Showing posts with label BURKINA FASO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BURKINA FASO. Show all posts

April 30, 2016

2510 BURKINA FASO - Wildlife of the country


Burkina Faso is largely wild bush country with a mixture of grass and small trees in varying proportions. The savanna region is mainly grassland in the rainy season and semi desert during the harmattan period. Fauna, one of the most diverse in West Africa, includes the elephant, hippopotamus, buffalo, monkey, lions, crocodile, giraffe, various types of antelope, and a vast variety of bird and insect life. To ensure conservation and preservation of the wildlife of Burkina Faso, four national parks have been established. The forests, fauna and fish have been declared part of the national estate of Burkina Faso.

October 25, 2015

1983 BURKINA FASO - A Fula woman


The Fula people (or Fulani or Fulɓe), numbering approximately 20 million people, are one of the most widely dispersed and culturally diverse of the peoples of Africa. They are spread, in larger or smaller proportion, from Sudan to Mauritania, and from Egypt to Central African Republic, being bound together by the common language of Fulfulde, as well as by some basic elements of Fulbe culture, such as the pulaaku, a code of conduct.

October 11, 2015

1429, 1952 BURKINA FASO - At the market

1952 Burkina Faso - Women at the market

Posted on 31.01.2015, 11.10.2015
There are more than 60 ethnic groups in Burkina Faso, so it is difficult to say to which belong people shown in the postcards. The most predominant group are the Mossi, mainly farmers, concentrated in the central portions of the country. Other groups are the Bobo (in the southwest; mostly farmers, artisans, and metalworkers), Fulani (in the north; a nomadic, pastoralist trading people), Gurunsi, Senufo, Lobi, and Mand. Agriculture represents 32% of the country gross domestic product and occupies 80% of the working population, although only 13% of the land is cultivated. In general is a subsistence agriculture, due to the highly variable rainfall and to poor soils, but also due to primitive methods.

1429 Burkina Faso -Two men at the market

Regarding the religion, it seems that about 60% of the Burkinabé practice Islamism, while about 23% of the population are Christians, and 15% follow traditional indigenous beliefs.so it is difficult to say to which belong the people shown in the postcards. Therefore, neither regarding the religion of the people shown in the postcards I can't make any specification, although the man from the left of the postcard 1429 wears a Kufi cap, initially an islamic headdress, but now worn in West Africa also by Christians. Anyway, traditionally, when worn by men, the kufi is a sign of peace, mourning, renewal or protection of the mind. I can say also that women in postcard 1952 aren't in any case Muslim.

September 19, 2015

1905 BURKINA FASO - Sya, centre historique de Bobo-Dioulasso (UNESCO WHS - Tentative List)


Situated in the southwest of Burkina Faso, at about 350km from the capital city Ouagadougou, Bobo-Dioulasso is the second largest city in the country, and also a major center of culture and music. The name means "home of the Bobo-Dioula"; while it was likely coined by French colonists to reflect the languages of the two major groups in the population, it does not capture the complex identity and ethnicity of the location. The local Bobo-speaking population (related to the Mande) refers to the city simply as Sia.

April 11, 2015

1523 BURKINA FASO - Peaks of Sindou


Peaks of Sindou (Les Pics de Sindou in French) are a spectacular natural geological formation of sandstone, where nature has really outdone herself. It is incredible rocky chains that have formed due to sandstorms coming from the Sahel in the north, in the eastern part of Burkina Faso. Though geologicaly similar to the Bungle Bungles of Australia, the Peaks of Sindou have an entirely different ecosystem and can even be said to surpass the Bungle Bungles in beauty.