British Voodoo: the Black art of Rollo Ahmed
Rollo Ahmed was a Guyanan national, born Abdul Said Ahmed c.1898. He emigrated to England in the inter-war period, initially to work as a theatrical performer and latterly as a herbalist, Yoga teacher, author, lecturer and occultist. Like other Black immigrants, Ahmed’s attempts to gain conventional employment were thwarted due to the widespread racism of the period. As a result, he played on his ‘exoticism’ in England as a self-promotional tool – for example, claiming to have been born in Egypt
so as to enhance his reputation as a purveyor of esoteric wisdom.
He was a familiar face on the 1930s Bohemian literary scene, counting Dennis Wheatley and Aleister Crowley amongst his friends, but struggled to provide a comfortable living for himself and his family, compelling him, on occasion, to seek dubious forms of income.
Ahmed was the author of two books - The Black Art (1936), a history of occultism and magic, and I Rise: The Life Story of a Negro (1937), an eloquent semi-autobiographical novel that moves from Guyana to Liverpool to London, vividly portraying the struggles of a Black man in the 'mother country.'
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | Rollo Ahmed, Guyana, Commonwealth, migration, racism, colonial studies, post-colonial studies, 20th century social history, occultism, Vodou, Voodoo, witchcraft, Dennis Wheatley, Aleister Crowley, Brighton, Hastings |
Subjects |
History Sociology & Anthropology |
Divisions | Senate House Library |
Date Deposited | 28 Apr 2015 08:42 |
Last Modified | 06 Aug 2024 03:52 |
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picture_as_pdf - Rollo Ahmed pt. 1. July 2014 no.316_redacted.pdf