The Dagaaba Traditional Belief System: A Documentary for Posterity
The Dagaaba Traditional Belief System: A Documentary for Posterity
Contemporary Dagaaba writers, poets, and scholars are increasingly engaging with their ancestral heritage, weaving traditional spiritual motifs into their works as a form of cultural reclamation and intellectual resistance. The Dagaaba Traditional Belief System: A Documentary for Posterity explores the enduring spiritual worldview, ancestral practices, and sacred rituals of the Dagaaba people of north-western Ghana and southern Burkina Faso. This documentary project aims to preserve and document the core tenets of the Dagaaba indigenous religion, including its cosmology, ritual performances, oral traditions, and sacred spaces, all of which are deeply interwoven with daily life and communal identity. Amid increasing modernization, religious transformation, and cultural erosion, the documentary serves as a visual archive for future generations and a scholarly resource for those interested in African indigenous religions, cultural heritage, and epistemologies rooted in oral and ritual traditions. Through close readings of a selected text; Namalneɛ, this study examines how literature becomes a site for cultural preservation, resistance, and the reimagining of indigenous epistemologies. It situates this revival within broader postcolonial and decolonial literary movements in Africa, arguing that Dagaaba literature offers a powerful model for the continuity and transformation of indigenous belief systems. The study presents a belief system that continues to shape the spiritual and cultural landscape of the Dagaaba people. It calls attention to the urgency of preserving intangible heritage and repositioning African spiritualities in contemporary cultural discourse.
