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Bobo, Burkina Faso
The Bobo tribe is located in the
Upper Volta region of Burkina Faso and Mali; they have
lived in this area dating back to 800 A.D., and are
politically non-centralised, but regulated by a
council of elders from all lineages. Their lineage is
the fundamental social building block, it united all
decendants of their common ancestor, known as wakoma.
The Bobo lineage is comprised of the people who share
the same house, with the head of the household or
father of the house being called the wakoma.
Their language and culture is more
closely related to that of the Mande, the Bamana and
the Miniaka, than to their Voltaic neighbors the
gurunsi and Mossi. The Bobo tribe’s economy relies
mainly on their agricultural activity. The major food
crops are maize, yams, red sorghum, and pearl millet.
Cotton is also a main crop that is sold to textile
mills. The Bobo also keeps bees to produce honey. The
Bobo tribe believes that every act that takes
something from nature has a negative impact. Before
planting and harvesting their crops the Bobo tribe
holds rituals to ask permission from the nature
spirits and their creator god, Wuro. They believe Wuro
is responsible for nature’s equilibrium and bringing
everything into harmony. Wuro cannot be
described or represented by sculpture.
Masks are used to bring bush
spirits to chase evil from their community and to
purify the land for successful planting and harvest.
These masks are made from fiber, cloth, leaf, and wood
and have geometric designs. They are usually worn with
costumes made from leaf and fiber. The purification
rituals last for three days and are usually before the
planting season and after the harvest. The masks are
also used at men’s initiations and funerals. During
funeral rituals the wearers of the Bobo masks comfort
the spirits of the dead and partake in a series of
rituals that lead them to the afterworld. Funeral
ritual dances are full of energy and use drums and
bells designed to wake the dead and instruct them to
leave.
The Bobo tribe also created art
with bronze which has geometric designs. Women of this
tribe wear bronze anklets to protect themselves from
bush spirits. Tick birds are a popular in bronze
ornaments as they are valued for its symbolic
relationship to bush cows and buffaloes. The bush cow
is the most popular animal used in the jewelry of the
Bobo people.
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Butterfly mask / Fjärilsmask |