in an effective and accurate way. The ancestors will wreak vengeance if the tales are not told accurately. Dancers, drummers and singers also express highly valued art forms.

The vocation with the highest respect among the Aukan is to be a religious practitioner. These "priests" wield considerable authority based on fear. These are the gate keepers allowing individuals free access in and out of Aukan society. They are the ones to judge whether someone should be accepted and respected in the community. Beyond these practitioners the secular leadership comprised of the village captains and their assistants are also highly respected. Store owners are usually respected members of the community accept in the case of those who have taken on too much of the ways of the outsiders (bakaa).

What Are Their Beliefs?

The Aukan up to twenty years ago were almost all traditionalists serving animistic deities. Recently, Pentecostal Christianity has made significant inroads into this traditional religious system. It is estimated that over ten percent of the Aukaners adhere to Pentecostalism.

The Aukan believe in a pantheon of gods which have authority over the different physical realms. These include the god who oversees the forest or jungle ("ampuku"); the ground god ("goon gadu"); the river god (can't recall that title), and the most powerful who is the god of the sky ("gaan gadu"). The name of the latter is often taken in vain. The traditional Aukaner thinks that when we, as Christians refer to the almighty God, we are speaking of the gaan gadu of his religious system.

Aukaners are polytheistic and often add Jesus, God's Son (as they call him) to their pantheon of gods. There is not much understanding of the person of the Holy Spirit, but they do believe, somewhat vaguely that God the Father is the creator. But it is difficult to see if they distinguish the biblical God from their god that they call "gaan gadu" (almighty god).

True to animism, the non-Christian Aukan believes that spirits permeate animate beings as well as inanimate objects. One of the most powerful animate incarnations is the boa constrictor who is called "father god" ("papa gadu"). This god is quite vengeful and murderous. The Aukan employ this deity in much of the witchcraft. There has been significant study in the anthropological literature on the gods that the Aukan believe in.

To the Aukan God is distant, exacting, and somewhat capricious. They believe in some of their traditions that God came to earth early in Aukan history (perhaps dating back to the time their ancestors were in Africa). And they have some recollection of Jesus dying, but they don't know what happened after that. They believe that God was disgusted with mankind and more specifically with their own people and abandoned them.

Their prayers often begin with a plea for mercy and for forgiveness for any sins they might have inadvertently committed. Before any religious ceremony can begin, or any folk tale told, the names of God and their gods, as well as their ancestors (especially squad leaders of runaway slaves) are invoked.

Aukaners are careful of revealing their true thoughts to the foreigner. This especially relates to giving information about their religious system and their folk tales. Giving that kind of information must be paid at a great cost by the foreigner.

Often sicknesses or deaths are attributed to lack of appeasing and seeking forgiveness of the ancestors but among the living getting forgiveness occurs rarely. In order to get a person "off the hook" for doing something wrong often a mediator volunteers to settle grievances and to seek reparation for loss of property or perhaps dignity.

Life after death is a given in the Aukan worldview. There is no sense of finality in death but instead, a passing on into the spirit realm of the ancestors. There are no rites of passage that are as strong as death among the Aukan. The culture of death permeates and defines family structure. The deceased becomes a feared member of a family and often will return in the form of avenging spirit "kunu" to keep the family in line.

The Aukan people are very religious in their traditions, especially surrounding their funerals. The more important the person lying in state in the mortuary, the bigger the funeral festivities. The paramount chieftain enjoys a long festivity. The end of the mourning period (Bokode) is a very important tradition and many prayers, libations, and celebrations surround this annual event. There are many traditions surrounding the inauguration of new homes as well as boats. Other common traditions are those which keep people safe from ancestral spirit retributions. These include armbands, amulets, good luck charms hung from the body or from fruit trees or placed in homes, boats and on other possessions.

There is a strong sense of good and evil among the Aukan based on a relatively loose interpretation of what the ancestors have taught them over the many generations since the birth of the Aukan people. Evil is equated as danger and should be avoided in every way possible. One of the sprits is even called The Danger ("Na Ogii").

Mankind forms part of the created realm and are linked with both spirits and animals. Animals can sometimes in their folktales become human and vice versa. I am not sure what else to write here that would be relevant.

The world as the Aukan know it, and the environment they live in, are filled with spirits. Daily life for the Aukan means constant communion with both "evil" as well as "good." Ancestors are constantly with them in spiritual form and an Aukaner will speak to the ancestor as if that person were living and breathing right next to him. Wrongs, sins, and guilt must be daily atoned for and quickly dealt with out of fear of vengeance of the ancestors. There are usually no natural causes for sicknesses, especially serious ones, but instead sicknesses are the result of ancestor’s vengeance against a member of that ancestress' matriclan. It would seem to me as an outsider that there is more fear of the ancestors and their retribution than from God.

There is no understanding in this legalistic world regarding salvation through faith. They understand mercy as they themselves use it in their legal system, but forgiveness means individual atonement. Thus, if salvation were a concept in their worldview, it would be a salvation by works. They believe Jesus died for sins, but apart from being a ritual mantra, there isn't much true understanding of what salvation means.

Any converts to another religion apart from the traditional Aukan religion is a serious matter. The repercussions usually mean that the convert cannot remain a member of good standing in the community. Some converts to Christianity move off to form a new community on a new plot of land away from the traditional village. Converts and adherents are considered threats to the status quo.

What Are Their Needs?

The national school system tries to educate children, but most children only go through until the third or fourth grade before dropping out. In some villages there are government run schools open to everyone. In one or two other villages there are Moravian schools open to a more limited number of students. Schools are valued among the Aukan but often children are pulled out in order to help harvest crops or prepare planting grounds.

In Aukan society there are two competing medical systems: the traditional and the Western. In their history Aukaners are well known for their powerful medical practition, "obia." Aukan healers, "bonuman" are especially famous for their abilities in setting broken bones.

Western medicine (especially through the Moravian Church) has made significant inroads into the traditional Aukan healing arts. Along the river systems of the interior are a series of clinics and in the regional centers are a couple of hospitals. Rarely does a day go by that there are not overflowing waiting rooms with people seeking medical attention. The leadership of these clinics are made up mostly of outsiders but the staff are all, mostly, local Aukaners.

Malaria and dysentery wreak tremendous havoc among the Aukan, and especially among the young.

Prayer Points

Pray for Aukan people to put their faith in Jesus Christ rather than the spirit world.

Pray for Aukan disciples to teach others the ways of Christ as spelled out in the Bible.

Pray for thousands to put their faith in Christ and be blessed in the process.

Text Source:   Joshua Project