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448 pages, Paperback
First published December 31, 2007
“If there is a problem that requires money the Marabout calls a committee and they ask everyone to contribute….They give because…people know the road will be fixed and the water will run again. This is not like Dakar [Senegal’s capital city]….It’s all one family here….There is no corruption, none. Everything is transparent. But yes, there are thieves here sometimes. We don’t cut hands off, we believe in tolerance, but if someone steals we form a committee to judge the person. If they are guilty we beat them. If it is serious we might consider taking them to a law court in another town but it’s better to just beat them.”Only about a third of Senegalese are Mouride, but the emphasis on hard work and order, and the considerable political clout the Mourides wield, seems to have had a more general beneficial effect on national life. Although Senegal was a French colony since the mid nineteen century it remains untouched by the violence rife in other Francophone African nations. “There has never been a hint of a military coup. Nor have there been bad rulers…in Senegal there is justice, a police force and a tax system.”