Daily Trust Saturday

‘Hausa cultural practice being spirited away’

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was completely debunked. It is now preached that there is one God Allah, and He is the only God that deserves to be worshipped.

“People prayed to the Jinn for protection against all adversitie­s like famine, as they also prayed to him to bless them with all fortunes like offspring and bountiful harvest. That gave birth to Bori. The intermedia­ries between the adherents and the Jinn were the people called ‘Yan Bori.’ Those ‘Yan Bori’ prayed to the gods of those times, the Jinns, for all fortunes and against all misfortune­s. That is Bori.

“With the advent of Islam, Bori the Religion was virtually abolished. People then turned to Bori the Cure. Bori the Cure means assuming the situation of Bori, that is the Dan Bori being possessed by the Jinn, in order to obtain cure for some ailments related to epilepsy or any unfathomab­le ailments believed to be inflicted by the Jinn.

“The advent of Islam in Hausaland virtually abolished Bori the Religion, but Bori the Cure still exists. We have among Muslims in Hausaland people practicing Bori the Cure, declaring the oneness of God, Allah, saying their five daily prayers, going on pilgrimage to Mecca, marrying according to Islam, but they are ‘Yan Bori. But among the Hausa people, the Maguzawa (heathens) still exist practicing Bori the Religion, worshippin­g the spirits.

“The only difference between the two forms of Bori is the intention. In Bori the Religion the intention is to worship the Jinn. Those practicing it mix it with magic. This has been the practice right from Tsumburbur­a (in ancient Kano) to Nakainafar in Birci (in ancient Katsina). Those worshippin­g these two still exist, practicing their traditiona­l religion of Bori.

“But in Bori the Cure, people believe in one God, Allah, but they also believe that the Jinn possesses some powers to afflict you with some ailment or any form of adversity, just as the practition­ers of Ruqqiyya now believe that Jinn has the power to enter the body of the human and cause some ailment.

“But in Bori the Cure, it is believed that the spirits possess the power humans beings lack. Humans can, therefore, venture through them to obtain cure for any ailment. It is believed here that the Jinn can inflict epilepsy, barrenness and other ailments in the humans. Even the practition­ers of Ruqqiyya among Muslims believe in this.

“The Bori you see in yearly or seasonal festivals or any other events is because there are people organizing festivals called Bikin Salla for them every year or seasonally. For instance, after the harvest season, such festivals can be organized by the ‘Yan Bori, or even the Muslim festivals of Sallah.

“In such festivals, crowds of people will be gathered from all directions. ‘Yan Bori will be invited, each possessing his or her feats. It is a cultural festival to showcase feats among the ‘Yan Bori. Every Dan Bori or ‘YarBori will display his feats in terms of his or her closeness to and amity with the Jinn possessing him or her to impress the spectators.

“In such festivals you will see a Dan Bori falling into and rolling in raging fire orlive coal, falling down from a tall tree or plunging into a deep well. You will even see a Dan Bori, when he is possessed by the spirit, raising his empty hand and then lowering it clutching some leaves which he will present as cure for some ailment. If a Dan Bori is possessed by the spirit of Sarkin Rafi, he can mysterious­ly present fresh fruits such as tomatoes, pepper, garden egg, carrot, mango and guava, as though they have just been sourced from the riverside, even if it is not their season.

“At the end of the showcasing of feats, there will be Shan Kabewa (eating of the pumpkin) for which a pumpkin will be placed on the ground under a tree and a Dan Bori will climb the tree and then fall with his buttocks on the pumpkin to burst it. This marks the end of the festival. The pieces of the ruptured pumpkin then become cure for some ailments.

“In regular ceremonies, such as wedding ceremonies, the celebrant can invite ‘Yan Bori to come and display their feats to commemorat­e the event. In such events, if, for instance, the Sarkin Rafi Jinn is invoked, the Dan Bori will be seen mysterious­ly presenting fresh fruits not obtainable in that particular season, by simply stretching his hands either upwards or towards a particular direction.

“If Barahaza is invoked, the lady possessed by the Jinn so called, clad in white Fulani attire, because Barahaza is ‘Yar Fulani, will place an empty guard at the centre of the arena, and Nono (milk) will mysterious­ly be seen to fill the guard. You ask why the culture of Bori is in gradual extinction. This is not the fate of Bori alone. Most cultures are in gradual extinction. Every activity associated with mysteries is gradually diminishin­g.

“Those practicing them die without bequeathin­g the secrets to their offspring. They would not bequeath them to the offspring because with the olden people, skills are bequeathed not on the basis of blood relationsh­ip but on the basis of reverence, loyalty and numerous other acts of good conduct to the person possessing the secrets of the art by the person to whom the secrets are bequeathed. For example, someone could be so impressed and thankful to you that he would bequeath the secrets of some skills to you for always relieving him of his load and helping him to carry it to the specific destinatio­n.

“The implicatio­n of the extinction of Bori is that all medicines sourced from Bori are rapidly becoming unknown. These even include the majority of traditiona­l medicines, because those endowed with their knowledge and practice have died, giving room for the emergence of cheats and liars in a situation where some will market a traditiona­l medicine with the claim that it cures a hundred ailments. In the past, a medicine man only possessed a single medicine with the claim that it cured only one ailment, and that medicine proved to be efficaciou­s cure for the ailment.

“That is why, in the past every medicine man was famous far and near to possess cure for a particular ailment, and there was no doubt about its efficacy. Because he was sure of the efficacy of his medicine, you would not see the medicine man going about markets and streets hawking it; and he would not step out of his own into any other medicine.

“Most of the cultures were in practice before the advent of Islam. With the advent of Islam, they were discovered to be at conflict with Islamic culture. So they had to be abolished or gradually abandoned to die for the Islamic culture to get establishe­d and prosper.

“Culture is dynamic. There are important cultures that do not disappear, and there are those that disappear with time. The fact is bigger cultures inundate and gradually or even rapidly obliterate smaller ones. Since the advent of colonialis­m, some cultural practices in the colonies began to diminish. Bori is one of such cultural practices obliterate­d by Islamic culture, colonialis­m and modern technology.”

 ??  ?? Experts say The implicatio­n of the extinction of Bori is that all medicines sourced from Bori are rapidly becoming unknown
Experts say The implicatio­n of the extinction of Bori is that all medicines sourced from Bori are rapidly becoming unknown
 ??  ?? Bori adherents cut accross genders
Bori adherents cut accross genders
 ??  ?? In an undated file photo, a Bori trance is in progress.
In an undated file photo, a Bori trance is in progress.

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