NTM USA NTM USA  

NEW TRIBES MISSION  |  planting tribal churches

  PRAY     GIVE     GO     PROMOTE     EXPLORE     TRAIN     NEWS     ABOUT  
   

KANKURAN SPIRIT VISITS THE BALANTA

home > senegal

KANKURAN SPIRIT VISITS THE BALANTA

Teenage girls prostrate themselves for a washing of protection.

July 9, 2009

by Dena McMaster

 

The Kankuran whirled and stomped in his costume of stripped bark while teenaged girls prostrated themselves on the ground hoping for a ceremonial washing to assure that they would someday have many children.

The Balanta people of Senegal believe that the Kankuran, a spirit who mediates between the living and the dead, is a protector of women and their newborn infants.

Missionary Dave McKee was able to observe the ceremony as the costumed Kankuran was ceremonially married to a Balanta woman who had previously had difficulty in childbirth. She kneeled before him in her hat of bark strips, becoming his wife so that she will receive his protection.

A Balanta man, whose identity is usually kept secret, plays the Kankuran spirit. Women, in particular, are not supposed to know who the Kankuran is. The long bark costume is kept hidden so that no one sees it until the Kankuran appears.

Most Balantas in Senegal have not yet heard the Gospel message. While some, through contact with missionaries, have had the opportunity to hear evangelistic Bible lessons and hear the message of truth, many still hold to traditional beliefs. They rely on ancestor spirits and religious ceremonies to protect them from bad things.

Pray that the Balanta people will have the opportunity to hear the Gospel and that many will trust Christ as their Savior and be set free from the bondage of ancestral spirits.

more NEWS HEADLINES >>
Explore SENEGAL email newsletter signup:

HTML version

Text-only version

Subscribe

Unsubscribe

We value your privacy ...

 E-mail This Page 
 Printable Format 
 Download This 
 Feedback 

Get the Podcast

 Mobile / PDA
 RSS 

 

PRAY  | GIVE  | GO  | PROMOTE  | EXPLORE  | TRAIN  | NEWS  | ABOUT  | HOME  | SITE MAP  | CONTACT
 
Copyright © 2003-2009 New Tribes Mission. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy
Through NTM, Christian missionaries plant churches among unreached indigenous peoples around the world.