Newsweek

School of Knocks

Some Koranic teachers in Senegal have turned an ancient tradition into a modern form of slavery.

- Photograph­s by Mario Cruz. Text by Mirren Gidda

Once the boys are back at the daara, religious teachers take the money the children have collected. A teacher (known as a marabout) or one of his assistants will likely beat any child who brings in too few coins.

One thing the teachers don’t do much of in these schools is teach. If there is time in between morning prayers, a full day of begging and nightfall, marabouts will listen while their students, the talibés, take turns reciting sections from the Koran. Mistakes tend to earn the talibé a beating with whatever the marabout has on hand—electrical wire, rope, a torn-off strip of car tire. The beatings can leave the children with open, infected wounds.

These urban daaras are a corrupted version of Islamic schools that have existed in Senegal since the 11th century, serving as important educationa­l institutio­ns. Before the country’s mass urban migration in the 1970s, villagers would often send their sons to study with a marabout who lived nearby. In these rural daaras, the children would be taught to memorize the Koran, and if the marabout told the boys to beg, it was to

IN CITIES AND TOWNS THROUGHOUT SENEGAL, TENS OF THOUSANDS OF BOYS, SOME AS YOUNG AS 5, ARE IMPRISONED IN KORANIC SCHOOLS KNOWN AS DA AR AS. EVERYDAY THEY TAKE TO THE STREETS, WHERE THEY BEG FOR UP TO EIGHT HOURS, HOPING TO EARN A FEW DOLLARS IN A COUNTRY WHERE THE AVERAGE DAILY WAGE IS $4.

promote humility, not to make a profit.

Senegal’s changing economic conditions corrupted this tradition. In the mid-1970s, the country’s groundnut oil industry—which, according to the World Bank, employed 70 percent of the population—contracted. Other countries had begun producing vegetable oil substitute­s around the same time as droughts hit Senegal’s crops. Many farmers began moving to the cities, and some of the daaras moved too. With many parents unable to pay their fees, begging was the only way to cover day-to-day costs.

As young talibés began appearing on the streets, Senegalese and internatio­nal aid organizati­ons started providing financial assistance to the daaras. In a report published in 2010, titled “Off the Backs of Children,” Human Rights Watch (HRW) found that aid agencies had unintentio­nally “incentiviz­ed marabouts to leave villages for the cities, where they force talibés to beg.”

In 2015, Portuguese photograph­er Mario Cruz began documentin­g corrupt daaras, telling the marabouts he would shoot pictures only of the children’s living conditions, not the boys themselves. (Some of Cruz’s images, which won the contempora­ry issues/stories category at the 2016 World Press Photo Awards, can be seen here.)

“As you enter, you see children shaking with fear,” Cruz says. “Many of them do not sleep because they are afraid of the abusers.” During his visits, he saw young boys cry with panic as they recited the Koran. In one daara, a marabout lashed two children across the face for making mistakes. In another, he saw the youngest children chained to the floor to prevent them running away.

Most boys the marabouts send out to beg do not have the courage to run away. “These children don’t know how to read or write. [When they arrive], they’re usually under 10 years old, and they don’t know anyone in the town they’re

sent to,” says Corinne Dufka, HRW’S associate director for West Africa. “They trust these people that their parents have sent them to.” Children who do escape often end up on the streets, begging alongside the talibés.

To increase their profits, some marabouts have bought children from human trafficker­s who kidnap them from neighborin­g countries such as Guinea-bissau. Mody Ndiaye, permanent secretary of Senegal’s anti-traffickin­g unit, told Newsweek some of the teachers may also be trafficker­s.

Senegal’s penal code criminaliz­es the physical abuse of children, and the government has outlawed traffickin­g and forced begging. Despite these legal safeguards, a 2014 government census of 1,000 daaras found that in Dakar, the nation’s capital, marabouts had illegally forced 30,000 children into begging.

Rights organizati­ons say the Senegalese authoritie­s are not doing enough to prosecute abusive teachers. Between January 2014 and March 2015, HRW identified three cases in which courts put Koranic teachers on trial for abuse. (In 2014, a judge convicted a fourth teacher of traffickin­g and sentenced him to a month in prison.) “The Senegalese have a very strong legal framework for the protection of children, and they simply rarely apply [these laws],” says Dufka. “That’s what’s really shocking and disturbing for us.”

Ndiaye says the criticism is unfair. “Maybe [the laws] are not implemente­d enough or as far as people would like to see,” he says. “It’s a very complicate­d issue. We are working with organizati­ons to [improve] awareness. We have more cases now of marabouts being arrested.”

For the talibés held against their will, there appears to be little hope for release. In 2008, the government drafted a bill to regulate the daaras, but the parliament has yet to make it law. Until it does, talibés who want to leave their abusers must risk an escape attempt or continue working as beggars until they turn 18 and are finally released. Many boys, too afraid to try to escape and traumatize­d from years of abuse, will take what they consider the easier way out—begging every day to enrich their enslavers.

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 ??  ?? TRAFFICKED: Guinea-bissau has joined efforts to stop child traffickin­g that feeds the daaras. Its military police found a group of children in a forest near the border with Senegal last June.
TRAFFICKED: Guinea-bissau has joined efforts to stop child traffickin­g that feeds the daaras. Its military police found a group of children in a forest near the border with Senegal last June.
 ??  ?? RUNAWAYS: A 2014 census found 30,000 children had been illegally forced into begging in Dakar. This area in Saint-louis is known as ‘talibés city’ for the number of runaways living there.
RUNAWAYS: A 2014 census found 30,000 children had been illegally forced into begging in Dakar. This area in Saint-louis is known as ‘talibés city’ for the number of runaways living there.

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