The New Orleans Historic Voodoo Museum
Wooden masks, portraits and the occasional human skull mark the collections of this small museum near the French Quarter
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Voodoo Charlie died of a heart attack in 2001, on Mardis Gras day: his memorial service, held in Congo Square, attracted hundreds of mourners, including voodoo queens in their trademark tignons, or head scarves. Gandolfo took over the museum from Charlie’s son in 2005. Then Hurricane Katrina hit and tourism ground to a halt: the museum, which charges between $5 and $7 admission, once welcomed some 120,000 visitors a year; now the number is closer to 12,000. Gandolfo, who is unmarried and has no children, is usually on hand to discuss voodoo history or to explain (in frighteningly precise terms) how to make a human “zombie” with poison extracted from a blowfish. (“Put it in the victim’s shoe, where it is absorbed through sweat glands, inducing a death-like catatonic state,” he says. Later, the person is fed an extract containing an antidote to it as well as powerful hallucinogens. Thus, the “zombie” appears to rise from the dead, stumbling around in a daze.)
“The museum is an entry point for people who are curious, who want to see what’s behind this stuff,” says Martha Ward, a University of New Orleans anthropologist who studies voodoo. “How do people think about voodoo? What objects do they use? Where do they come from? [The museum] is a very rich and deep place.”
The eighth graders—visiting from a rural Louisiana parish—filed through the rooms, sometimes pausing to consider candles flickering on the altars or to stare into the vacant eye sockets of skulls.
The braver girls hoisted Jolie Vert over their shoulders for pictures. (“My mom’s going to flip!”) Others scuttled for the door.
“Can we go now?” one student asked in a small voice.
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Comments (2)
The Gandolfo's brothers did well trying to create a place were more people who's related to this subject, plus people who dont, share time and delve into this colorful modus vivendi!
An aplause for this brothers!
Posted by Carolina on July 10,2011 | 08:35 PM
Well, this article is as highly colored as the museum, but I feel there could have been more of a look at how Voodoo persists in spite of such lingering misconceptions. Voodoo is very much a living religion in New Orleans and the surrounding area, and the religious elements of the faith - ancestor reverence and the worship of gods brought overseas by slaves and kept alive in memory and worship in spite of every attempt to sever ties to the African past - are far more enduring and true to the heritage of Voodoo than "voodoo dolls", love spells, zombies or other such Hollywood fare.
Posted by Daniel on June 22,2011 | 05:18 PM