© koninklijke brill nv, leiden, 2018 | doi: 10.1163/15685357-02201101
Worldviews (2018) 1–30
WORLDVIEWS
brill.com/wo
Accidental Environmentalists
The Religiosity of Church Forests in Highlands Ethiopia
Eliza F. Kent
Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, ny, usa
ekent@skidmore.edu
Izabela Orlowska
Leibniz—Zentrum Moderner Orient, Berlin, Germany
izabela.orlowska@zmo.de
Abstract
In the highlands of Ethiopia, the only remaining stands of native forest are around
churches of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahido Church. Though hailed as community-
conserved areas by environmentalists, we argue that the conservation of such forest
is not intentional, but rather an indirect result of the religious norms, beliefs and
practices surrounding the sites. In actuality, the religiosity surrounding church forests
maintains the purity of the most holy space in the center of the shrine, the tabot,
a replica of the Ark of the Covenant, which ensures that the church is a legitimate
and effective portal to the divine. An underlying cultural logic of purity and pollution
structures the spatial organization of the site outward into a series of concentric circles
of diminishing purity and shapes the social order into an elegant hierarchy.This article
seeks to understand the norms, beliefs and practices of this sacred geography in its
social and religious context, arguing that ignorance of or inattention to these can
undermine the conservation goals that have brought these forests, along with so many
other sacred natural sites, to the attention of environmentalists around the world.
Keywords
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahido Church – Ethiopia – church forests – sacred natural
sites – sacred groves – sacred geography – community-conservation area