Vodou, Orisha and other Afro-Caribbean faiths will take center stage as the subjects of a humanities panel discussion at South Florida’s Island SPACE Caribbean Museum on Saturday, April 29, 2023, from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m.
Practices like these, Jamaican Rastafari and Trinidadian Shango have typically conjured negative connotations, both in the Caribbean region and beyond it. Yet these are the faiths that most closely connect the many Black Caribbean people to their Yoruba African ancestry.
Island SPACE Caribbean Museum will welcome a panel of academic professionals, faith leaders and subject matter experts, to explore the origins, impact and stigmas associated with these faiths. Panelists — including Vodou priestess Dr. Charlene Desir, Yoruba High Chief Nathaniel
Styles and educator Dr. Clyde Bailey, moderated by pastor, author and educator Dr Owen Facey — will take part in the presentation titled “SUPA-NATURAL: An Afro-Caribbean Faith and Spirituality Panel Discussion.”
The panel is meant to demystify and resolve misconceptions about Afro-Caribbean spiritual practices in an effort to elevate the dialogue surrounding them.
Interested attendees within driving distance of Island SPACE Caribbean Museum in Plantation, Florida are invited to this free event. Register at islandspacefl.org/faithtalk2023.
Remote viewers may also watch the live stream and ask questions during the discussion by visiting islandspacefl.org/supanatural.
















