The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

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were also paired together. This set
off a chain of links, extending
beyond animals to plants to create
a vast network. The Dogon believe
that each individual has a soul
connection to one-eighth of the
living things in the world.
According to some versions of
the myth, the eight ancestors were
created when one of the first two
Nommo rebelled against Amma
and tried to create a separate world

THE DOGON COSMOS


The Nommo are often depicted
with upraised arms, as in this small
sculpture. This is thought to represent
a reaching toward the heavens in
prayer for rain.

of his own. He procreated through
sexual intercourse with the
placenta that held him inside the
womb of his mother, Earth, but the
fruits of this incestuous union were
solitary and impure. Contaminated
by this abominable act, the world
faced the prospect of descending
into a state of utter chaos, but
Amma regained control of the
cosmos by murdering the other
Nommo. He was torn apart, and his
body was scattered across the
earth; the eight Nommo ancestors
were then created from his body
parts. The Dogon later created
ancestral shrines (called binu) at
places where the parts had landed.

Early humans
The eight Nommo procreated and
began to populate the earth. At
this stage, humans were primitive
beings who lived in holes in the
ground like animals and could only
use basic sounds to communicate.
When the Nommo had produced
many children, the eight ascended
to heaven.
However, when the Nommo
realized that the human world was
in chaos, they returned to earth
one by one, in order of age, each
bringing a valuable skill. First the
eldest Nommo, a blacksmith,
introduced humans to fire and
metalworking by stealing a piece of
the sun in the form of a live ember
and a white-hot iron rod. Another
Nommo taught the art of weaving
to mankind, and another the art of
constructing clay granaries. These
were topped with a thatch to
prevent rain washing away the clay,
and were modeled on the anthill

Amma filled with his seed when he
impregnated the earth. Their bases
were square to represent the four
cardinal points—north, south, east,
and west.

Chaos and sacrifice
The eighth Nommo was impatient
and descended to earth before her
sister, the seventh Nommo. This
angered the seventh Nommo so
much that she turned into a giant
serpent, but humans feared the
snake and made weapons to kill
her, using the skills taught by the
first Nommo, the blacksmith.
The death of the seventh
Nommo brought more chaos. The
other ancestors decided that they
must sacrifice Lébé, who was the
first Hogon (spiritual leader of the
community) and the oldest man in
the family of the eighth Nommo.
Lébé was the first human to die,
and thereby brought mortality to
mankind. His body was buried in a
primordial field with the head of the
seventh Nommo, under the anvil of
the blacksmith Nommo. The
blacksmith struck the anvil with
his tools, awakening the spirit of
the seventh ancestor. The serpent
then devoured Lébé—combining
the spirits of the seventh and
eighth Nommo forever. These two

In order to purify the universe
and restore order to it, Amma
sacrificed another Nommo.
Art of the Dogon
Kate Ezra, art historian (1988)

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Dogon dancers don masks for dama
funerary rites in Tireli, Mali. These are
enacted to lead spirits of the deceased
out of the village and toward their final
resting place with the ancestors.

Nommo represented language,
which was considered the essence
of all things: the seventh Nommo
was the master of the Word and the
eighth was the Word itself.

Cleansing gifts
When the serpent vomited Lébé’s
remains out in a series of stones,
they made the shape of a body.
First came eight dugé stones,
which are formed when lightning
strikes the ground. These stones
marked the joints at the pelvis,
shoulders, elbows, and knees. Then
came the smaller stones, forming
the long bones, vertebrae, and ribs.
The stones were a gift from the

ANCIENT EGYPT AND AFRICA


Nommo to humanity. They held
Lébé’s life force, and were a
physical manifestation of speech.
The stones also absorbed all that
was good from the ancestors and
cleansed the people of their
impurities with the water that was
the Nommo’s essence and life force.
When Lébé’s remains were being
ejected, torrents of purifying water
also came forth. It brought fertility
to the land and enabled humanity
to plant crops and farm.
The Dogon view Lébé as the
manifestation of the regenerative
forces of nature. To this day, Hogon
wear stones that symbolize Lébé’s
remains and remind them of their
link to their ancestors. Although
Amma is the supreme deity in
Dogon religion, and prayers and
sacrifices are made to him, the
chief focus for most of the Dogon’s
rituals is ancestor worship. ■

Water and the Dogon


Water is crucial in the myths
and lives of the Dogon people.
Mali, the Dogon homeland,
sits on the edge of the Sahara
Desert, where water can be
scarce and the amount of
rainfall dangerously variable.
The water cycle in the area is
variable. Both droughts and
monsoons afflict the region,
and rivers and lakes appear
and disappear again.
Rejecting the pressure to
convert to Islam, the Dogon
first set up their villages at
the base of Mali’s Bandiagara
Escarpment 1,000 years ago,
attracted by its defensibility
and its springs; they later
spread to the nearby plateau,
where they built deep wells.

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