Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
International

A Festival Is A Festival! Muslim-majority Senegal Gets Into The Christmas Spirit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Dec, 2015 04:18 PM
    DAKAR, Senegal — After his morning prayers at the mosque, 25-year-old Mamadou Aliou Ba puts on his Santa suit, the padded belly protruding from his thin, tall frame, and goes to work. 
     
    He stands proudly, smiling from behind a snowy white moustache and beard that take over his face, waving to families walking by the supermarket in one of Dakar's wealthier neighbourhoods.
     
    Ba is one of many Pere Noels, or Father Christmases, seen in Senegal's capital this festive season. He, like the majority of Senegalese, is Muslim and yet celebrates Christmas.
     
    "Everyone, Christians and Muslims, celebrate Christmas here," he said, holding up a small bag of candies he gives out as gifts. "I like to do this work," Ba says, adding that he also enjoys the extra money.
     
    About 94 per cent of Senegal's 14 million people are Muslim, but Christmas is everywhere. Street vendors hawk tinseled garlands, blow-up Santas, Christmas trees and ornaments. Giant candy canes line the path to one mall where a sleigh sits in the tropical heat, and at an amusement park a large Santa Claus statue greets visitors.
     
    The prominence of the Christian holiday highlights that Senegal is a bright spot of tolerance and diversity in West Africa where many countries are divided by religion and ethnicity and where the threat of Islamic extremism is growing.
     
    Daouda Sow, 45, a Muslim businessman says he has a Christmas tree at home.
     
    "This is the culture in Senegal," he said. "It's very open, and it's different from our neighbours such as Guinea or Mali."
     
    Sow says he has celebrated the holiday since he was a child. "The two religions, we are in it together," he said, using a phrase common in Senegalese culture. "We are invited to celebrate holidays like Easter and Christmas, and we invite Christians to celebrate our holidays with us." Members of the same families may also practice different religions, he said.
     
    This year is particularly special because the celebration of Moulid al-Nabi, the birth of the Prophet Muhammed, is followed just a day later by Christmas, said Bakary Sambe, an assistant professor at Gaston Berger university in St. Louis, on Senegal's northern coast.
     
    "The celebrations symbolize the uniqueness of Senegal, where we are a Muslim majority and where we have a special cohabitation between Muslims and Christians," said Sambe, also the head of the Observatory on Religions, Radicalism and Conflict in Africa.
     
    In Senegal, most Muslims belong to one of the Sufi brotherhoods, "which interpret Islam according to our social values in a peaceful way, based on education and tolerance. ... We have a critical assimilation of Islamic faith. We accept it as a faith, but we try always to harmonize between Islamic and local values," said Sambe.
     
    This has been a barrier against the Islamic extremism seen in neighbouring countries in West and Central Africa, said Sambe.
     
    Worries of extremism have caused Senegalese authorities to propose banning fireworks for New Year's Eve celebrations and some vendors have complained that less tolerance for public gatherings could hurt business.
     
    Senegalese of whatever faith get into the Christmas spirit of celebration.
     
    "For us, it's a night out!" said Ouli Sanokho, a 23-year-old who works at a call centre. "In fact, we celebrate the entire month," quickly adding that alcohol is not imbibed.
     
    Ashok Chellani said he is pleased to have a Santa in front of the supermarket he manages. He is Hindu and said he welcomes the month of celebration.
     
    "We are in this together," he said, adding that the Santa will be at his shop until Dec. 31. "A festival is a festival!"

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Queen's India-Born Representative Resigns After Saying British Pakistanis Need To Learn Civility

    Queen's India-Born Representative Resigns After Saying British Pakistanis Need To Learn Civility
    Pakistanis are lovely people individually but there is a lot of work to do to teach them basic common courtesy and civility

    Queen's India-Born Representative Resigns After Saying British Pakistanis Need To Learn Civility

    US Cop Eric Parker's Assault Of Indian Grandfather: Mistrial Declared

    The police officer, Eric Parker, 26, was charged with violating the civil rights under colour of law of Sureshbhai Patel during an incident on Feb 6, just six days after he had arrived from India to take care of his grandson.

    US Cop Eric Parker's Assault Of Indian Grandfather: Mistrial Declared

    Indian-American Researcher's Heart Disease Project Gets $400,000 Boost

    Indian-American Researcher's Heart Disease Project Gets $400,000 Boost
    An Indian-American researcher at East Tennessee State University (ETSU) has received a $423,485 grant from the National Institutes of Health for his project related to ischemic heart disease, a media report said.

    Indian-American Researcher's Heart Disease Project Gets $400,000 Boost

    86-Year-Old Woman Injured In Crash Between Ambulance And Train In Langley Dies

    86-Year-Old Woman Injured In Crash Between Ambulance And Train In Langley Dies
    The woman was transported to hospital following the crash and died shortly after her arrival

    86-Year-Old Woman Injured In Crash Between Ambulance And Train In Langley Dies

    Ambulance And Train Collide In Langley, Patient Suffers Life-Threatening Injuries

    Ambulance And Train Collide In Langley, Patient Suffers Life-Threatening Injuries
    Two people are in hospital including a patient who was in an ambulance that crashed into a train in Langley, B.C.

    Ambulance And Train Collide In Langley, Patient Suffers Life-Threatening Injuries

    British Woman Racially Abused Me In Train: Sikh Youth

    British Woman Racially Abused Me In Train: Sikh Youth
    British police have launched a probe after a 25-year-old Sikh man reported that he was racially abused by a woman on board a train last month

    British Woman Racially Abused Me In Train: Sikh Youth