val, which is a water-centred festival by the Sawa, that is, coastal peoples in Douala, Cameroon, was held annually until 1981 when it was banned by authorities due to some of its sacred rituals, especially the ceremony honouring the Jengu (the water spirit and deity worshipped by the Sawa).
In 1991, the festival was restored and has since not only exposed some of the sacred rituals that make the festival unique but has also exhibited the colourful culture of the Sawa people, including their beautiful arts and craft, their strength and how familiar they are with the sea.
The Ngondo festival, held in the first two weeks of December on the Wouri river banks in Douala, brings religion and tradition together as it involves communication between the “water gods” and the Sawa people.
The festival comes with a lot of festivities including music and dance, a canoe race, and a crowning of a Miss Ngondo, but the peak of the event is the ritual performed by the Jengu cult members, otherwise known as the immersion of the sacred vase.
Accordin
g to lo
.
The Ngondo festival, which is a water-centred festival by the Sawa, that is, coastal peoples in Douala, Cameroon, was held annually until 1981 when it was banned by authorities due to some of its sacred rituals, especially the ceremony honouring the Jengu (the water spirit and deity worshipped by the Sawa).
The said worshipper will dive and disappear into the
river, stay there for almost an hour and will emerge with his body, his clothes and basket completely dry to the surprise
of many.
“The immersion of the sacred vase starts with an assembly very early in the morning on the last day of the festival.
Dignitaries in ceremonial go to the river accompanied by th
eir staffs and followed by a dense crowd of people. Initiates on a pirogue look for a secret passage for the immersion of the
sacred vase.
“An emissary goes into the Wouri with the vase to seek messages sent by the water divinities, the ‘Myengu’ (sirens). When the boatmen are immersing themselves into the water to the Jengu, the boatmen and the traditional priests, as well as other initiated elders, undertake a wild mass cries “yai assu yai” (Come assu come) meaning assu is an alternative name for Jengu.
Once they have been brought to the surface, the people look unwet and the calabash they brought are interpreted by the ancients who meet in the sacred hut,” according to accounts by a trip down memory lane. Locals believe that the water gods – Jengu (plural Miengu) is t
heir source of strength and wisdom, prosperity in terms of good harvests, as well as, love and peace within families and the country
as a whole.
The final event of the Ngondo is the race between giant pirogues that can be manned by up to 50 paddlers. Thousands of supporters gather on the banks of the Wouri to watch the race which hitherto had its results used to predict the future.
Pirogue racing has traditionall
y been the most important sport among the Douala, with the sport reaching its peak during the German colonial period when organisers h
eld races annually.
The Douala trace descent patrilineally, and associations, or secret societies, were largely their instruments of social control. Their older religious system focused on a high god or a creator while others believed in the power of witchcraft and ancestors.
But by the 1970s, most Douala were nominal Christians and as compared to the past where diviners used the results of the canoe races to predict the future, today a Christian priest often presides instead.
The festival has also taken a more commercial turn with the presence of the sponsors whose Tee-shirts have replaced the traditional clothes.