Film, Video Women, Rain and Religion: Diola Prophets in Post-War Senegal
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Title
- Women, Rain and Religion: Diola Prophets in Post-War Senegal
Summary
- This talk examines the history of a Diola prophetic tradition which was exclusively male before the colonial conquest, but has become predominantly female in the 20th and 21st centuries. Using a term "Emitai dabornol," which means "God sent him/her." Robert M. Baum has uncovered oral traditions concerning more than 75 indigenous leaders who claimed direct revelation from the supreme being and commanded them to teach. Baum focussed on three of them: Alinesitoué̄ Diatta, who emphasized a week-long rain ritual while rejecting French Colonial agricultural development schemes, only to be exiled to Timbuctou where she died at age 23; Berthe Alinesitoué̄ Diatta, who played the earlier prophetess in a 1960s local theater and who in the 1980s had visions of her own from Emitai; and Todjai Manga, who was the most successful post-colonial prophet, launching a revival of rain rituals and new teachings about Diola agriculture in a time of frequent drought and climate change. This video was made possible through the generous support of the Religion and Cultural Institutions Initiative at the Lilly Endowment.
Names
- Library of Congress
- Library of Congress. African and Middle Eastern Division, sponsoring body
Created / Published
- Washington, D.C. : Library of Congress, 2023-09-29.
Notes
- - Group name: African and Middle Eastern Religious Cultures. 7
- - Robert M. Baum, Edward Miner.
- - Recorded on 2023-09-29.
Medium
- 1 online resource
Digital Id
Library of Congress Control Number
- 2025661458
Online Format
- video
- online text
- image