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A Cajun Traiteur : Faith Healing on the Bayou

A Cajun Traiteur : Faith Healing on the Bayou SC 10.4-Not Forgotten 10/28/04 8:21 AM Page 79 Not Forgotten A Cajun Traiteur Faith Healing on the Bayou by karen y o chim “Don’t thank me,” says faith healer Wade Theriot, “healing comes from God.” Cajun traiteurs like Theriot have been treating Louisiana’s sick for centuries. Photograph courtesy of the author. 79 SC 10.4-Not Forgotten 10/28/04 8:21 AM Page 80 In southwestern Louisiana, where the slow-running, gumbo-colored bayous and the incredibly wide-spreading mythical oaks mingle with the soft, sultry air to protect and comfort the spirit, it’s easy to believe in faith healing. Cajun traiteurs (treaters), or faith healers, have been ministering to the ill and the injured around the bayous since the eighteenth century, when the Acadians migrated to south- western Louisiana from France by way of Nova Scotia. Some traiteurs treat any problem, while others specialize. One traiteur may treat only respiratory problems, for example, while another may heal diseases of the blood, and another, sprains and bone breaks. Wade Theriot, a traiteur who lives hard by the Atchafalaya Swamp, is one of those who treat the afflicted no matter what the problem. He reports successes over the years, even with grave, life- threatening illnesses such as http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Southern Cultures University of North Carolina Press

A Cajun Traiteur : Faith Healing on the Bayou

Southern Cultures , Volume 10 (4) – Nov 18, 2004

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright © 2004 Center for the Study of the American South.
ISSN
1534-1488

Abstract

SC 10.4-Not Forgotten 10/28/04 8:21 AM Page 79 Not Forgotten A Cajun Traiteur Faith Healing on the Bayou by karen y o chim “Don’t thank me,” says faith healer Wade Theriot, “healing comes from God.” Cajun traiteurs like Theriot have been treating Louisiana’s sick for centuries. Photograph courtesy of the author. 79 SC 10.4-Not Forgotten 10/28/04 8:21 AM Page 80 In southwestern Louisiana, where the slow-running, gumbo-colored bayous and the incredibly wide-spreading mythical oaks mingle with the soft, sultry air to protect and comfort the spirit, it’s easy to believe in faith healing. Cajun traiteurs (treaters), or faith healers, have been ministering to the ill and the injured around the bayous since the eighteenth century, when the Acadians migrated to south- western Louisiana from France by way of Nova Scotia. Some traiteurs treat any problem, while others specialize. One traiteur may treat only respiratory problems, for example, while another may heal diseases of the blood, and another, sprains and bone breaks. Wade Theriot, a traiteur who lives hard by the Atchafalaya Swamp, is one of those who treat the afflicted no matter what the problem. He reports successes over the years, even with grave, life- threatening illnesses such as

Journal

Southern CulturesUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Nov 18, 2004

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