A Structuralist Analysis of Puerto Rican Santeria 
Anthropological analysis by Lily Diaz of Kardekian Spiritualism (La Mesa Blanca), and Santeria as practiced by Puerto Ricans.
African New World Soap Making Recipes for the Spiritual Bath 
Recipes for home-crafting herbal soaps for use in rituals dedicated to the Orishas.
Alafia Net 
Descriptions of various aspects of Orisha worship: Warriors, Ilekes, Ikofa/Awofaka (initiation to Orunmila), and answers to readers questions on "Who is my crowning Orisha?".
At the Crossroads 
An exhibit of Afro-Cuban Orisha arts in Miami, Florida, presented by the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, includes historical articles, beadwork, implements, and paintings by orisha artists.
Bata Drums 
These sacred, double-headed drums from the Yoruba culture, were brought to Cuba and are now played in the U.S. Information on the drums, songs, rhythms, dances, religion, history, and culture surrounding bata drumming.
Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye 
English and Spanish site for Santeria / Lukumi / Orisha/ Regla de Ocha / Yoruba / Cuban religion. CLBA was the first church of its kind in the U.S. and was responsible for the recognition of Santeria as decided by the June 1993 unanimous U.S. Supreme Court ruling, Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye vs. City of Hialeah.
Church of the Seven African Powers 
Guidance for those who seek spiritual light through the Mysteries of African deities. Includes pages on most of the principal Orishas.
Dictionary of Afro-Caribbean Deities 
Seven major Orishas from the Yoruba pantheon described.
Ebo Okokan, Offerings from the Heart 
A cultural history of the four major Afro-Cuban religious musical divisions - Yoruba, Abakua, Arara and Kongo drumming, within the pages of Afro-Cuban drum and dance ensemble Ebo Okokán, based in California.
Effectively Communicating with Our Egun 
With the exception of our Ori, no Orisa approaches the level of closeness that we have with our Egun (Ancestors).
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