![]() |
| In Senegal, Muslim families join Christians as they prepare for the feast of the Eid al-Adha (AFP Photo/Seyllou) |
Dakar (AFP) - When Senegal's Muslim families gather for the biggest Islamic religious feast of the year, they often encourage the Christian minority to join them in a tradition of tolerance rare in West Africa.
Many Roman
Catholics in Dakar were invited Monday to join Muslim friends for Tabaski, the
local name for the Eid al-Adha or the Festival of the Sacrifice, which commemorates
Ibrahim's willingness to slaughter his own son if God commanded it.
For
Senegalese student Grasse Diop, his preparations to welcome Christian friends
were placidly watched by Dembel, a family sheep destined for imminent slaughter
like the ram God told Ibrahim to sacrifice as reward for obedience.
"They
come every year for the Tabaski and I go to the Christmas mass. We spend all
our religious feast days together," said Grasse, whose name is derived
from Grace, a Christian one.
The family
courtyard in Dakar's Ouakam district was turned into both abattoir and kitchen.
Women sang as they cut up the freshly killed meat while children played by
bowls containing discarded entrails.
"Jacques,
Marie, Joseph... All my Christian friends are wishing me a good Tabaski,"
Grasse said amid a flurry of calls on her mobile phone. "When I visit
them, I feel at home. There's no difference."
"When
a Christian dies, all the neighbours go to the church for the funeral,"
added her brother Pape Doudou Diop. Though a Muslim like more than 90 percent
of the population, he said he regularly goes to church for communion.
Once their
guests settled around a huge platter of barbecued food, Christians could not be
told apart from the Muslims, though Yves-Martin Kemden wore a special long robe
to honour his hosts during his tenth Tabaski.
"It's
a custom," the young dog breeder said. "Here, you're always invited
by a neighbour even if you don't share the same religion."
![]() |
Sheep are
slaughtered for family feasts often shared with neighbours (AFP Photo/Seyllou)
|
'Indivisible'
Hardline
Islamist militants have made their mark in other parts of West Africa, trying
to impose their more intolerant and often violent vision of Islam on
communities in countries like Nigeria and Mali.
For those
ultra-conservatives, other religions and even other branches of Islam are often
seen as apostates.
Sociologist
Fatou Sow Sarr believes Senegal's religious harmony dates back to the
preachings of leaders of the widespread Mouride brotherhood, who taught
tolerance towards Christians from the 19th century on.
"You
find Christians and Muslims in the same family and they intermarry. Religion
comes second to blood ties, so the communities have never been
antagonists," she said.
"Today
there's more risk of dissent among Muslims because of conflict between the
Mouridic communities and Wahabi influence than between Muslims and
Christians," Sow Sarr said, distinguishing between Senegal's predominant
Sufi order and a more conservative Islamic branch.
In their
courtyard sheltered by palm trees, the Ndoye family was packing boxes with
mutton to take to Christian friends no longer able to get around.
"Our
cousins invite us at Easter, making sure not to cook pork," smiled Karim
Ndoye, a house painter in his 50s who added that one of his grandmothers was
Catholic. "It's family, we're indivisible."
At the
clergy house of Dakar Cathedral shaded by a riot of bougainvillea flowers,
octogenarian Father Jacques Seck made ready to join Muslim friends for the
Tabaski.
A
self-styled "Muslim Christian", the elderly priest is known for
sprinkling his sermons with verses from the Koran and urging dialogue among
religious communities.
"This
religious tolerance is at the root of Senegalese society," he said.
"The good fortune of this country is that it's rare for a family not to
have members from both communities. The diversity built the
nation."


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.