Papers Session Annual Meeting 2024

Migration, Magico-Religious Healing, and Interreligious Perspectives on Displacement

Saturday, 5:00 PM - 6:30 PM | Convention Center-6C (Upper Level West) Session ID: A23-434
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)

The first part of the session will offer the paper examining the religious experience in the October fiestas commemorating the spiritual birth (initiation) of world-famous magico-religious healer and miracle worker, el Niño Fidencio (1898-1938). It situates contemporary Fidencista religious practices in the periphery as a response to the violence inflected by political and religious centers of power. An ethnographic engagement with the primary sources will demonstrate that for Fidencio’s followers—pilgrims attending the fiestas—“imposed suffering” is transformed into “joyful suffering.” 

The second part of the session will be a roundtable discussion of the Religions, Borders, and Immigration Seminar's collaborative project exploring migration and various dimensions of forced displacement in the form of essay volume. This is the concluding year of RBI Seminar before the publication of the essay volume. Panelists include Mary Beth Yount, Michael Canaris, Anne Blankenship, Helen Boursier, Kirsteen Kim and Kristine Suna-Koro. 

Papers

This paper examines religious experience in the October fiestas commemorating the spiritual birth (initiation) of world-famous magico-religious healer and miracle worker, el Niño Fidencio (1898-1938). It situates contemporary Fidencista religious practices in the periphery as a response to the violence inflected by political and religious centers of power. An ethnographic engagement with the primary sources will demonstrate that for Fidencio’s followers—pilgrims attending the fiestas—“imposed suffering” is transformed into “joyful suffering” precisely because Fidencio himself is regarded as a divine presence. They acknowledge the crucial ways God and Fidencio have intervened in the violent yet mundane events that constitute life in the U.S-Mexico borderlands: border-crossing, detention, and deportation. I argue, therefore, that joyful suffering is an expression of religious experience in the periphery. Overall, this paper contributes to the growing interdisciplinary dialogue on migration, religion, and state-sanctioned violence in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands.

Audiovisual Requirements
LCD Projector and Screen
Play Audio from Laptop Computer
Tags
#medicine #healing #health #religion
#Migration; Forced displacement; Interreligious dialogue; Immigration; Borders; Asylum seekers; Compassion; Indigenous histories; Spirituality; Ethics; Conviviality; Hospitality;
#migration; #migrant spirituality