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Senegal's Mouride Brotherhood Brings Spiritual Power Fez Festival
Senegal's Mouride Brotherhood Brings Spiritual Power Fez Festival

Morocco World

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Morocco World

Senegal's Mouride Brotherhood Brings Spiritual Power Fez Festival

Fez – On the fourth evening of the Fez Festival of Sacred Music, the serene Jnan Sbil garden echoed with the deep, devotional sounds of Senegal's Mouride brotherhood. Represented by Cheikh Ahmadou Bambandaou and his ensemble, the performance offered an intimate look into one of West Africa's most influential Sufi traditions; rich in rhythm, reverence, and rooted spirituality. Hailing from Dakar, Bambandaou and his group are spiritual artists devoted to the teachings of Cheikh Ahmadou Bamba, the 19th-century founder of the Mouride order and the holy city of Touba. Their performance was far more than a concert, it was a living form of prayer. Through layered chants and lyrical praise, they brought to life panegyrics dedicated to the Virgin Mary, written by Bamba himself. The result was a powerful blend of devotion and musical mastery that captivated both seasoned festival-goers and newcomers alike. 'We were responsible for delivering this sacred chant,' Bambandaou told Morocco World News 'to honor a moment of shared reverence through the lens of our tradition.' The Fez Festival, now in its 27th edition, is known for bringing together diverse spiritual voices from across the globe. Yet there was something especially moving about this Senegalese performance. The Mouride brotherhood's deep-rooted Sufi philosophy, centered on surrendering to God, renouncing material excess, and emulating the Prophet's example, resonated strongly with Morocco's own Sufi heritage. 'Fez is a magnificent city,' Bambandaou said to MWN. 'We were touched by the warmth and openness of the people, and by the cultural similarities between our communities.' Jnan Sbil, with its fountains, ancient trees, and twilight atmosphere, was the perfect setting for such an encounter. As the chants rose into the night air, they seemed to dissolve borders: geographical, linguistic, and even religious. This kind of performance is what the Fez Festival does best: it reveals common ground through sacred sound. Bambandaou and his group didn't just share their music, they invited the audience into a living tradition, one shaped by spiritual discipline, artistic continuity, and cultural pride. And they left an impression. As the final chant faded and the applause echoed through the garden, it was clear that something meaningful had transpired, something that spoke not only to the past and present of Senegalese Sufism, but also to the future of global spiritual exchange.

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