Cargo Cult



Cargo Cult is the trope when a group of people worship an object as Gods or deities. This usually happens either because of its advanced technology, or a coincidental resemblance to figures in the local religion.

The trope name comes from the documented effect that World War II military forces had upon natives of various South Pacific islands. Seventy years after the war, some tribes in Vanuatu are still building elaborate fake airfields and praying to idols shaped like DC-3 cargo planes.

There is a mythical character they call "John Frum", who they believe to be the source or harbinger of their prosperity (some anthropologists think this may have been the result of American soldiers introducing themselves as "John, from [America]"). Interestingly, it has helped prevent many older traditions of the islanders being wiped out by conversion to Christianity.

Many Cargo Cults are distinguished by a mixture of native spiritual systems with elaborate economic rituals, as capitalism has come to replace military power as the force of the developed world that is most heavily felt and appreciated in daily life. Such rituals similarly have the aim of appropriating what the natives perceive as the westerner's "power" from his symbols, such as money or materials in addition to technology.

Compare Mighty Whitey and Insufficiently Advanced Alien. Contrast with Sufficiently Advanced Alien. If the society worshipping the religion is post-apocalyptic, try All Hail the Great God Mickey. If the religion worships technology itself rather than as a means to an end, you have a case of Machine Worship.

Unrelated to Cargo Ship.

Note: This trope is for objects being worshiped. If characters pretend to be, or are just mistaken for gods, the trope is God Guise.

Anime

 * Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann had an underground village that worshipped a "face-God", a Ganmen that had fallen into the village long ago. At the end of the episode,.
 * In Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, the atomic-powered, biomechanical Humongous Mecha are refered to as "God Warriors", and the Master Computer that's been running things behind the scenes has a cult that worships it.
 * In one of the episodes of the first season of Vandread, the Nirvana crew descends upon an aquatic planet who mistakes them for their "God". They don't mind when the crew mentioned that they weren't Gods, but they do mind when the aforementioned crew was "hurting their true Gods". The Gods that they refer to? The machinelike Harvesters, the same ones that the Nirvana crew have been fighting for at least 5 episodes, who came there for the people's spinal cords (which they knew and willingly offered as part of the religion).
 * One of Kino's journeys takes her to a country calmly awaiting the imminent apocalypse, as foretold in their holy book of prophecies, which is revealed later in the same episode to actually be the stream-of-consciousness work of a great but grief-stricken poet whose mind snapped when his wife died in childbirth.
 * In Mobile Suit Gundam 00, Setsuna takes his devotion to Gundams to almost Ave Machina levels, shown by his complete and utter awe when he first saw the 0 Gundam in action right after he declared there is no God, as well as his repeated declarations of "I am Gundam", meaning the complete submission to Celestial Being's ideals by becoming the very symbol of the eradication of conflict (that is, a Gundam). Based on his reaction to the works of Ali and the Trinity team, using a mobile suit even remotely similar in appearance to a Gundam to shed blood just for the hell of it borders on blasphemy to him - seeing that Setsuna is Kurdish and spent an unknown amount of time as a fanatical Child Soldier who killed his own parents in the name of God, he's capable of one hell of a devotion.

Comic Books

 * Captain America was worshiped by a tribe of Eskimos after WWII while he was still frozen in a block of Arctic ice. Part of why he eventually thawed was because Namor, furious at what he perceived to be the Eskimo's idiocy in their choice of religion, hurled Cap's ice block into the ocean, and the currents pulled it into warmer climes.
 * The Tower King, a strip that ran in the British comic book Eagle, was set on an Earth that had collapsed into anarchy when a malfunctioning solar-powered satellite somehow bathed the Earth in radiation that made the production of electricity in any form impossible. A cult worshiping electricity set itself inside a power station, carefully maintaining the generators and pretending that electricity still existed.

Film

 * In Men In Black 2, a race of tiny aliens living in a rental locker worship a watch that K left behind. When K retrieves this watch, J replaces it with his own, becoming a new deity for the locker people.
 * Averted and played with in The Gods Must Be Crazy, a careless pilot throws an empty Coke bottle from his aircraft. It lands in the middle of a Bushmen community, who decide it must be a gift from the Gods. However, it only causes jealousy and inequality and it is decided that, yes, the gods must be crazy, and a member of the tribe is sent to throw the object off the edge of the world. Much of the humour of the film comes from the lone Bushman interpreting the things he encounters from his stone-age perspective.
 * With more than a touch of Clarke's Third Law thrown in as the bushmen never actually worship the bottle, but only consider it a gift, as noted above.
 * Compare Gods Must Be Crazy to Lord of the Rings. Indestructible evil bottle. Recalls the revisionist interpretation that the whole notion of the One Ring was a primitive misunderstanding, or a Big Lie designed to mask an economic fight over resources.
 * In Rango, the animals treat human artifacts like pipes this way for their 'divine' ability to provide water in a desert. Verges on Humans Are Cthulhu at points.
 * In the sequel to Planet of the Apes, Taylor uncovers a group of humans survived the apocalypse but had been turned into disfigured mutants. They worship an intact, unexploded bomb which they keep enshrined in St. Patrick's Cathedral.
 * Depending on your interpretation of "object," the Ewoks bowing down to worship C-3PO in Return of the Jedi counts as this.

Literature

 * In Will Self's novel The Book of Dave, a contemporary London cab driver's diary has become a Holy Book five hundred years in the future, with savagely satiric results.
 * Outright subverted in the Discworld book The Colour Of Magic, when a Cargo Cult works.
 * Cargo cults are also considered by Ponder when he reflects that 'he didn't build Hex, he just put it together'.
 * Dream Park, by Larry Niven and Steven Barnes, features a virtual reality-enhanced live-action roleplaying session based around the real-world Cargo Cult.
 * Christopher Moore's Island of the Sequined Love Nun uses the WWII setup of cargo cults, with a tribe of natives who worship the pilot Vincent and his plane, the Sky Priestess.
 * The Store-living Nomes in Terry Pratchett's Nomes Trilogy worship Arnold Bros (Est 1905), who built the Store. The Floridian Nomes in Wings worship Nassa, the god who makes clouds. The Nomes living on the streets of Blackbury seem to have been too busy trying to survive to come up with a religion, although the way they treat the Thing comes close.
 * Alfred Bester's The Stars My Destination has the Scientific People, the descendants of a research team that crashed in the asteroid belt, and whose rituals are built around the scientific paphernalia of the ship.
 * One book in Isaac Asimov's Foundation series mentions a temple on a planet built to house one old videotape.
 * There was that Jules Verne novel where they go across Africa in a hot air balloon and at some point the natives decide it's the moon; the characters escape just as the real moon is about to rise.
 * The Mystery of Death, AKA the Technologists of The Darksword Trilogy, fetishized technology into a spiritual belief system.
 * One of the early Star Wars Expanded Universe novels (Han Solo and the Lost Legacy) featured a group of cargo cultists who were the descendants of the crew of the treasure-laden starship of an ancient warlord; they lived on a backwater planet for generations, maintaining sacred "landing fields" complete with mock-ups of spaceships and ritualized "communications procedures".
 * In the third Empire From the Ashes book, the people of Pardal worship an ancient defense computer as the voice of God, using the "Holy Tongue" (the language of the former Fourth Imperium) to speak with it in such holy rituals as... "System Test"... and "High Fire Test". That same religion also condemns developing technology as heresy. Sean and crew get mistaken for Demons by the entire population and later for Angels (and their champions) by the rebels.
 * The short story "Assumption" (scroll down) by Desmond Warzel features a literal Cargo Cult (in that they worship an actual piece of cargo), but eventually becomes a God Guise—a person becomes an object of religious awe because of her advanced technology (she descends from the sky).
 * The 1984 book Interstellar Pig by William Sleator featured a small spherical object with a face—referred to as the "Pig"—which was highly sought-after by several species. At least one, an all-consuming Hive Mind ooze called the "lichen", believed it was a god of some sort that would bestow upon them eternal wisdom. Of course it turns out that it's more like the Winslow than anything else—an incredibly annoying embodiment of ADHD that uses its reputation as an object of great power (religious or otherwise) to planet-hop like some kind of obnoxious freeloading tourist.
 * Edgar Rice Burroughs' John Carter of Mars novel The Master Mind of Mars. In the Martian city of Phundahl, the idol of the god Tur has a system of controls that allow the operator inside to control the idol's eyes and speak through its mouth. The protagonists use this to their advantage by pretending to be Tur and giving the Phundahlians instructions.
 * Older Than Feudalism: The infamous Golden Calf in The Bible. The Israelites wanted a tangible god, so they melted down some gold and sculpted a calf and worshiped the statue ... and were severely punished.
 * Harry Harrison has a story where a man is sent to repair an ancient, RagnarokProof hyperspace beacon on a distant planet. It turns out the builders failed to notice a few stone age reptiles. Since then, the natives found the beacon (a huge tower), and made it a holy shrine (it produced an endless spring of water as part of its coolant system). One of the priests, while cleaning inside, hit the emergency shutdown switch. The protagonist pretends to be a sentry of heaven, sent to restore the spring. After he finishes the repairs, the reptiles attempt to keep him in as a permanent caretaker—in response, he claims the heaven is angry enough to forbid entry into the tower altogether (reinforced by him welding the door shut).
 * In the Doctor Who novel Night of the Humans, the Eleventh Doctor and Amy Pond find themselves on a giant space junkyard in the year 250,339. One of the first pieces found by the doctor is the Pioneer 10 probe launched back in 1972 with the plaque showing naked humans still intact. And no, despite the potential, the plaque is not the object of worship (in fact, the probe is run over by a vehicle in the first chapter). They find a primitive group of humans living in the shadow of the Tower of Gobo, the hulk of a spaceship of the Gobo Corporation (or Gobocorp) that crashed there thousands of years ago. The humans are the descendants of the surviving crewmembers, having regressed into savagery. They worship Gobo, the clown mascot of Gobocorp proudly painted on the side of the ship, as their deity, believing him to have created them on Earth (yes, they believe they're on Earth) and who will eventually take them away to the mythical land of El Paso. The latter they got from a broken projector showing westerns with no sound, or as they call them "Stories". It helps that Westerns usually have clearly-defined good guys and bad guys, allowing the humans to interpret the good guys as Gobo's children/apostles and the bad guys as the Bad, the enemy of Gobo. Anyone who disagrees with the teachings or claiming that the junkyard is not Earth is considered a heretic and put to death, as they must be the servants of the Bad.
 * Being a holy shrine to them, the Tower is off-limits to all. Only once does the current leader send a "word-slinger" (the only person per generation who knows how to read) inside. The latter quickly loses his faith after discovering the ship logs.
 * Subverted in the science-fiction short shory 'Hinterlands' by William Gibson; this time, it's humanity who are on the receiving end, and by the end of the book . More than a little unsettling.

Live Action TV

 * The Red Dwarf episode "Waiting For God" reveals that the race of humanoids that evolved from Lister's pet cat discovered his plan to move to Fiji (which they called Fuschal) and open a hot dog and donut stand, and built an entire religion around it. They decimated themselves in a holy war over what color the silly hats for the wait staff would be, and then the survivors left to search for Fuschal using star charts left behind by "Cloister"—the old laundry list used by Lister to line the original cat's bed. (The colors fought over were red and blue. Lister, however, intended them to be green.)
 * In the novelization, the cats are waiting for "Cloister", who has been frozen in time, but will one day reemerge to lead them to "Bearth". The other cats believe exactly the same thing, except he was called "Clister". Naturally, they nearly wipe out their own species in religious war, then leave to find the promised land.

Stand Up Comedy

 * During his Dandelion Mind tour, comedian Bill Bailey gets the crowd worshiping an oud.

Tabletop Games

 * The Mage: The Awakening Sourcebook "Summoners" has strange, otherworldly beings which resemble an Uncanny Valley version of planes and can be summoned to drop powerful items down on the summoners.
 * Call of Cthulhu adventure Glozel Est Authentique! by Theater of the Mind Enterprises. In the distant past the people who lived in Glozel, France interacted with Phoenician traders. When the traders stopped coming the people created tablets with Phoenician characters on them to try to bring them back.
 * Sufficiently Advanced includes Cargo Cults as one of the types of civilizations PCs can come from. Due to the hectic far flung nature of the diaspora, and the insanely advanced science of most of the cultures cargo cults are incredibly common, and the PCs can end up dealing with them fairly often.
 * Interestingly, the original premise for the game was entirely based around cargo cults, until the creator had a better idea.
 * Forgotten Realms has the Cult of Entropy, started by Karanok family, which became the rulers of Luthcheq (city-state in Chessenta), quickly earning it the nickname "city of madness". This cult worshiped a giant sphere of annihilation (basically an artifact that makes anything that touches it vanish) which can't be controlled as normal, but content to sit in one place, around which its temple was built. It apparently does not talk back to its worshipers or act as a sentient entity in any way at all.
 * It's established canon that non-existent or dead deities are up for grabs to be used as masks by the active ones. So later (in D&D 3.0 Lords of Darkness) this was expanded - though per 3.0 era design fashion (known as "lolrandum") went down a tenuous road: "You'd think Entropy, the Great Nothing, the Swallower of Gods, the Magechill, whose priests hunt magic-users is obviously a guise of Shar - with her black circle for unholy symbol, portfolio including Loss and hostilities with Goddess of Magic - but it was me, Tiamat, all along!" Later in D&D4 era issue of Dragon (magazine), per 4 edition design fashion it was retconned into a primordial embodiment of chaos that had been trapped in the form of a sphere of annihilation by the Overgod Ao.

Video Games

 * In Fallout 3, the town of Megaton has an undetonated atomic bomb in the town square, and much of the early development was done with the help of those who came to worship the bomb. Oddly enough, disarming the bomb seems to have no noticeable effect on the cult (but then again, you can't really tell an armed nuke from the unarmed kind until they blow).
 * Fallout Tactics also featured a cult of Ghouls worshiping a nuclear weapon as a God, which they named Plutonius.
 * Fallout also has the Brotherhood of Steel, who worship technology.
 * Their fascination with technology isn't actual worship, but more along the lines of obsessing over technology as a means of promoting the human race (though their level of dedication often comes off as religious). Of course, over the years many have re-doubled their efforts while loosing sight of their goals to a point it resembles more of a religion, but that's another matter.
 * Project Eden has the earth people, who live on the ground (everybody else lives in a really tall skyscraper) and mentioned they would be scared to live so high up, in case they fell down like the rubbish they collect.
 * The Covenant from the Halo games and Expanded Universe. In addition to worshipping the Forerunners as literal gods, the Covenant hold all technology created by them as holy, to the point where improving or modifying any technology reverse-engineered from Forerunner ruins is tantamount to heresy.
 * The native Nali in Unreal are a simple, agricultural race with some advanced technology (hinting to an ancient, more violent history) that they believe are sacred relics—for instance, they call the rocket launcher "stick of six fires", which "came from the Nali water god when the star fell from the sky", and put it on a holy pedestal.
 * In Avernum 3 you encounter a Cargo Cult that seems to worship random junk they've collected or stolen from various places. They do worship some valuable artifacts as well, but that doesn't make them any less deranged.
 * In The Elder Scrolls, there is a minor race of gorillas called the Imga who worship High Elves and seek to emulate them, to the point of shaving off their fur and powdering their skin.

Web Comics

 * Done in Order of the Stick, when Elan visits an island filled with primitive orcs. At first, they treat him like any other human... until he brings out Banjo, when they start bowing in supplication. That's right: the orcs thought that Elan's kooky hand-puppet was a God.
 * Of course, Elan also thinks Banjo's a God. He's actually pretty stoked that someone else is acknowledging it, although he's not so happy that the orcs won't give Banjo back.
 * Technically, Banjo probably is a God. Possibly the weakest god imaginable, but, somehow, divine nonetheless. This is due to OotS using the Gods Need Prayer Badly rules.

Web Original

 * A few SCP Foundation objects are considered parts of a god worshiped by the Church of the Broken God. One in particular, SCP-882 has had at least one known cult worship it due to its effects.

Western Animation
"Fry: You guys worship an unexploded nuclear bomb?! Vyolet: Yeah, but nobody's that observant. It's mainly a Christmas and Easter thing."
 * In the original Transformers cartoon, the second-season episode 'The God Gambit' has a tribe of Rubber Forehead Aliens on the moon Titan worshipping a statue that looked vaguely Transformer-like.
 * Then Cosmos crash-lands on the planet, and they start worshipping him instead (this counts since he is deactivated at the time).
 * Then Astrotrain arrives, and starts taking advantage of all this nonsense.
 * Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers:
 * In "Kiwi's Big Adventure", a tribe of Kiwis worship the Ranger Plane as a deity and expect it to give them back their ability to fly.
 * In "The Case of the Cola Cult", a large group of mice in tunics worship a soda brand.
 * In the Jonny Quest episode "A Small Matter of Pygmies", a tribe of pygmies worships airplanes: they have have small statuettes of airplanes in the place where they perform human sacrifices.
 * All hail the Magic Conch!
 * Given a quick jab in Futurama, which references the Planet of the Apes films (see above).


 * In Thundercats 2011 the Book of Omens is a Ancient Artifact, the singular source of history, mythology and theology for the Cats of the kingdom of Thundera. Lost for generations, Shrouded in Myth, Famed in Story and dogged by skepticism, its reputed as a Great Big Book of Everything, the source by which its kings orate their history, a Tome of Fate to the order of Clerics who maintain its Ancient Traditions, and a source of fascination to those who believe its tales of Lost Technology. Two of Thundera's best generals were sent questing for it for years, but when Thundera is invaded by ancient Outside Context Villain Mumm-Ra, head Cleric Jaga reveals that its definitely real, and sends young Prince Lion-O racing to find it before Mumm-Ra can. Once discovered it  will reveal the key to defeating Mumm-Ra.
 * In Rocko's Modern Life Heffer joins a cult that worships sausage.

Real Life

 * As mentioned in the description, the John Frum cults. Frum himself is a sort of amalgamation of Uncle Sam, Santa Claus, and John the Baptist; the name is believed to be a corruption of "John from America", though another theory holds that it's based on a letter "from John". They believe he will return on a February 15, celebrated each year as John Frum day. In some circles, John Frum is considered to be Prince Phillip's brother. A National Geographic reporter asked a John Frum cult leader how he could still keep a cargo cult going despite the modernizations that have come to his island. The leader replied "We've only been waiting for our prophet for 60 years. You've been waiting for 2,000."
 * Interestingly enough, John Frum brought wealth to them—metaphorically speaking, of course: it brought the interest of scientists, journalists and then tourists, and through them, their money.