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Traditional land rights in Dagara and Sisala societies in Burkina Faso and Ghana which were stateless in pre-colonial times are closely connected with the concept of earth-shrine parishes under the protection of a local land god and ideally under the control of the “first-comers” to the area. The earth priests perform regular sacrifices at the shrine and allocate land to later immigrants as well as the right to build houses and to bury their dead, often in exchange for gifts. The international border between Ghana and Burkina Faso, which was drawn up in 1898 and runs along the 11th parallel, often cuts across earth-shrine parishes. Particularly since the border demarcation exercise in the 1970s, the spatial separation of the Sisala earth priests on one side of the border from the Dagara immigrants on the other side has given rise to intricate conflicts over land rights. The paper will present the history of one such conflict and look at the various landrelated discourses – traditionalist, nationalist, and Christian – which the adversaries put forward in order to substantiate their claims.
The area around the Lake Chad is characterized as an example for a region where ethnic changes abundantly took place and still do. For example some Kanuri districts, or the leaders of those districts, are (unofficially) named after other ethnic names (e.g. Margi, Shuwa) or Kanuri clan names are identical with ethnic names of other groups, eg. Tera, Bade. Both people speak a Chadic language and live in the south and west of the Kanuri respectively. These are indications that the Kanuri formerly absorbed and integrated these peoples. These processes are not only a phenomenon of the past. In the case of the neighbouring Gamergu people an ongoing process of ethnic change towards a Kanuri identity is observed until present. The research projects1 have revealed that the concept of "ethnic units" is far from being static which the term may suggest. This especially applies to the German Stamm, which implies a static concept of ethnicity. However, in Borno the dynamics of ethnic and linguistic change are prevailing. Therefore Ronald Cohen rejected the term "ethnic unit", or even "tribe" for the Kanuri and preferred "nation" instead. Umara Bulakarima argued along the same line but used "ethnic group" for Kanuri subunits, e.g. Manga, Mowar, Suwurti. There is no doubt that the Kanuri played a dominant part in the history of the Lake Chad area during the past centuries. Therefore the "Kanurization" process may not surprise. However, in the following it will be revealed that the processes of contact and resulting adaptations and delimitations are not necessarily unidirectional from Kanuri to other groups. At least in some cases they may go into the opposite direction, e.g. from Gamergu to Kanuri.
Einmal im Jahr, einundzwanzig Tage nach dem für Ahnen und Jenseitsmächte zelebrierten Erntedank, würdigen König und Hofstaat mit einem gesonderten Fest, Bugum Yaoge~, den Vorfahren, von dem sich die Tenkodogo-Dynastie in direkter Linie herleitet: Naaba Bugum. Naaba Bugum selbst hat seinen Fuß wahrscheinlich nie nach Ye~le~yan gesetzt, wie Tenkodogo - in Anlehnung an einen nahen Regenzeitfluß - damals noch hieß. Naaba Sigri leitete den Beginn einer Expansion ein, die etwa hundert Jahre später, unter einem seiner Nachfolger, Naaba Bãogo, zur Unterwerfung der südlichen Bisa von Loanga und Bane und damit zur größten territorialen Ausdehnung vor Einzug der französischen Kolonialmacht führen sollte.
The conflict I refer to happened at the beginning of the 1998 farming season when the distribution of land started. The seasonal migrants went into the village area were they had been farming since many years, they gave their contributions and payments to the respective officials and started to prepare the land. Shortly after they had started to plant the beans – the main cash crop beside fishing – they were harassed by armed people and had to leave the area. Only several weeks later they were able to go back to their prepared fields and proceeded with their farming business. The question I want to concentrate on is related to the topic of the ethnological sub-project – “Community building in newly founded settlements in the Lake Chad area” – and can be specified as “What do conflicts tell us about the community and people involved?”
Our dichotomy of ‘nature’ and ‘culture’ is expressed in the Kanuri language with the terms al@ga for ‘creation’ and ‘creature’ which embraces trees, mammals, birds, insects, humans, in short the whole of the natural environment, and ada for ‘custom, habit, way of behaviour, family tradition’ for culture as a whole. There is no genre of oral literature, which would describe al@ga as such, but aspects of it can always be expressed in proverbs, riddles, toponymic praise phrases and songs, of which those performed by the hunters figure most prominently in reflecting upon al@ga. Yet, in these songs (and partly in other genres) ideas about al@ga are not purely descriptive in naturalists’ terms. They are much rather expressions, which centrally combine notions of the social and natural environment.
The vast distribution of terraces in the geographical Sudan zone of West Africa leads to the question why and under which conditions an agrarian society might apply this particular form of farming. From an anthropologist's point of view it is essential to understand why farmers practise this form of farming and therefore try to explain the reason for it. The best way to gain insight is the description of terrace farming and when taking a closer look, we realize that farming is nowhere only an isolated agricultural activity.
Bei den hier vorgestellten ethnologischen und geomorphologischen Aspekten von Brunnen und Getreidespeichern in der firgí-Region Musenes wird besonders die "angepaßte Technologie" der hier lebenden Menschen deutlich. Die kulturelle Entwicklung der Region hängt eng mit den besonderen naturräumlichen Bedingungen zusammen. Die Eigenbezeichnung als firgiwú (die Leute des Tons) verweist auf eine Beziehung der Bewohner zum Naturraum, in dem Ton eine besondere Rolle spielt und für den es spezielle Berufszweige gibt. Die Ressource Ton wird, gleichwohl im Bewußtsein, daß es sich hierbei um regionalspezifische Aspekte handelt, als integrierendes Moment über die ethnischen Grenzen hinweg als Teil ihrer firgiwú -Kultur verstanden. Offensichtlich hat diese eine lange Tradition. Interessant wäre, ob in anderen ähnlich ausgestatteten Naturräumen in Westafrika eine vergleichbare Anpassung bzw. Nutzung des Naturraumes zu finden ist, bzw. wie dort die Nutzungsstrategien aussehen.
Tenkodogo, a township situated in the south-eastern part of Burkina Faso on the road leading from the capital Ouagadougou to the Togo border, has approximately 29,000 inhabitants. It is Burkina's seventh largest town and is the location of the regional government of the Boulgou-Province. This regional government is represented by a high-commissioner and a "préfet" as it is the residence of a traditional ruler, otherwise known as Tenkodogo-naaba. His sphere of influence covers many villages and hamlets in the region: in total he is the sovereign of nearly 120,000 people. The power of the traditional rulers was curtailed first by the arrival and following overrule of the French colonialists and then after independence by Sankara and his revolutionary government. The kings ceased to be the ultimate judges who were able to determine life and death of their subjects. Henceforth they were no longer allowed to recruit subjects for certain work on their fields, and they no longer could claim control over the allocation of resources. Their position was strengthened anew by Sankara's successor in office, Blaise Campaore, who quickly recognized that collaborating with the traditional rulers could only be of advantage: in fact they later proved to be his best supporters in the election campaign.
Le système de la parenté, qui est en général la base de l’ordre social, peut être remplacé par un ordre alternatif, c'est-à-dire par un ordre du voisinage (ou bien par l’ordre spatial). Dans le cas du lignage Dambure, c’est la proximité et la distance entre les concessions qui déterminent les obligations mutuelles: On construit de nouveaux concessions toujours très proches les unes des autres et on a aussi construit une place centrale appartenant aux quatre concessions les plus anciennes. En plus, les deux formes peuvent se renforcer mutuellement et de cette manière supporter les prétentions sur le rôle dominant du lignage principal. Le contrôle social pratiqué par le chef d’un lignage maximal peut être exercé de façon plus effective dans un groupe de voisins directs. A la base de ces connaissances, l’analyse de l’ordre de l’espace peut aider à décrire la réalité sociale.
L'art de soigner par les plantes ou phytothérapie remonte à l'origine des temps. L'Homme a développé trés tôt une relation intime entre lui et le milieu qui l'entoure. Pour subvenir à ses besoins, il a appris à se servir des éléments naturels indispensables à son existence. Si en Europe la phytothérapie, jadis florissante, a connu un déclin à cause de la découverte de molécules chimiques de synthèse, en Afrique les médicaments à base de plantes restent les produits les plus utilisés par l'immense majorité de la population dans des villages comme des villes. C'est le cas du Burkina Faso où la pharmacopée traditionnelle, en temps que système de soins, demeure le système le plus populaire parce que mieux intégré aux réalités socio-culturelles des populations. Pour notre exposé, nous avons retenu dix espèces de plantes qui sont utilisées dans la médecine traditionelle populaire pour traiter les maladies les plus courantes comme les accés fébriles dus au paludisme, la jaunisse ou ictère, les diarrhées, la toux etc.
La notion de plantes sacrées, de bois sacré est liée à la culture d'une société donnée. Le bois sacré est souvent un lieu de culte ou de fétichisme. Une espèce végétale peut faire partie de ce bois mais elle n'est pas considéré comme sacrée. Une plante ou espèce est sacrée parce qu'elle est liée à un rite coutumier bien précis, à une mythologie bien déterminée. Nous présentons dans ce qui suit quelques espèces végétales considérées comme sacrées par les Bobo. Nos informations proviennent de Kotedougou de son vrai nom Kokana. Le village est situé au nord de Bobo-Dioulasso à 25 km de la ville, localisé dans la zone phytogéographique Sud Soudanienne du Burkina Faso. Nous avons restreint nos données ethnobotaniques sur huit espèces les plus connues et qui de par leur usage abusif dans la pharmacopée tendent à disparaître dans la zone présentée ici. Par ailleurs les variations climatiques, particulièrement la baisse de la pluviométrie ont entraîné une grande modification de la flore et de la végétation autour du village de Kokana et à travers tout le Burkina.
In Tenkodogo, Burkina Faso, bietet sich gegenwärtig noch Gelegenheit, die Schlachtung von Rindern sowohl im sakralen als auch im profanen Kontext beobachten zu können. Diese Situation ist Moment einer Veränderung, nämlich der Verlagerung von der Schlachtung im rituellen zur Schlachtung im gewerblichen Rahmen. Am Hof des traditionellen Herrschers von Tenkodogo werden immer weniger Stiere während der rituellen Feste eines Jahres an den Gräbern der Ahnen geopfert. Immer mehr Rinder werden täglich auf dem modernen Schlachthof von Tenkodogo vermarktet. Sowohl im sakralen (rituellen) als auch im profanen (gewerblichen) Zusammenhang werden die Tiere geschlachtet, d.h. getötet, gehäutet, ausgenommen und grob zerteilt. In beiden Fällen führt dies dazu, daß die Körperteile der geschlachteten Rinder zum größten Teil vom Menschen verbraucht, d.h. klein zerteilt, verteilt, zubereitet und verzehrt werden. Beides, sakrale wie profane Schlachtung, dient der Versorgung der Bevölkerung mit Fleisch (Fleisch verstanden als Sammelbegriff für alle essbaren Bestandteile eines Tierkörpers, d.h. Muskel, Fett, Blut, Organe, Sehnen/Knorpel, Knochen/Knochenmark und Haut). Daneben spielen auch andere Ziele eine Rolle, etwa die Gabe an die Ahnen oder der Lebensunterhalt der gewerblichen Fleischer. Dennoch kann man, aufgrund der fundamentalen Bedeutung der Ernährung für den Menschen, zu Recht davon ausgehen, daß die vorrangige Funktion sakraler und profaner Schlachtung in der Versorgung der Bevölkerung mit Fleisch besteht. Im Folgenden sollen sowohl ideelle Zusammenhänge als auch handwerkliche Methoden sowie die Verteilungssysteme im Rahmen beider Bereiche beschrieben und verglichen werden.
All over the world meat plays an important role in the nutrition of people. Mostly it is considered to be a special source of strength and health. In many peoples' minds the consumption of animal products, such as muscle, fat, blood, inner organs and bones, is much more associated with vital strength than a vegetarian meal. A reason for this may be the inherent physical similarity between human being and animal, especially mammals. There are other ways of producing meat, such as hunting and fishing, but today the most common method is butchering. The people in Tenkodogo consider beef to be an excellent meat. We will focus our comparative studies on special occasions, specialised butchers, locations, times, technical methods, distribution and ideas connected with the production and consumption of beef. Two fundamental reasons for the butchering of cattle can be identified: firstly, bulls are killed during the rituals of the year and secondly, cattle is slaughtered for daily commercial purposes on the market. In both cases almost the entire carcass of the butchered animal is consumed by people. In Tenkodogo we can actually compare those two different reasons, which have at least one common impact.
One of the powerful conventional images of pre-colonial Africa is that of a continent of more or less immobile ethnic groups, living since time immemorial on their ancestral lands, steeped in their traditional cultures. In this image, Africa appears like a mosaic, with clearcut ethnic boundaries, each sherd representing a different people cum language cum culture cum territory. Since a number of years, however, historians and anthropologists of Africa have insisted that this image is misleading. Most pre-colonial societies were characterised by mobility, overlapping networks, multiple group membership and the contextdependent drawing of boundaries. Communities could be based on neighbourhood, kinship and common loyalties to a king, but this did not absolutely have to include notions of a common origin, a common language or a common culture. Our own research on the West African savannah has also shown the enormous importance of mobility. Among the societies of southern and southwestern Burkina Faso, for instance, which several projects have studied, there is hardly a single village whose history has not been characterised repeatedly by the arrival and settlement of new groups and the departure of others. In some cases, we can even speak of systematic practices of multilocality.
Dumba-fishing was invented at Lake Chad about 10 years ago by immigrant fishermen from Mali and Nigerian Hausaland. The new technique brought about a new era of Lake Chad fishery, characterised by social and institutional changes. Titled Kanuri fishery headmen (Kacalla njibe)2 who traditionally controlled the access to the lake's water were unable to cope with the massive influx of immigrant fishermen. The lack of an institution for effective control lead to serious conflicts between local and immigrant fishermen. With the Fishermen Association Marte Local Government a new institution was invented, in which local and immigrant fishermen, regardless of their ethnicity, should control access to the fishing grounds together. The Fishermen Association was modelled after “modern” urban institutions and thus mirrors the transformation of the lake shores from rural backwaters, with local customs and culture to an economic centre, characterised by inmigration, cultural diversity and several other 'urban' traits.
We can conclude that the Dughwede calendar lasts for two seasonal years, marked by the bull festival as a culminating and turning point. All ritual and agricultural activities are interlinked and need to be seen comprehensively together with the social and cosmological order to understand the underlying cultural pattern. The year is dramatized throughout the seasons to keep the communication between the natural and spiritual forces, both creatively reflected in the individual person. The traditional world was kept in balance as a functional equilibrium over a period of time not known to us, but is now moving towards a process of transformation initiated by structural historical change. The first step towards change is the change of moral values which affects possibly first individuals and then groups. This encourages them to give up the traditional way of interacting with their environment. This process can be described as secularisation and leads to another quality of relationship between man and his natural environment. The same process can also be described as socio-economic change.
The search for persistent elements in nature and culture, which comprises language as a constitutive part, is a prerequisite for the definition of any change which is the aim of our common project. When analysing the process of transformation by a number of disciplines we expect to discover significant features of this alteration and the forces dominating it. The current highly complex present linguistic situation in the western and south-western fringe of the Chad Basin will be reconstructed from the historical migrations undertaken by the various linguistic groups from Lake Chad (mainly Chadic languages) to their present settlements. The six authors, the linguists Dr. Dimitr Ibriszimov, Dr. Doris Löhr, Christopher Mtaku, the ethno-musicologist Dr. Raimund Vogels, and the historian Ibrahim Maina Waziri integrated the results of their studies into one paper towards a systemic approach by tracing back the common roots of the languages, the customs and the music of those peoples and give an outline of their tradition concerning their movements. A basic dual model of migration will be put forward.
The tale portrays the unhappy life of a dove. Constantly surrounded by enemies, hunted by human beings and animals, disappointed by friends and separated from her family, the dove despairs of her life. She ponders over her unjust fate in this world and in a monologue she begins to consider, whether it would not be better to end her own life. This tragic theme forms the climax of several episodes, in which the tension between life and death is described. The elaborate development of dramatic acts demonstrates the intertwining of guilt and innocence in human existence.
Ungeachtet zahlreicher Anstöße aus der jüngeren Ethnizitätsdebatte gehören ethno- bzw. regionalspezifische Zuordnungen im Sprachgebrauch von Ethnologie und Geographie noch immer zur Regel. Im gleichen Zusammenhang bemüht man das Bild von sogenannten autochthonen Bevölkerungsschichten und später angekommenen Zuwanderern. Dies aber bewirkt das Festhalten an Luftschlössern, deren Beschaffenheit sich immer deutlicher als Fehlkonstrukt entpuppt. Generalisierende Feststellungen wie "das Ethnos A besiedelt das Gebiet B und hat die kulturellen Eigenschaften X, Y, Z" fördern lediglich einen essentialistischen Ethnizitätsbegriff. Gerade aber in Westafrika vermitteln Erkenntnisse über soziale Identitäten und das Verhältnis der Bevölkerung zur Vergangenheit oft ein ganz anderes Bild. Diese These wird nachfolgend anhand von Forschungen im zentralen Volta-Gebiet erörtert; im einzelnen liegen dazu Daten von Mamprusi und Kusasi in Nordost-Ghana vor sowie von Nuna im zentralen Süden von Burkina Faso.