Asamando, in Akan religion, the land of the spirits and the dwelling place of the Nsamanfo, or ancestors.
For the Akan, physical death (owuo) does not mark the end of life but represents the transition from earthly life to spiritual life, a transition that each individual must make to reach Asamando and join the community of the Nsamanfo.
The Akan believe that each individual consists of certain material and spiritual components. The body (honam) and blood (mogya) represent the material or physical components, whereas the life force or soul (kra), divine breath (honhom), and spirit (sunsum) represent the spiritual or nonphysical components. Nyame, the creator, bestows the material and spiritual elements upon people at conception and birth. However, upon physical death, the individual’s honam and mogya join Asase Yaa (Mother Earth) while the kra, honhom, and sunsum return to Nyame. The Akan believe that the universe and all things, both animate and inanimate, are endowed with varying degrees of sunsum, which is also the basis of the individual’s character and personality. Upon owuo, it is the sunsum that makes the transition to Asamando and awaits nomination to the status of Nsamanfo.
The Akan calendar operates on a 40- to 42-day cycle, and the Akan believe that it takes at least one cycle for the sunsum to finally depart the world of the living and enter Asamando. Akan funeral rites (ayie) are taken quite seriously, because it is the responsibility of the deceased’s family members to perform proper and timely customary rites to ensure that the sunsum can enter Asamando. If the rites are defective, the sunsum might be transformed into an unsettled and malevolent spirit that returns to harm the family.