The Prague Post - In Senegal, a feverish ancestral hunt beckons the rain

EUR -
AED 4.212647
AFN 75.706745
ALL 93.785056
AMD 417.95623
ANG 2.053566
AOA 1051.871531
ARS 1693.068653
AUD 1.636486
AWG 2.06044
AZN 1.950306
BAM 1.956531
BBD 2.30016
BDT 140.782624
BGN 1.970117
BHD 0.430661
BIF 3407.247875
BMD 1.147079
BND 1.475784
BOB 7.942182
BRL 5.841155
BSD 1.142027
BTN 109.870069
BWP 15.508797
BYN 3.293331
BYR 22482.74396
BZD 2.296859
CAD 1.610407
CDF 2591.250878
CHF 0.923106
CLF 0.026959
CLP 1061.024977
CNY 7.764344
CNH 7.761698
COP 3708.73509
CRC 518.493811
CUC 1.147079
CUP 30.397587
CVE 110.306232
CZK 24.198773
DJF 203.366017
DKK 7.475225
DOP 66.704934
DZD 152.51448
EGP 57.964991
ERN 17.206182
ETB 184.327201
FJD 2.569743
FKP 0.857212
GBP 0.847181
GEL 3.005669
GGP 0.857212
GHS 13.149915
GIP 0.857212
GMD 84.884489
GNF 10016.093249
GTQ 8.712257
GYD 238.929311
HKD 8.990998
HNL 30.583432
HRK 7.53551
HTG 149.272955
HUF 359.214028
IDR 20796.538163
ILS 3.440146
IMP 0.857212
INR 110.735945
IQD 1496.059221
IRR 1577233.31358
ISK 143.201479
JEP 0.857212
JMD 181.017664
JOD 0.81335
JPY 185.945479
KES 148.305395
KGS 100.311782
KHR 4614.946325
KMF 492.096857
KPW 1032.370974
KRW 1703.377246
KWD 0.35478
KYD 0.951656
KZT 537.801028
LAK 25816.650161
LBP 102267.427157
LKR 384.003539
LRD 207.277479
LSL 18.712495
LTL 3.387025
LVL 0.693857
LYD 7.316735
MAD 10.661685
MDL 20.076505
MGA 4855.815084
MKD 61.63956
MMK 2408.175867
MNT 4114.097999
MOP 9.221247
MRU 45.634859
MUR 54.049845
MVR 17.733584
MWK 1980.240206
MXN 19.939968
MYR 4.665858
MZN 73.309699
NAD 18.712495
NGN 1578.346212
NIO 42.027175
NOK 11.074248
NPR 175.79171
NZD 1.961642
OMR 0.441053
PAB 1.142027
PEN 3.886653
PGK 5.028055
PHP 70.726009
PKR 317.394341
PLN 4.323644
PYG 6926.589131
QAR 4.163456
RON 5.237678
RSD 117.350156
RUB 88.902142
RWF 1679.92795
SAR 4.299794
SBD 9.258487
SCR 15.472635
SDG 688.815441
SEK 11.002493
SGD 1.477873
SHP 0.85641
SLE 27.960057
SLL 24053.676767
SOS 652.643956
SRD 43.203004
STD 23742.214668
STN 24.510016
SVC 9.992735
SYP 126.789023
SZL 18.708993
THB 38.512591
TJS 10.529336
TMT 4.026246
TND 3.379363
TOP 2.76189
TRY 53.965477
TTD 7.751898
TWD 36.965782
TZS 3016.487996
UAH 51.112806
UGX 4219.577261
USD 1.147079
UYU 45.957179
UZS 13804.15994
VES 831.44835
VND 30117.126737
VUV 137.995046
WST 3.170484
XAF 656.202286
XAG 0.019878
XAU 0.000283
XCD 3.100037
XCG 2.058169
XDR 0.816105
XOF 656.202286
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.455999
ZAR 18.718261
ZMK 10325.081618
ZMW 20.801776
ZWL 369.358897
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.1

    +0.05%

  • BCC

    1.9000

    75.99

    +2.5%

  • RYCEF

    0.0900

    18.72

    +0.48%

  • CMSD

    0.0550

    22.385

    +0.25%

  • RIO

    0.3300

    93.62

    +0.35%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    67.35

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    82.91

    -0.6%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.6

    +1.85%

  • GSK

    0.2000

    51.45

    +0.39%

  • VOD

    -0.4800

    15.08

    -3.18%

  • JRI

    -0.0465

    13

    -0.36%

  • BTI

    0.5300

    58.73

    +0.9%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    41.33

    -0.17%

  • RELX

    0.8600

    33.51

    +2.57%

  • AZN

    3.8700

    168.37

    +2.3%

In Senegal, a feverish ancestral hunt beckons the rain
In Senegal, a feverish ancestral hunt beckons the rain / Photo: PATRICK MEINHARDT - AFP

In Senegal, a feverish ancestral hunt beckons the rain

Against a frenzy of drums, chanting and gunfire, a few hundred Serer men parade about in a trance-like state, brandishing the day's hunt -- jackals, monitor lizards, monkeys and birds -- in hopes of hastening Senegal's rainy season.

Text size:

Ndiaye Ndiaye, a district in the western city of Fatick, on Monday hosted the 723rd edition of its annual hunt, known as the Miss de Diobaye, a centuries-old tradition believed to bring rain and protect the community.

The ritual, which belongs to the country's Serer ethnic minority, also heralds the start of the farming season.

However it has been disrupted in recent years by deforestation, modernisation and climate change that is causing the rains to arrive later.

Wearing a camouflage vest, Ousseynou Laye Dione returns on his motorbike from his seventh Diobaye hunt alongside eight other young men in scorching heat.

"We chase the animals on motorbikes", the 26-year-old firefighter said, explaining that "when we're 100 metres (330 feet) from the animal, we shoot at it and sometimes we hit it head-on".

The hunters share the catch by hacking off pieces with machetes and hanging them from their belts.

Only Serer men who have undergone initiation rites are allowed to take part in the mystical hunt.

The day before the event, a traditional seer, known as a saltigue, predicts which animal must be killed in order to trigger abundant rain. The secret is shared only among the initiates.

Legend has it that the practice began seven centuries ago during a terrible drought, when a seer foretold the return of rain only if a specific animal was killed.

On the evening when that animal was hunted down, heavy rain fell on Ndiaye Ndiaye, bringing a bountiful harvest -- and a tradition was born.

- Martial parade -

The young men's return to the district is marked by a spirited martial procession, accompanied by drums and chanting.

Adorned with protective vines and eyes rolled back in ecstatic trances, the hunters bash their machetes and fire their rifles and pistols to ward off evil spirits.

"The Miss is a moment of catharsis, a violent purification of space, entrusted to the youngest men", said Sobel Dione, an anthropologist specialised in Serer culture.

From a safe distance, women and children, generally in high spirits but sometimes startled by the gunfire, watched the frenetic procession.

"It's a celebration", exclaimed various members of a group of women.

As the parade drew to a close, hunters gathered by family to dance before traditional and religious leaders as well as state officials, brandishing their weapons.

"It's a source of pride for me to represent my community and take part in the culture", said 19-year-old Mamour Diaw, his face painted white. "Our millet fields need it".

- Climate change and deforestation -

Over the centuries, the Miss de Diobaye has had to adapt to the changing physical environment and times.

Dressed in an elegant suit with a rifle slung over his shoulder, 56-year-old Ousseynou Ndour has seen the tradition evolve.

"Hunting methods have shifted with the introduction of motorbikes. In the past we walked barefoot through the bush, without guns", he told AFP.

The once vast forest of Diobaye has been reduced to a sprawling plain dotted with sparse trees, depleted by human-driven deforestation and soil salinisation.

Antelopes and rhinos once hunted by ancestors no longer exist in the region.

Today, climate change has further modified the tradition, with rains arriving increasingly later and over shorter periods.

Sitor Ndour, secretary-general of the Miss organising committee, noted that the timing of the hunt has shifted over the decades.

"We used to hold it in May, because the rainy season was already setting in", he said.

Peanut and millet farming practices have also changed, with new seed varieties that mature more quickly.

"These traditions have the capacity to evolve," Dione, the anthropologist said.

"They safeguard both practical knowledge and a collective bond with the land, making climate adaptation more robust and more human."

History will record that in 2026, the day after the Miss de Diobaye, western Senegal received the season's first major rainfall.

C.Sramek--TPP