By Rose Skelton
BBC News, Casamance, Senegal
Slashing its sharpened machetes together and letting out a deafening
screech, the bark-clad beast known as a konkoran races through the market
scattering women and children as they go about their morning shopping.
Turning off down a residential side street in the southern Senegalese town
of Ziguinchor, the frightening figure makes its way towards a family
compound, accompanied by an entourage of dancing and singing young men. Here
they will find young boys who have recently been circumcised and who,
according to the Mandingo people, are vulnerable at this time to attacks
from evil spirits.
The beginning of Senegal's rainy season and the circumcision period, in
which boys as young as three will symbolically become men, coincides with
the announcement by the World Health Organization (WHO) that male
circumcision could prevent millions of new HIV infections.
The study found that in places such as Senegal, where circumcision is
commonly practised, HIV is less prevalent than in places where the practice
is less widespread, such as in South Africa.
A separate WHO report says that demand for male circumcision as a method of
combating HIV/AIDS is likely to increase dramatically in southern African
countries.
However, concerns over traditional ceremonies - such as this one in Senegal
- in which the health of the initiates may be put at risk because of
exposure or unsanitary conditions, means that more circumcisions may be
performed in hospitals by trained medical personnel rather than in the
traditional manner.
Rites of passage
In the village, the konkoran doesn't walk on earth but flies. Nowadays,
these kids do whatever they like.
Ibrahima Ndiongue
Grandfather
At the family compound of low white-washed concrete houses, the young men of
the Ndiongue family bring their newly-circumcised sons from their hiding
places as the konkoran in its costume of sacred red tree bark whirls through
the compound gates.
With the young boys on their knees, the benevolent but violent beast circles
them, chasing out the harmful spirits that are thought to cause illness or
misfortune in later life.
"In Africa, there are things that we believe in and one of them is that
there are bad spirits who want to harm the child while he's going through
this vulnerable period. "The Konkoran is working against that," says
Ibrahima Ndiongue, 78, grandfather and great-grandfather to the three
recently circumcised boys.
The elaborate rite will end when the boys are healed and taken to the sacred
forest to learn the essentials of being a man. Overnight, under the
protection of the konkoran, they will be washed in sacred water, emerging
the next morning as grown-ups.
But, says Ndiongue, the power of the ancient rite is waning, even though it
is hugely popular amongst young Mandingo men in the region. "This that you
see in town, it's not the real konkoran," says the old man, dressed in a
long robe and Muslim skullcap. "In the village, the konkoran doesn't walk on
earth but flies. Nowadays, these kids do whatever they like."
Men's business
The ritual of the konkoran is strictly the preserve of men. Female
circumcision, or genital mutilation, was banned in Senegal in 1999.
Traditionally, women would not set eyes on the circumcised boys who in the
days when Ibrahima Ndiongue was young, would spend up to three months in the
forest learning the art of being a man. "You learn about life, how to live
with people, to be polite and wise," says Mr Ndiongue, recalling his own
three months in the forest.
Traditionally, women were also strictly forbidden from seeing the konkoran,
locking themselves inside the house when it came to the compound. But Rama
N'Diaye, one of Mr Ndiongue's 10 surviving children, says that this aspect
of the ritual is changing too. "Before, women would not even go to the door
to look at the konkoran. Now, women are allowed to look from afar," says the
31-year-old hairdressing student.
Despite this, when the mythical beast appears in the neighbourhood, women
and children still scatter. "I am very afraid of him," says N'Diaye. "You
just look at him and you feel afraid."
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/africa/4795629.stm
Published: 2006/08/15 23:17:16 GMT
© BBC MMVI
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