All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Drapo Vodou: A Sequinned Flag and a Real Religion

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, art, ethics, citizenship, language
Core question How did enslaved Africans in Haiti combine their religions with Catholicism into a new faith — and how does one beautiful sequinned flag teach us to take that real religion seriously, beyond Hollywood stereotypes?
A Haitian Vodou altar with drapo (sequinned flags) hanging behind it. Each flag is dedicated to a specific lwa (spirit), with colours and symbols that identify which one. Drapo Vodou are sacred ceremonial objects and major works of Haitian art. Photo: Calvin Hennick, for WBUR Boston / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 3.0
Introduction

You have probably heard of voodoo. You may have seen it in films — dolls with pins, dark magic, zombies, evil curses. Almost everything you have seen is wrong. Vodou (the correct spelling) is a real religion, practised today by millions of people in Haiti and the Haitian diaspora. It has nothing to do with curses or evil. It teaches the existence of one supreme god (Bondye, from French Bon Dieu, 'Good God') and many spirits called lwa who carry messages between humans and the divine. Its rituals involve drumming, singing, dancing, and offerings. It is closely related to West African religions like the Yoruba and Fon traditions, mixed with Catholic Christianity and other influences. Vodou developed in Haiti from the 1500s onwards, when enslaved Africans were brought from West and Central Africa to work on French sugar plantations. They were forbidden to practise their religions. They were forced to convert to Catholicism. Many did both at once — they accepted Catholic saints as appearances of their African spirits. Saint James the Great looked like Ogou, the warrior spirit. Saint Patrick, surrounded by snakes, looked like Damballa, the snake spirit. The Virgin Mary looked like Ezili, the love spirit. Over centuries, the African religions and Catholicism fused into Vodou. In 1791, a Vodou ceremony at Bois Caïman is said to have started the Haitian Revolution — the only successful slave revolt in modern history. Haiti became the first independent black republic in 1804. The most beautiful object of Vodou is the drapo — a flag made of fabric covered with thousands of sequins. Each drapo is dedicated to a specific lwa. The colours and symbols on the flag show which spirit. The flag is carried at the start of every Vodou ceremony to call the spirit into the room. After the ceremony, it hangs on the wall of the temple. This lesson asks who the Vodou are, what their flag means, and what it teaches us about taking other people's religions seriously.

The object
Origin
Haiti. Developed from a fusion of West and Central African religious traditions, Catholic processional banners, French military flags, and Masonic aprons. The modern sequinned form developed in Haiti from the 1940s onwards.
Period
Vodou itself developed in Haiti between the 16th and 19th centuries, when enslaved Africans combined their traditional religions with Catholicism. Drapo Vodou as we know them today were transformed by sequins from 1940 onwards. The tradition continues to evolve.
Made of
Fabric base — silk, satin, velvet, rayon, or even repurposed burlap coffee sacks in older flags. Thousands of sequins and beads sewn on by hand. Sometimes a chromolithograph (printed paper image of a Catholic saint) is incorporated. Often edged with fringe, ribbon, or gold thread.
Size
A traditional ceremonial drapo (drapo servis) is usually about 90 cm by 90 cm. Modern art-market drapo vary from 50 cm to over 1.5 metres. Each flag may contain 2,000 to 20,000 sequins and beads, with the largest taking weeks or even months to make.
Number of objects
Tens of thousands of drapo Vodou exist across Haiti, in temples, homes, museums, and private collections worldwide. Active flagmaking workshops continue in Port-au-Prince, particularly in the Bel-Air neighbourhood. Tampa Museum of Art holds about 135 in one of the largest collections; the Fowler Museum at UCLA holds over 120; the Smithsonian and many other museums hold significant collections.
Where it is now
Used in Vodou temples (ounfò) across Haiti and in Haitian diaspora communities (especially in the United States and France). Held in major museum collections including the Fowler Museum at UCLA, Tampa Museum of Art, the Smithsonian, the Brooklyn Museum, the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, and many others. Sold in galleries from Port-au-Prince to New York to Paris.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Vodou has been deeply misrepresented in popular culture. How will you teach it as a real religion that millions of people practise, with respect?
  2. The Vodou tradition emerged from the trauma of slavery. How will you teach this honestly without making the lesson only about pain?
  3. Some students may have negative ideas about Vodou from films or family. How will you help them see past those ideas without dismissing their families?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine sailing across the Atlantic in chains. Your home was West Africa or Central Africa. Your religion was the worship of orisha (Yoruba) or vodun (Fon) or nkisi (Kongo) spirits. Your priests, your ceremonies, your sacred objects were everything you had. Now you are on a French slave ship to the Caribbean colony of Saint-Domingue. When you arrive, the priests are gone. The drums are gone. The temples are gone. The plantation owner forbids you to practise your religion. You are baptised as a Catholic at gunpoint. What would you do? What enslaved Africans actually did was extraordinary. They kept their religions alive in secret. They held ceremonies at night, in the woods, when masters were not watching. They taught the rituals to their children. And they did something else — they noticed that the Catholic saints they were forced to worship looked a lot like their African spirits. Saint James the Great, with his sword and horse, looked like Ogou, the warrior spirit of iron and war. Saint Patrick, surrounded by snakes, looked like Damballa, the great serpent spirit of life and wisdom. The Virgin Mary, gentle and loving, looked like Ezili Freda, the spirit of love. The Catholic Trinity matched the multiple spirits of African religions. So the enslaved Africans did both at once. They accepted the Catholic saints. They accepted the African spirits. The saints became the African spirits' Catholic faces. Over generations, the two traditions fused. The new religion that emerged was Vodou. Why might enslaved people develop a new religion this way?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. First, survival: a religion that looked Catholic on the surface could be practised openly without punishment. Second, integration: many enslaved Africans came from different regions of Africa, with different traditional religions. A new combined religion could unite them. Third, theology: many African religious systems already accepted multiple spirits and supreme beings, so adding Catholic saints to the mix was not difficult. Fourth, resistance: keeping their original religions alive, even disguised, was a form of resistance against the masters who were trying to erase their cultures. Fifth, beauty: the new religion had access to Catholic ritual practices (church, candles, processional banners) and to African ones (drumming, dancing, possession). The combination was richer than either alone. Vodou is one of the world's clearest examples of religious syncretism — the combining of two or more religions into something new. Other examples include the Cuban religion of Santería (Yoruba + Catholicism), the Brazilian religion of Candomblé (Yoruba + Catholicism), and many forms of Mexican folk Catholicism. Students should see that 'syncretism' is not a small thing. It is what happens when humans facing impossible situations find creative spiritual answers. Vodou is one of the most successful and enduring examples.

2
In 1791, the night of August 14, a Vodou priest called Dutty Boukman led a ceremony in the woods of Bois Caïman in northern Saint-Domingue. He called the spirits, especially Ogou, the warrior spirit. He prayed for the freedom of the enslaved. The men and women at the ceremony swore an oath to fight. They drank pig's blood. They committed themselves to revolution. A week later, on August 22, the Haitian Revolution began. Tens of thousands of enslaved Africans rose up across the colony. Plantations burned. The French army, trying to crush the revolt, failed. The British and Spanish, who tried to invade and seize the colony, also failed. Toussaint L'Ouverture, the brilliant former-slave general, led the rebellion through years of war. In 1804, Haiti became independent. It was the first independent black republic in modern history. It was the first country in the Americas where slavery was permanently abolished. It was a massive defeat for European colonial powers — particularly Napoleonic France, which had tried to reimpose slavery. The Haitian Revolution sent shock waves across the Atlantic world. It encouraged abolitionists, frightened slaveholders, and changed history. Vodou was at the heart of this. The Bois Caïman ceremony is remembered every year in Haiti. Many of the revolutionary leaders were Vodou priests or strong Vodou believers. Vodou imagery — the lwa Ogou as a revolutionary, the drapo of warrior spirits — became part of national memory. Why might a religion become bound up with revolution?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because religion is often where people find courage. Vodou gave the enslaved Africans of Saint-Domingue a sense of identity, community, and divine support. It gave them gathering places (secret ceremonies). It gave them leaders (priests). It gave them messages from spirits encouraging resistance. The Bois Caïman ceremony was a religious-political moment in one. Other revolutions have similar religious roots. The American Revolution drew on Protestant Christianity. The Mexican Revolution drew on Catholic devotion to the Virgin of Guadalupe. The Iranian Revolution drew on Shia Islam. Religion has often given people the spiritual courage to risk their lives. Students should see that 'religion' and 'politics' are not always separate. In Haiti, Vodou and the Revolution were one story. After independence, Vodou was sometimes persecuted by Haitian governments who wanted to seem more 'modern' or 'European'. The Catholic Church campaigned against Vodou as recently as the 1940s, ransacking temples and destroying sacred objects. Vodou survived all this. In 2003, the Haitian government officially recognised Vodou as a religion of Haiti, alongside Catholicism. The recognition was overdue. Vodou had been there since 1804.

3
A drapo Vodou is a flag, but not the kind that flies on a pole. It is a piece of fabric, usually about 90 cm square, completely covered with sequins. The sequins are sewn on by hand, one at a time. A typical full-size drapo contains 2,000 to 20,000 sequins. Making one can take 10 days for a small flag, or weeks or months for a larger one. The central image of the drapo shows the lwa it is dedicated to. This may be a chromolithograph — a printed paper image of a Catholic saint, glued or sewn onto the fabric. It may be a vèvè — an abstract symbolic drawing that represents the lwa. (Each lwa has a vèvè drawn on the floor in cornmeal during ceremonies.) It may be a beaded image of a saint or an animal sacred to the lwa. The colours match the lwa: red for Ogou, blue for Damballa, pink for Ezili Freda. Around the central image, the flag is filled with sequinned patterns. There may be a diamond-shaped border. There may be elaborate geometric designs. There may be additional symbols — stars, hearts, snakes, anchors. Some flags include words or numbers. Some include images that have come from outside Vodou tradition altogether — Princess Diana, in one famous flag by Edgard Jean Louis. At the start of a Vodou ceremony, the drapo for the lwa being called is brought out and waved. The flag bearer (often a young woman or man) carries it through the temple. The lwa is welcomed. The ceremony begins. Why might a religion communicate through visual symbols?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. First, beauty: the drapo are gorgeous objects. They reward looking. They demonstrate the lwa's power and the maker's devotion. Second, identification: each lwa has its own colours and symbols, so the right drapo can be selected for the right ceremony. Third, syncretism: the drapo combine African vèvè symbols with Catholic chromolithographs, making the multilayered nature of Vodou theology visible. Fourth, accessibility: most early Vodou practitioners could not read Latin (Catholic) or French. Symbols crossed the language barrier. Fifth, sacredness: making and possessing a drapo was an act of devotion, not just a craft. Many drapo makers are also Vodou priests (oungan) or priestesses (manbo). Students should see that 'religious art' often does several things at once. It is beautiful. It is functional. It is theologically meaningful. It is communal. The drapo Vodou is one of the world's clearest examples of art that does all four. The closest comparisons might be Eastern Orthodox icons, Tibetan Buddhist thangkas, or Hindu murti.

4
In 1940, a Haitian artist called Joseph Fortine saw a troupe of Afro-Brazilian samba dancers performing in Port-au-Prince. They wore costumes covered in sequins. Fortine was struck by the sparkle. He began decorating costumes for Rara band members with sequins. In 1943, he made the first sequinned drapo Vodou — a flag for Damballa stretched on a wooden frame, made from a burlap coffee sack covered in sequins. Fortine's innovation transformed the tradition. Earlier drapo had been simpler — embroidered fabric with some metal bangles or glass beads. Sequins made the flags shine, dance, and sparkle in candlelight. Other artists copied the technique. Edgard Jean Louis, Sylva Joseph, Clotaire Bazile, and Yves Telemak all learned from Fortine. They became the first generation of master flagmakers. In the 1950s, foreign collectors began to buy drapo Vodou as art. Vodou priests started making them for sale, not just for ceremony. The art form developed. Newer artists like Antoine Oleyant (who died in 1992) brought the flags into 'fine art' status. Then in the 21st century, women artists — Myrlande Constant, Evelyn Alcide, Mireille Delice, Roudy Azor — transformed the tradition again. Constant in particular, who learned beadwork in a wedding-dress factory, developed an extraordinarily dense and detailed style of bead-and-sequin work. Her drapo are now in major museums worldwide. Today drapo Vodou are made in workshops across Port-au-Prince, particularly in the Bel-Air neighbourhood. They are sold to tourists, collectors, and art galleries. Some are still used in ceremonies. The market provides income for hundreds of artists, in a country where economic opportunities are scarce. What is the drapo Vodou today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A living art form, a sacred ceremonial object, a piece of national identity, and a source of livelihood for hundreds of artists. The flags are sold in Port-au-Prince galleries, in New York, in Paris, in London. They hang in the Smithsonian, the Fowler Museum at UCLA (which has over 120 of them), the Tampa Museum of Art (which has 135), and many other major museums. They are still made in temples and used in ceremonies. The dual life — sacred object and art commodity — creates real tensions. Some Vodou practitioners worry that flags made for the art market lose their spiritual meaning. Other artists argue that the art-market success keeps the tradition alive when ceremonial use alone could not. Both views are real. Vodou itself faces challenges in modern Haiti. The country has experienced earthquakes (2010), political instability, gang violence, hurricanes, and severe poverty. Many Vodou priests have died. Some temples have been destroyed. Yet the religion continues. Drapo are still made. Ceremonies still happen. The lwa are still called. The Bois Caïman anniversary is still marked every August 14. End the discovery here. The flag continues to sparkle. The religion continues to live.

What this object teaches

A drapo Vodou is a sequinned flag used in Haitian Vodou religion. It is made of fabric covered with thousands of hand-sewn sequins and beads, with a central image of the lwa (spirit) it is dedicated to. Each flag is carried at the start of a Vodou ceremony to call the spirit into the room. Vodou is a real religion practised by millions of people in Haiti and the Haitian diaspora. It developed from the fusion of West and Central African religions with Catholicism during the slavery era in Haiti. A Vodou ceremony in 1791 sparked the Haitian Revolution; Haiti became the first independent black republic in 1804. The drapo tradition was transformed in 1940 when artist Joseph Fortine introduced sequins. First-generation masters like Edgard Jean Louis, Clotaire Bazile, and Yves Telemak developed the art form. In the 21st century, women artists — particularly Myrlande Constant — have introduced new techniques and themes. Drapo Vodou are now held in major museums worldwide, including the Fowler Museum at UCLA, Tampa Museum of Art, and the Smithsonian. The flags are both sacred objects and recognised fine art, sold in galleries from Port-au-Prince to New York. Vodou was officially recognised as a religion of Haiti in 2003. The popular Hollywood image of 'voodoo' (dolls with pins, curses, zombies) is largely fiction with little connection to actual Vodou belief.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
Is Vodou a real religion?Just movie magicA real religion practised by millions of people in Haiti and worldwide; officially recognised by Haiti in 2003
Where did Vodou come from?From dark magicFrom the fusion of West and Central African religions with Catholicism during slavery in Haiti
Are voodoo dolls real?Yes, used for cursesMostly Hollywood fiction; some Haitian Vodou uses dolls but for healing, not cursing
Is Vodou anti-Christian?YesNo; Vodou often includes Catholic saints and prayers, syncretised with African spirits
Are drapo Vodou old?Yes, ancientThe basic flag is old, but the modern sequinned form began in 1940 with artist Joseph Fortine
Are drapo Vodou just craft?YesThey are both sacred ceremonial objects and recognised fine art, held in major museums worldwide
Key words
Vodou
A religion that developed in Haiti between the 16th and 19th centuries, combining West and Central African religious traditions with Catholicism. Practised by millions of people in Haiti and the Haitian diaspora today. Officially recognised by Haiti in 2003.
Example: Vodou should be spelled 'Vodou' (Haitian Creole spelling) or 'Voudou', not 'Voodoo'. The 'Voodoo' spelling is associated with negative Hollywood stereotypes and the related but distinct Louisiana Voodoo tradition.
Lwa
The spirits of Vodou. They are intermediaries between humans and the supreme god (Bondye). Each lwa has its own personality, colours, symbols, foods, and ceremonies. Often syncretised with Catholic saints.
Example: Major lwa include Ogou (warrior, syncretised with Saint James), Damballa (snake/wisdom, syncretised with Saint Patrick), Ezili Freda (love, syncretised with the Virgin Mary), and Baron Samedi (death). There are hundreds of lwa in total.
Vèvè
An abstract symbolic drawing that represents a particular lwa. Drawn on the ground in cornmeal, ash, or coffee grounds during Vodou ceremonies to call the spirit. Each lwa has a unique vèvè.
Example: The vèvè for Damballa shows two snakes intertwined. The vèvè for Baron Samedi shows a cross. The vèvè for Legba shows a crossroads. Each vèvè is the spirit's signature in symbolic form.
Bois Caïman
The site in northern Haiti where, on August 14, 1791, a Vodou ceremony led by priest Dutty Boukman is said to have begun the Haitian Revolution. A foundational moment in Haitian history. Commemorated every year in Haiti.
Example: The exact location and details of the ceremony are debated by historians, but its symbolic importance in Haitian national memory is huge. It connects Vodou to the founding of the first independent black republic.
Myrlande Constant
Contemporary Haitian artist (born 1968) who transformed the drapo Vodou tradition with extraordinarily detailed bead-and-sequin work. She learned beadwork in a wedding-dress factory and applied the techniques to drapo. Her work is now in major museums worldwide.
Example: Constant's drapo are larger and more densely beaded than traditional flags, often showing entire ceremonial scenes with many figures. She has had solo exhibitions in major American museums and is one of the most internationally recognised Haitian artists.
Bondye
The supreme god of Vodou. The name comes from the French 'Bon Dieu' meaning 'Good God'. Bondye is the creator of all things. Vodou practitioners do not worship Bondye directly; they worship the lwa, who carry messages between humans and Bondye.
Example: Vodou is monotheistic in the sense that there is one supreme god (Bondye). The many lwa are not gods themselves but spirits who serve and represent Bondye. This structure is similar to Catholic veneration of saints under the one God.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of Vodou and Haiti: enslaved Africans brought to Saint-Domingue (1500s onwards), Vodou develops (1600s-1700s), Bois Caïman ceremony (1791), Haitian Revolution (1791-1804), Haiti independent (1804), Catholic Church campaigns against Vodou (1940s), sequinned drapo invented (1940), Vodou officially recognised (2003). The story spans 500 years.
  • Geography: On a class map, mark the routes of the Atlantic slave trade — from West and Central Africa to Haiti (then Saint-Domingue). Mark the regions where the religious traditions of Vodou come from: Yoruba (Nigeria/Benin), Fon (Benin/Togo), Kongo (Angola/DRC). Discuss: Vodou is geographically a fusion of three regions across the Atlantic.
  • Art: Look at images of drapo Vodou by different artists. Each is unique. Each combines African vèvè symbols, Catholic saint images, and other elements. Each student designs their own symbolic flag for an idea or value important to them, on paper. The design must include both symbolic patterns and at least one image.
  • Citizenship: Vodou was misrepresented in popular culture for over a century before being officially recognised by Haiti in 2003. Discuss what it means for a religion to be officially recognised, and why it matters. Compare with other religions that have struggled for recognition (Native American religions in the US, Indigenous Australian spiritualities, etc.).
  • Language: Many Vodou words are now in widely used English: voodoo (from vodou), zombie (from Haitian Creole zonbi), houngan (Vodou priest). The Haitian Creole language itself is a fusion of French, West African languages, and Indigenous Taino, just like Vodou is a fusion of religious traditions. Discuss: how do languages and religions blend in similar ways?
  • Ethics: Vodou has been demonised by Hollywood films, white supremacist propaganda, and even some Christian missionaries. Discuss the ethics of misrepresenting other peoples' religions. What are the consequences for Vodou practitioners? What is the responsibility of films, journalists, and educators? Strong answers will see this as a real ongoing issue with practical consequences.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Vodou is the same as the 'voodoo' in Hollywood movies.

Right

Hollywood 'voodoo' is largely fiction. Vodou is a real religion practised by millions of people. It teaches the existence of one supreme god, many spirits, and ethical living. It does not centre on curses, dolls with pins, or zombies.

Why

The Hollywood image has done real harm to Vodou practitioners, who have been demonised, misunderstood, and discriminated against because of it.

Wrong

Vodou is anti-Christian.

Right

Vodou developed by combining African religions with Catholicism. Many Vodou rituals include Catholic prayers and saints. A Haitian saying is 'pou sevi lwa yo se pou'w bon katolik' — 'to serve the spirits, you have to be a good Catholic.' Many Vodou practitioners are also practising Catholics.

Why

The 'anti-Christian' framing erases the syncretic reality. Vodou is one of the world's clearest examples of a religion built from two traditions.

Wrong

All drapo Vodou are old traditional folk art.

Right

The basic ceremonial flag is older, but the modern sequinned form was invented in 1940 by artist Joseph Fortine. Today's drapo are made by named, recognised artists — first generation (Edgard Jean Louis, Clotaire Bazile), second generation (Antoine Oleyant), and contemporary (Myrlande Constant, Evelyn Alcide). They are recognised fine art, not anonymous folk craft.

Why

'Anonymous folk art' often serves to undervalue work by artists from poorer countries. Drapo artists are real, named, internationally collected artists.

Wrong

Vodou is dying out.

Right

Vodou continues to be practised by millions of people in Haiti and across the diaspora (especially in the United States and France). It was officially recognised as a religion of Haiti in 2003. Drapo Vodou is a thriving art form. Vodou ceremonies are held weekly across Haiti.

Why

Predicting the death of religions outside the mainstream is often a way of dismissing them. Vodou is alive.

Teaching this with care

Treat Vodou as a real living religion with real practitioners. Use 'Vodou' (Haitian Creole orthography) not 'Voodoo' (which is associated with negative stereotypes and the related but distinct Louisiana Voodoo tradition). Pronounce 'Vodou' as 'voh-DOO'. Pronounce 'lwa' as 'L-wah'; 'drapo' as 'DRAH-po'; 'oungan' (priest) as 'OON-gahn'; 'manbo' (priestess) as 'MAHN-bo'; 'Bondye' as 'BOHN-dyay'; 'Bois Caïman' as 'bwah ka-ee-MAHN'; 'Damballa' as 'dahm-BAH-lah'; 'Ezili' as 'eh-ZEE-lee'; 'Ogou' as 'oh-GOO'. The lesson is about a religion. Some of your students may belong to this religion. Some may belong to other religions, especially Christianity, with strong views about Vodou. Some may have been taught Vodou is evil. Be ready for discomfort. Teach Vodou with the same respect you would give to any other religion. Be careful with the topic of slavery. The religion emerged from slavery and remains tied to the experience of African enslavement in the Americas. This is real history with real ongoing implications. Mention slavery honestly without making the lesson only about it. Avoid Hollywood 'voodoo' references unless specifically debunking them. The popular image is so wrong that even casually using it can mislead students. Be very careful with images. Some Vodou imagery, especially of Baron Samedi (death) or Petwo lwa, can look dark or scary to students who are not familiar with the tradition. Choose images that show the beauty and craft of drapo, not the most dramatic imagery. Be careful with the topic of possession. Vodou ceremonies sometimes involve practitioners being possessed by lwa. This is a sacred and meaningful experience for Vodou practitioners, not the demonic possession of horror films. Mention it briefly and respectfully if at all. The Haitian Revolution is a major historical event. Treat it with the gravity it deserves. The first successful slave revolt in modern history. The first independent black republic. The country that frightened slaveholders across the Americas. If you have students of Haitian heritage, give them space to share their family experiences if they want. Many Haitians have complex relationships with Vodou — some practitioners, some Catholics, some Protestants who reject Vodou, some artists who paint it. Respect the variety. Avoid the lazy 'mysterious Caribbean' framing. Vodou is a coherent, theologically sophisticated, ethically structured religion. Treat it that way. Finally, end on the present. Vodou is alive. The drapo are still being made. The ceremonies still happen. The lwa are still called.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the drapo Vodou.

  1. What is a drapo Vodou?

    A drapo Vodou is a sequinned ceremonial flag used in the Haitian Vodou religion. It is made of fabric covered with thousands of hand-sewn sequins and beads, with a central image of the lwa (spirit) it is dedicated to. It is carried at the start of a Vodou ceremony to call the spirit.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the materials (sequins on fabric), the religious function (calling spirits), and the central image of a lwa. Two of these is enough for credit.
  2. How did Vodou as a religion develop?

    Vodou developed in Haiti from the 1500s onwards, when enslaved Africans were brought from West and Central Africa to French Saint-Domingue. They combined their traditional African religions with the Catholicism they were forced to practise. Catholic saints became the visible faces of African spirits. Over centuries, the two traditions fused into Vodou.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention slavery, African religious traditions, Catholicism, and syncretism.
  3. What was Bois Caïman, and why is it important?

    Bois Caïman was the site of a Vodou ceremony in northern Saint-Domingue on August 14, 1791. The ceremony, led by priest Dutty Boukman, is said to have begun the Haitian Revolution. The Revolution led to Haitian independence in 1804 — the first independent black republic in modern history.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that names the site, gives the date or context, and connects it to the Haitian Revolution.
  4. How are popular movie 'voodoo' and real Vodou different?

    Movie 'voodoo' is largely fiction — dolls with pins, curses, zombies, evil magic. Real Vodou is a religion that teaches the existence of one supreme god, many spirits called lwa, and ethical living. It involves drumming, singing, dancing, offerings, and prayers. It does not centre on curses or evil. Many Vodou practitioners are also Catholics.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name several real elements of Vodou and contrast them with the movie image.
  5. Are drapo Vodou considered art today?

    Yes. Drapo Vodou are recognised as fine art and held in major museums worldwide, including the Fowler Museum at UCLA (over 120 flags), the Tampa Museum of Art (about 135), and the Smithsonian. Contemporary artists like Myrlande Constant, Evelyn Alcide, and others are internationally collected. The flags are both sacred objects and recognised art.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises drapo as both sacred and art, with at least one specific museum or artist named.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. Vodou developed by combining African religions with Catholicism. What does this teach us about how religions change over time?

    Push students to think about religious history. Religions are often presented as fixed and ancient, but most major religions have absorbed influences from others over centuries. Christianity itself developed from Judaism with Greco-Roman influences. Buddhism spread from India to China and absorbed Daoist elements. Islam developed in dialogue with Judaism and Christianity. Sikhism emerged from the meeting of Hinduism and Islam. The deeper point is that religious change is not weakness or impurity. It is how religions adapt and survive. Vodou is one of the world's clearest examples of a religion that emerged from cultural meeting under terrible conditions and became something beautiful and enduring.
  2. Hollywood 'voodoo' has been almost entirely wrong about Vodou for over a century. What are the consequences when one religion gets misrepresented in popular culture?

    This is a question about the harm of stereotyping. Students may suggest: practitioners face prejudice, tourists visit Haiti expecting curses, Vodou is treated as 'less real' than other religions, films profit from misrepresentation while practitioners suffer the consequences. The deeper point is that misrepresentation has real effects on real people. Other religions face similar issues — Indigenous American religions stereotyped as 'mystical', Islam stereotyped as violent, Hinduism stereotyped through orientalist clichés. Strong answers will see that the responsibility for accurate representation falls on filmmakers, journalists, and educators. End by asking how students can contribute to better representation.
  3. The drapo Vodou is both a sacred ceremonial object and a piece of fine art sold in galleries. Is there tension between these two roles?

    This is a real ongoing question in Vodou. Students may suggest: art-market success keeps the tradition alive financially, but ceremonial flags lose meaning if they become commodities; the artists are real artists deserving recognition; some flags are made specifically for ceremony, others specifically for sale. The deeper point is that traditions navigate this tension all the time. Tibetan thangkas are both sacred and sold. Eastern Orthodox icons are both sacred and sold. Christian church art is both sacred and sold. The art market and the sacred can coexist, sometimes with friction. Vodou artists themselves debate this. End by saying there is no single right answer.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'What do you know about voodoo?' Take answers — they will probably mention dolls, curses, zombies. Then say: 'Almost everything you have heard is wrong. Vodou — the correct spelling — is a real religion practised by millions of people. We are going to find out about it.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the drapo Vodou: a sequinned flag, central to Vodou ceremonies, dedicated to a specific spirit (lwa). Made by named artists. Held in major museums worldwide. Pause and ask: 'Why might a religion centre itself on flags?' Listen to answers.
  3. THE STORY OF VODOU (15 min)
    Tell the story: enslaved Africans brought to Saint-Domingue from West and Central Africa, combined their religions with Catholicism, developed Vodou over centuries, sparked the Haitian Revolution at Bois Caïman in 1791, won independence in 1804, faced persecution from Haitian governments and the Catholic Church, were officially recognised in 2003. Discuss: how did a religion survive 500 years of pressure?
  4. THE FLAG AS ART (10 min)
    On the board, write the names of drapo artists: Joseph Fortine (1940 sequins), Edgard Jean Louis, Clotaire Bazile, Yves Telemak, Antoine Oleyant, Myrlande Constant. Each is a real recognised artist. Discuss: why might it matter that we know their names? Compare with how 'folk art' from rich countries is often anonymous.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the drapo Vodou teach us about religions, stereotypes, and respect?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'Vodou is real. It is practised today by millions of people. The drapo are still being made by artists with names. The ceremonies still happen. The lwa are still called. The film versions are wrong. The reality is more interesting, more beautiful, and more deserving of respect than the cartoon. Now you know.'
Classroom materials
Design a Symbolic Flag
Instructions: Each student designs a symbolic flag on paper for an idea or value important to them — peace, family, learning, courage, hope. The design must include: (1) a colour scheme that means something; (2) at least one symbol; (3) a border or pattern. Display the designs. Discuss: each Vodou drapo works the same way, with each lwa having its own colours and symbols.
Example: In Mr Charles's class, students designed flags for peace, family memory, and personal courage. The teacher said: 'You have just done what every Vodou drapo artist does. You have made a symbol with colours, patterns, and meaning. The Vodou tradition has been doing this for centuries. Each drapo is like your design — but with thousands of hand-sewn sequins, made by an artist who often works for weeks on a single flag.'
Stereotypes and Reality
Instructions: On the board, draw two columns: 'Stereotype' and 'Reality'. Under Stereotype, list things students have seen in films about voodoo — dolls with pins, curses, zombies, dark magic. Under Reality, list real Vodou — one supreme god (Bondye), many spirits (lwa), ceremonies with drumming and dancing, ethical teachings, syncretism with Catholicism, official recognition by Haiti in 2003. Discuss: how do stereotypes form, and how do they harm?
Example: In one class, students were stunned at how different the two columns were. The teacher said: 'You have just discovered something that affects millions of people. The film image of voodoo is so different from the real religion that practitioners are constantly fighting against misunderstanding. The next time you see a Hollywood voodoo image, you will know it is not the real thing.'
The Power of Naming
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'Why does it matter that we know the names of drapo Vodou artists?' Examples might come up: art is taken more seriously when artists are named; recognition gives artists more income; named artists are more likely to be remembered; un-named 'folk art' is often undervalued because of where it comes from. Each group shares one thought. Discuss: the difference between 'anonymous folk craft from Haiti' and 'art by Myrlande Constant' is huge.
Example: In Mrs Pierre's class, students realised that art from poor countries is often un-named while art from rich countries is named. The teacher said: 'You have just noticed something important about how art is valued. Drapo Vodou artists are real artists. Knowing their names is part of giving the tradition the respect it deserves. The same is true of many traditions worldwide.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Vodou shrine for another object from the same religious tradition. The Vodou shrine lesson goes deeper into ceremony.
  • Try a lesson on the carnival costume for another Caribbean tradition with deep roots in resistance.
  • Try a lesson on the cassava grater for another Caribbean tradition that survived a catastrophe.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the Haitian Revolution. The first independent black republic deserves much more attention than it usually gets.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on religious art across cultures. Drapo Vodou, Eastern Orthodox icons, Tibetan thangkas, Hindu murti — all combine sacred function with artistic beauty.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of stereotypes and minority religions. Vodou is one of many religions that have been demonised by majority cultures.
Key takeaways
  • A drapo Vodou is a sequinned ceremonial flag used in the Haitian Vodou religion. It is made of fabric covered with thousands of hand-sewn sequins and beads, with a central image of the lwa (spirit) it is dedicated to.
  • Vodou is a real religion practised today by millions of people in Haiti and the Haitian diaspora. It teaches the existence of one supreme god (Bondye) and many spirits (lwa) who carry messages between humans and the divine.
  • Vodou developed in Haiti from the 1500s onwards, when enslaved Africans combined their West and Central African religions with the Catholicism they were forced to practise. The two traditions fused into something new.
  • A Vodou ceremony at Bois Caïman in 1791 sparked the Haitian Revolution. Haiti became the first independent black republic in 1804. Vodou was officially recognised as a religion of Haiti in 2003.
  • Modern sequinned drapo were invented in 1940 by artist Joseph Fortine. Generations of named artists — Edgard Jean Louis, Clotaire Bazile, Antoine Oleyant, Myrlande Constant, and many others — have developed the tradition into a recognised fine art form held in major museums worldwide.
  • The popular Hollywood image of 'voodoo' (dolls with pins, curses, zombies) is largely fiction. Real Vodou has nothing to do with curses or evil. The misrepresentation has caused real harm to Vodou practitioners over more than a century.
Sources
  • Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou — Donald J. Cosentino (ed.) (1995) [academic]
  • Haitian Vodou Flags — Patrick Arthur Polk (1997) [academic]
  • Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution — Laurent Dubois (2004) [academic]
  • The Drapo Vodou: Spirit Flags of Haiti — Fowler Museum at UCLA (2024) [institution]
  • Myrlande Constant: The Master of Drapo — Fowler Museum at UCLA (2023) [institution]