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Can you spot how the music was
made?
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This was called 'The Fools' Dance' and the women dressed up in
very odd clothes.
Look closely at the shoes!
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Everyone joined in with the clapping and singing |
Usually just one or two people come into the
ring at a time and dance madly for a few seconds then return to
the circle around the edge |
Everyone leans forward and stick out their bottom
as much a possible. Girls might even push a cushion up their skirt! |
Boys love to dance just as much.
These are at the school in Janjanbureh |
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This is the kankurang man. He can still be an
important part of ceremonies for boys' initiation into manhood.
Traditionally he is dressed in red leaves, the red bark of the camel-foot
tree. |
He would round up the boys and take them out into the bush for
weeks and teach them how to act like men. Once they returned to
their village they would take on the roles of adult men.
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The young man is cutting himself with a sharp
knife but because of the jujus (charms) he is wearing, it will not
cut him. It is a traditional belief for the Jola tribe. When a man
was in hospital it was impossible to inject him while he was wearing
his jujus because they protected him. When he removed them he could
be injected. |