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A Century of Magico-Religious Healing: the African, Ethiopian Case (1900-1980s)

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A Century of Magico-Religious Healing examines the relationship between church-based medicine and the state in Ethiopia over the course of the 20th century. Church-based healing, associated with the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, may also be traced back to the 16th century. It involved a rich complex of practices based on the usage of esoteric medical and divinatory texts and the manipulation of letters and numbers, as well as invocation of spirits, and the usage of herbal therapies. Church-based healers underwent rigorous training lasting many years and dealt with a range of physical and social problems. All the way through the 20th century, church-based healers had to contend with a unexpectedly changing social and political environment shaped by successive state-led efforts to grow to be Ethiopian society. These transformations, including the introduction of western education and medicine, began with the westernizing initiatives of Menelik II (1889-1913), and continued through successive post-Menelik governments. Assefa investigates how churchbased medico-magical healers struggled to care for their medical traditions in the face of these transformations. “A Century of Magico-Religious Healing is based on extensive archival research and oral interviews and represents one of the most only studies that we have which traces the history of indigenous healing practices in Africa over the years. Due to this alone it is an important contribution to the history of medicine in Africa. Moreover, Assefa s Balcha work is a ‘will have to read’ for anyone interested in understanding the challenges that face those working to integrate indigenous and biomedical practices in Africa.” Randall M. Packard, Professor and Chair: Institute of the History of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University

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