One thing that struck you when you arrived in Senegal is the open and public display of religiosity and Godliness. Islamic identity in the Africanised adaptation is the inherent identity of the middle to older men in Senegal. Islam is a universal religion which is practiced by over 1.5billion people in the world.
The Senegalese takes their Sufi Islam seriously and they are public about it. It is very attractive overall the way the Mourids Africanise Islam. They take pride in being Muslim and Black.
The powers vested in the Sufi Tariqas is enormous. The different sects of the religious houses has their own domain of control. There are problematic angst to the religious brotherhood, the fact that, some of them allow very young children to beg for them. This was a sight i detest very much. Upon enquiringly as to why, such thing is allowed amidst the smooth running of the state, it is mention, the powerful 'Serign' revolted and the ban on 'Almudous' didn't last long.
What troubled me as a Muslim was the fact that, pictures of Saints acts as decorations and reminders everywhere. In shops, in offices, in taxis, private cars, in Taylor workshops, carpentry workshop, in gardens, hanging on people's necks, just everywhere. Amean, vast amount of people know more about the 'Serigns' Saints than, about Muhammad' the prophet of Islam.
My observation on the photos of holy men is that, these 'Serigns' saints provide very photogenic postures for the photographers who sell this images to the ardent followers.
The Mourids are said to be very powerful in Senegal, so powerful that, some attribute them to be having a union that boast of having very influential Senegalese as members. This 'Mourid' club is said to be behind many big businesses, powerful politicians and successful people in Senegal. I visited Professor Khadim Mbacke on the dominance and influence of the Mourids, but sadly he wasn't keen on discussing them. I sensed, the fear of offending the powerful brotherhood could be the reason. I attempted to create conversation about them, but not many want to talk about them realistically.
I happen to record some backgrounds on the brotherhood, which will serve my research interest. Man selling Chicken
The followers of Malick Sey, Bai Nyassi, Buu Kunta, Amadou Taal etc all belong the wider club of Talibes who follow them diligently.
The competition in the call to morning prayers is fascinating experience. Even though Fajr (early morning) Muslim prayers happen round about 06:45am, the Muashim (callers to prayer) commence the call at 04.30am. I learnt that, this is all because some people give offering to those who make the call to prayer sooner that the others.
The superstition seen in Senegal is extra-ordinary. There're birds held in cages, young men travel around selling this birds to people who frees them. If you free a bird from a cage, you release it but not before mention your wishes on the bird. I have never seen such superstition anywhere.
The believe in Marabouts ( spiritual doctors) is at higher level in Senegal than the Gambia. And Senegalese are willing to pay huge amounts for the work of the marabouts. The wrestling tradition is very rich, but also filled with superstition at an unprecedented level. This trend doesn't show any sign diminishing.
My passionate journey to Senegal also involves getting to comprehend the legacy of the Mbaay Faals...A subject I will deal with later.
As a cultural enthusiast and commentator, Senegal is a fertile ground for studying the contrasting existence of traditional values and modernity.
I have been to Senegal in the past, but mostly to the Cassamance region. Dakar as a capital is dominated with French style of building and habitat. The developments and advancement happening in Senegal is rapid for those living there. The tenure of Abdoulie Wade is said to have witness many infrastructural development.
However, what generates the growth of foreign industries in Senegal is the mature level of democracy. Dakar can boast of having a high concentration of NGO's, foreign embassies, head quarters of private companies, the U.N agencies etc.
The modern side to Senegals advancement is also the growth of private Senegalese own medical institutions. Health is big business in Africa. Since I'm making simple observations, I will not attached any figures to the opinions here.
Gambians are arriving in Dakar in droves for private medical treatment. The Gambia, it is said lack modern medical equipment needed for vigorous testing for illnesses. I came across very rich Gambians attending rehabilitation and therapy after strokes and other serious illnesses.
This Gambians complain that, they don't trust the Doctors in the Gambia. They claim that, the clinics and private health centres are very far behind in modern treatment. On the other hand, if you can afford the expensive medical bill, Senegal can provide facilities and expertise to cure the ailments.
The ordinary man and woman in Senegal is mostly engaged in some form of petty trade. The vehicles for commercial passenger commerce are usually very old, dilapidated, but effective in taking people from one place to the other. Corree
I visited Coree, a former slave Island and was struck with intense feeling of anger at what has happen there by the European slave traders. The suffering those people encountered cannot be describe. It most have been horrendous The dungeon created for keeping captives who refuse to be enslaved is beyond description. The inhumane minds of those Europeans is beyond animalistic. Even today, the memory of Corree will live with me forever.
Travelling across Senegal was also enjoyable..Some roads are bad, but far better than the Gambia. i find people very helpful in general although the tendency to attempt to cheat is high.
Senegal in short is a paradise for Tourist. Very rich in culture, the people are friendly and open and the food is delicious as well.
There are great views, music and cultural heritage highly unexplored by the wider world. Senegal is a cocktail of many cultures inter-woven producing a hybrid of something beautiful. I will in future relay my Senegal experience. I will go back again for more research and enjoyment.
Sunday, 10 February 2013
Senegal Is Working Whilst the Gambia is At A Standstill
Suntou Touray (A Recent trip to Senegal
In Januray)
Politics is working in Senegal, and the
Gambia, power struggles and empty penmanship leads the way..
After a 3 years absent from the shores
of Africa. I took a plunge last month for a near three weeks holiday
and fact finding in Senegambia. The trip I will admit brought to
light the realisation of how globally inter-connected we are now. In
Senegal where I spend a considerable time, things are working, people
are always on the move. Whilst the Gambia, the stark reality of
dictatorship and fear infect the elites much more than the ordinary
people.
There's hardly anything to compare the
Gambia with Senegal with in 2013, nearly nothing can be liken to the
other. To understand Africa, as an African living nearly permanently
in Europe or America, you have to be one of the people as soon you
land in Africa. Sadly, through my observations, you encounter,
Americanised Gambians and Europeanised Senegalise and Gambians
likewise. They cannot just put the façade away and be one the
people.
The Gambia is commercially dying, I
mean dying. Consumers don't have disposable income and the means to
generating wealth is all strangled by either state regulations or
high cost of basic food and necessities. The ferry crossing into
Barra is danger zone waiting to erupt. The Ferry it is said is old
and should be disuse. It took from 7 hours for a car to cross from
Banjul to Barra in a Sunday normal crossing. Vehicles wait at the
Ferry terminal from 6am in the morning, just to cross in 5 hours
time.
The Ferry regularly encounter breakdown
in the middle of the sea. It is unbelievable the impact such
disruption has on business and passengers. The Gambia is a disaster
politically, economically and socially.
Gambians have learn the best they could
how to survive in the very hostile environment. People now demands
payments for things we all use take for granted as either family
members or friends. People will hardly offer kindnesses for free this
days. A young man who spent eight months holiday in the Gambia made
this phenomenon glaringly clear when I meet him in Casablanca
Muhammed the IV Airport. At the Moroccan Airport, the young man
explain to how educated he has become in the Gambia for the eight
months he spent there.
The joblessness in Spain is driving
many Gambians to return home. These young men have risked it all at
high cost to journey to Europe, and now Europe is jobless, they are
returning home with the little they have save to farm and be with
their wives. However, on their return, these young men are struck
with demands and disappointments.
The young man explain how much people
want things without working for it. Anyway, the quirk-mere that
ensues in the country is reaching melting point. The positive
appearance we can garner is the fact that, people are losing the fear
that once gripped the nation.
Gambians are now bored of their own
self-inflicted fear. They have realised that, Europe neither America
will hoist Yahya Jammeh and his criminal gang out of power. People
have commence open discussion of issues happening. They have started
saying, he cannot jail all of us. Let us hope that, spirit continues.
Senegal: I am very impress with the
level of political maturity in Senegal. I visited many places and
spoke to different people with my basic Wollof. The impression
overall is that, the people cannot be politically enslaved by
anyone. Even the Maky Sall government is ongoing some intense
scrutiny during his first year in office. From Taxi drivers to grey
old men, politics, the economy etc is the bread and butter
discussion.
People in Senegal in general are
self-dependent and trade oriented than Gambians. I attended the Radho
sponsored media conference in Dakar, where Sedat Jobe spoke
eloquently in French. The even was well attended by Gambian
dissidents. I was told, political meetings like that in the past
would have been less well attended.
The views of Senegalese politicians is
simply that “Gambians cannot keep talking on the media and writing
on the newspapers without wanting to confront Yahya Jammeh on the
street”. One politicians further made it clear that, 'Senegal don't
see the Gambian problem as a priority'. They are in effect saying, we
Gambians want to 'eat our cake and still have it'.
I was sadden by the opinions of the
Senegalese about Gambians. In fact, Senegalese are baffled at our
cowardice and lack of courage in tackling a little man who pumped
himself to be what he is not.
A lady street vendor selling beans and
bread opined to us whilst we were speaking about Yahya Jammeh. She
blunlt told us, 'you Gambians are very funny', in peach sleek Wollof.
She went further to say, can Yahya Jammeh kill the whole country if
you stand together? We looked at each other and said no. She said,
then what have Gambians been waiting for in uniting against the
sadistic regime?
We couldn't answer, because Senegalese
embrace each other not that, they don't have underlying tension in
either religious sectarianism or ethnic power struggles, but they
understood one thing. A divided nation cannot take charge over the
direction of a nation.
The opposition against Abdoulie Wade
brought that to light. The politicians never hesitate to back Maky
Sall since his party got the larger vote share in the contest against
Wade. Yet, 200 kilometre to the border, the Gambians opposition don't
want to embrace such a system. What could be the causes of this
phenomenon?
Senegalese political culture is working
because the elite's hatred of each other is at a controllable level
whilst that of the peanuts colony Gambia, the reality is different.
Smaller political parties in Senegal have no qualms in recognising
the strengths of rival parties. A young activist told me “we backed
Maky Sall because, all we want is for Wade to leave”(Gaye)
The activist further mention that, the
demonstrations against Abdoulie Wade left some lasting causalities
some died and other badly injured.
Abdoulie Wade have left and Senegal is
a steady course of change. Yet Abdoulie Wade has transform Senegal
with multiple new roads, opening up and connecting the country
between Dakar and Cassamance and other regions. Wade has built new
suburbs in Dakar, solving the housing crisis. Wade has brought some
equality between the religious brotherhoods in Senegal. Where the
previous governments left the major Tariqas (Mourids, Nyassens, Sey,
Kunta, Taal) to benefit from state sponsorship and patronage,
Abdoulie Wade reached out to the Janhanka, Mandinka and Fula
religious brotherhoods in Cassamance region, thus elevating those
religious households, creating some pride in those regions. The
economy wasn't doing badly either under Wade. Above all, Abdoulie
Wade wasn't a serial human right abuser. He allowed the law to takes
it course and due process seen to be leading the way. Yet, the
opposition against him became unanimous and solid.
In essence, with all of Abdoulie Wade's
achievements, the Senegalese people wanted change more than one man
at the helm of their country for over ten years. The opposition
united against Wade, because they understood that, change is always
positive, no matter it chaotic nature sometimes.
Gambian oppositions all refused to
rally behind the bigger opposition party in the last elections, to
the Senegalese, nothing can be enough excuse for such a behavior If
there are other reasons more compelling than, seeing the back of
Yahya Jammeh and his oppression, then the lesser opposition parties
in the Gambia don't come to that realisation yet.
How many cruel things have happen since
the re-election of Yahya Jammeh in November 2011? For starters, 9
people were executed, Imam Bakwsu Fofana tortured and exiled, Imam
Baba Leigh still in detention, many more people still remain in
prison, many unlawful murders remain unanswered, the land seizure and
usurpation of private properties continues, three media outlets
closed, the cost of living sky rocketing, now what could be the
reason why, the smaller opposition parties refused to rally and form
a Coalition with a bigger and larger opposition party? Could it be
ethnicity, could it be power ambition on the side of the smaller
party leaders etc? Whatever it is, the Senegalese sees us
collectively as failures to our country and future, and they cannot
be the catalyst to solve our own hatred of each other. Because, no
amount of reservations within the opposition rank should be more
urgent than, seeing the back of President Jammeh. After all, change
is always positive in a collective landscape, even where the
impression seems otherwise. People will always learn to grow from a
change position. The blame for Gambia's pain lies on every single
Gambian, but the burden is on the shoulder of the smaller opposition
party leaders.
I will provide my own narrative for the
bigger Gambian opposition party on my next contribution. Meanwhile, I
just hope someone remind the opinionated opposition politicians
writing letters to Jammeh and the Inspector General that, that has
never work yesterday and will hardly ever work today. Masterminding
disunity is the cause of our state of affairs today. Whatever Jammeh
does, he knows some opposition politicians see others as more urgent
priorities than him. That is Yahya Jammeh's saving grace, not his
intimidation and harassment.