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Figure - ancestor

Part of the collection: Collection of Dogonian art

Popularization note

Wooden figures popular in Dogon art are placed on altars that are numerous in the Bandiagara Escarpment. The Dogon altars are generally divided into two groups: communal and personal. Among the communal altars we can distinguish those which serve all the Dogon people as well as those which are dedicated only to a specific group. For example, different age classes, healers, blacksmiths and shepherds have their own altars. There are family altars (amayewe), family altars (wagem), district altars (babinu), village altars (lewe). There are even cases where a group of men, enjoying each other's company and spending time together drinking beer, decide to erect konyo ama, i.e. beer altar. Nowadays, omolo-ama is considered the strongest altar. It is a mound formed of clay, although sometimes a clay pot sitting on a branched stick can play its role. The Dogon believe that omolo-ama is strong because it has omolo-sem (life force). Blood sacrifices provide the most strength to the altars. In the oral tradition survived information about people once sacrificed, but it has not been practiced for a long time. An animal whose blood works just as well as human blood is the dog, but the last animal sacrifices remembered by modern Dogon were made during the Sigi festival, at the turn of the 1960s and 1970s. The blood of the dog was then used during the sacralization of imina na masks. If a blood sacrifice is required chickens are usually killed. The way the victim is killed is important. It must not happen at once; the animal must still be moving after falling on the altar. Every such movement is carefully observed and interpreted by competent people. In this way it is possible, for example, to find out at once whether the sacrifice has been accepted.

Ewa Prądzyńska

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown
Dogonowie

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 48 cm, width: 6,5 cm

Object type

figure

Creation time / dating

między 1901 — 1950

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Mopti, region (Republika Mali); znalezienie: Kani-Kombolé (Republika Mali)

Identification number

MNS/AF/7304

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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