Endangered in Ivory Coast: traditional priestesses
Pascal Abinan Kouakou, the Ivorian employment minister, has promised to place the school on the tourist map as a means of promotion and fundraising |
They are training to become certified "komians", or priestesses, steeped in traditional lore, the properties of medicinal plants and the techniques of conflict resolution.
They are credited with the power to cast spells and predict the future -- at a time when the komians fear for their own future as modern society increasingly leaves tradition behind.
The women belong to the 25 million-strong Akan ethnic group predominant in eastern Ivory Coast and across the border in Ghana, in the bosom of the traditional Ashanti kingdom.
Certified komians, or priestesses, are steeped in traditional lore, the properties of medicinal plants and the techniques of conflict resolution |
"The komian has a sanctifying role," Pascal Abinan Kouakou, the Ivorian employment minister, told AFP. "She participates in the cohesion and stability of our regions."
- Disrepair -
Even so, the school is slowly deteriorating. Its ochre walls have not been painted for years, and most of its buildings are in disrepair.
"Help us! We sleep rough -- we have no dormitories while we take in dozens of patients each month," said Adjoua Messouma, who founded the Adjoua Messouma Centre for the Initiation of Komians of Aniansue (CIKAMA).
The course lasts at least three years, with around 20 graduates each year.
No local king or tribal chief can be enthroned without the intervention of the komians, or priestesses
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The school, bordered on one side by a teak plantation, features a large central courtyard with a giant mango tree in the middle, surrounded by houses.
People come to the school seeking cures or treatments from the komians for conditions such as cancers, infertility, epilepsy and mental illnesses.
Others come for counselling over personal problems.
"I was diagnosed with appendicitis which I want to treat with plants," said businesswoman Dame Yvonne Ezan after a consultation.
- Under fire -
"If we don't watch out, the komians, this culture that is intrinsic to our society, could disappear," said the employment minister, who was recently elected president of the regional council.
People come to the komians school seeking cures or treatments for complaints such as cancers and infertility, or for counselling for personal problems |
Criticism of komians, notably from evangelical churches, is becoming increasingly insistent and acerbic.
"Today we are seen as the devil incarnate," said 22-year-old Leonie Kouame, who put her university studies on hold in order to "study and commune with the spirits" -- and become a komian.
In the town of Amelekia, between the big city of Abengourou and Aniansue, around 20 priestesses are sounding the alarm, saying they lost a great defender in the person of Jean-Marie Adiaffi, who died in 1999.
The author, who was awarded France's Grand Prix Litteraire d'Afrique Noire in 1981, advocated the modernisation of African religions.
But criticism of komians, notably from evangelical churches, is increasing |
As in most African animist religions, these are revered in villages across the continent.
- 'We're not afraid' -
A school for training komians, or traditional priestesses, opened in 1992 in eastern Ivory Coast but most of its buildings are in disrepair and the school is looking for a benefactor |
"The komian will never disappear."
Nevertheless the komians are looking for a benefactor to save the school or even allow it to expand to other regions.
In the meantime, Pascal Abinan Kouakou has promised to place the school on the tourist map as a means of promotion and fundraising.
"I have a duty to ensure that it does not disappear," said the minister, himself the grandson of a celebrated komian named Akua Mandjouadja, who ruled the region for many years.
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