Based on Meron Zeleke Eresso’s PhD project carried out from 2008 until 2010 at an Islamic Sufi shrine of Teru Sina in northern Ethiopia, this volume presents the syncretic elements of religious practices at the contemporary Islamic shrine, where elements from Christianity, Islam and Traditional Religion are brought together. It discusses the changing nature of religiosity in the first and second generations of the shrine by examining the different factors that have accounted for the formation of syncretic religious elements. Furthermore, it analyzes how these elements are reflected in the dispute settlement process of a faith-based court, yäšeykoc celot, held regularly at the shrine. Against the backdrop of the complex blending of various religious traditions, the first part of the book examines the formation of syncretic religious practice. The second part presents how these practices are reflected or mirrored in the dispute settlement process of yäšeykoc celot. The book is a useful complement to the existing academic analyses in the fields of anthropology, religious studies and sociology of religion. It is also an addition to the theoretical discussion in legal anthropology and to discussions pertaining to legal pluralism.
Meron Zeleke Eresso Bücher


The mother and the bread winner
- 100 Seiten
- 4 Lesestunden
The book examines the interplay between technology, social organization and gender, based on an ethnographic study among the Gumuz in the Benishangul region of Northwestern Ethiopia. It draws on and criticises the analytical framework built by Boserup (1970) and further refined by Goody (1976), i. e. that the type of farming technology a society uses determines its social organizational principles (particularly marriage practices) and defines gender roles and statuses. Accordingly, traditional societies who practice hoe-farming depend on female agricultural labour, and this neccessitates a need for compensating the birdes family in the form of bride wealth payment. Furthemore, the high valuation of female labour induces a polygamous form of marriage. This crucial economic role of woman is stipulated.