CHAPTER VI.
CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS CEREMONIES.
While paganism is embraced by the larger portion
of the African races, it is by no means the religion
of the land. Missionaries representing nearly every
phase of religious belief have made their appearance in
the country, and gained more or less converts. Mohammedanism,
however, has taken by far the greatest hold
upon the people.
Whatever may be said of the followers of Mohammed in other countries, it may truly be averred that the African has been greatly benefited by this religion.
Recent discussions and investigations have brought the subject of Mohammedanism prominently before the reading public, and the writings of Weil, and Noldeke, and Muir, and Sprenger, and Emanuel Deutsch, have taught the world that "Mohammedanism is a thing of vitality, fraught with a thousand fruitful germs;" and have amply illustrated the principle enunciated by St. Augustine, showing that there are elements both of truth and goodness in a system which has had so wide-spread an influence upon mankind, embracing