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CULTURE
Burkina
Faso has over 60 ethnic groups, each with its own social and cultural
distinction, but all emphatically Burkinabé. The major groups
include the Bobo who live around the city of Bobo Dioulassa, the
Fulani, the Lobi, and the Sénufo, but the most significant
and dominant group are the Mossi. The Mossi are descendants of a
royal empire and the emperor, or Moro-Naba, possesses tremendous
social cachet and influence. Some Mossi descendants are Muslims
but Burkina Faso is notable for the fact that it is one of the few
West African countries that is not predominantly Muslim. Almost
half the population still follow traditional animist beliefs.
Each
ethnic group has its own artistic style but the art of the Mossi,
Bobo and Lobi are the most famous. The Mossi are known for their
antelope masks; impressively tall masks, which are over 2m (7ft)
high and painted in red or white. The masks are usually worn at
funerals and when guarding certain fruits. The Bobo make large butterfly
masks, painted in stripes of red, white and black, that are used
to invoke the deity Do in fertility ceremonies. The Bobo
actually have an entire zoos-worth of animal masks but the butterfly
masks are the only ones worn horizontally. The Lobi have one of
the best preserved traditions in Africa, including the dyoro
initiation rites for young boys. Lobi art, especially the wood carvings,
which protect the family, are highly valued.
Burkina
Faso has led the way in the renaissance of African art and culture.
The FESPACO Film Festival, occuring every two years, had a humble
beginning in 1969 but has since grown to become a chic West African
version of Hollywood's independent cine scene, without the pouting
next-biggest-thing, air kissing executives, and frenzied bidding
wars. A different cultural festival, occurring in the non-FESPACO
years, covers other artistic pursuits - music, dancing and theatre.
As an adjunct to this, Burkina Faso hosts the continent's largest
craft market.
Gourmands
who believe that solid food is only necessary because the sauce
has to go on something will love the food in Burkina Faso; everything
comes with sauce. It's a bit weird, really, when you consider Burkina
Faso's French connections but the fact is you get sauce with everything:
sauce with rice (riz sauce), vegetable sauce with rice (riz
gras), a fish-based sauce (sauce de poisson), sauce with
beef and eggplant (boeuf sauce aubergine) and sauce with
mutton and tomatoes (mouton sauce tomatoe). In rural areas,
bush rat (with or without sauce) is considered a delicacy.
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