Thousands of devotees from African on Monday, January 1 assembled at the Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to pay tribute to the famed Yoruba deity, Yemajá, who is credited as the sea goddess of fertility.
The Afro-Brazilians paid homage to their goddess who is also known as the “Orisha of Fertility” as a special tribute to usher in the new year.
Yemanjá, meaning the “Great Mother of the Sea”, is often praised and worshiped in a series of African hybridized diasporic religious forms in Brazil which were taken from Africa during the slave trade era, while Afro-Brazilian Candomble and Umbanda traditions are some of those rooted in the African culture.
“Historically, the interweaving of cultures that form the religions are tied to Portuguese colonial history and all the diverse diasporic cultures of West and Central Africa nations whose inhabitants were forcibly relocated to Brazil during the colonial era.”
“And finally, to numerous Indigenous American beliefs,” Helio Sillman, the organizer of the Yemanjá Festival said in an interview shortly after the event.
“We bring the gifts today in thanks to everything that has happened to us, and now for 2024 we ask for health, prosperity, everything, everything you can ask for,”
“Yemanjá, she’s there listening, she’s there listening.”
Amid singing, drumming, and dancing, the worshippers left offerings to the goddess on the sands of Copacabana Beach while some offered their gratitude and prayers, with small boats laden with flowers and bowls containing candles, fruits, perfume, and beverages.
“I’m here to thank that we have peace, good health, a good New Year’s Eve, that there’s harmony and that people understand that we’re here to cultivate happiness, harmony and peace, on a day like today and for the whole year to come,” a worshipper who gave his name as Valter said.