Type | Journal Article - Africa |
Title | Entrustment and its changing political meanings in Fuladu, the Gambia (1880-1994) |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 74 |
Issue | 3 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2004 |
Page numbers | 383-410 |
URL | http://www.urbanlab.org/articles/Bellagamba, A. 2004. Entrustment and its Changing PoliticalMeanings in Fuladu, the Gambia.pdf |
Abstract | Karafoo ye jotentung saabang (‘entrustment precedes cowardice’): in the Mandinka language, as spoken along the River Gambia and in the nearby area of Casamance, this idiomatic expression asserts the importance of trust in the articulation of society.1 Its sense could be explained like this: ‘even the man who runs away when in danger should be brave if the person entrusted to him gets in trouble’. The Mandinka word that I translate as ‘entrustment’ is karafoo. Elsewhere (Bellagamba 2000, 2002a), I have analysed some of its layered meanings, which include the care of valuable things, the practice of child-fostering, and the ties of confidence and reciprocal assistance built up between a stranger and his host. ‘Ngakarafaaima’ (‘I entrust myself to you’) is a ‘voluntary declaration of allegiance’ for the sake of protection (Goody 1970: 5), one which the historical memories related to the development of local communities and pre-colonial polities in this area of West Africa put at the core of host–stranger relationships. In the longue duree´ , ‘entrustment’ speaks indeed of the patterns of trade and mobility, which for centuries characterised the River Gambia, linked as it was by long-distance trade routes to the interior of Senegambia, to the Sahara and, since the late fifteenth century, to European commercial interests and the Atlantic markets as well. Seasonal and more stable forms of migration interested the riverside even before the nineteenth century, a period in which the development of commercial-scale groundnut cultivation attracted a flow of labourers towards Senegambia. People joined caravans on a temporary basis. They were looking for pastures, commercial opportunities and land to settle on, and at times they were also escaping the attacks from more aggressive neighbouring polities (Swindell 1981: 86–87). |
» | Gambia, The - Population and Housing Census 1993 |