Benin's
Fon tribe crafts wooden dolls when their small children die, which they
believe possess the child's spirit and have the divine power to bring
the family good or bad luck, depending on how well they are treated.
Pictured, Hounyoga, whose twins died in infancy
Many of
the dolls also attend school with their living siblings and, when their
parents are away working, are cared for in huge 'creches' run by the
village elders.
Not
every child becomes a doll after they die however - the custom only
applies to those born of multiple births, which, in the Fon tribe,
occurs in one in every 20 births - one of the highest in the world.
The extremely high mortality rate means that twins, either one or both, often die.
'Three
months after the birth of twins, if they are still alive, they do a
collection of gifts from around the community,' explains Mr Lafforgue.
'If they are dead, the statues of the twins are sculpted then placed so
that they peer out of the front garment of the mother for everyone to
see.'
One
mother, named Hounyoga, who resides in the village of Bopa, took Mr
Lafforgue through a day the life of her own dolls. The 40-year-old, who
is married to a voodoo practitioner whose work includes preserving the
dead bodies of criminals before using their skulls for rituals has had
nine children.
Among
them was a set of twins who died just a few months apart at the age of
two, and she has also suffered a number of miscarriages.
Hounyoga's
dead twins were called Zinsou (the boy) and Zinhoue (the girl), but she
talks about them in the present tense. In the morning, like any child,
the twins are bathed by their mother, who wipes their faces with a wet
glove.
They
are also given a weekly scrub in the lake, not because they are dirty
but to rid them of evil spirits. 'Hounyoga wipes them with a vegetable
sponge and soap,' explains Mr Lafforgue.
'Then
she dries them off and sprays perfume on them. The bathing ends. She
throws the sponge as far as possible in the lake. It is contaminated. If
she brings it home, she will bring the evil spirits with her.'
Some
statues are cleaned so often that the facial features disappear, the
wood eroded by constant scrubbing, which, says Mr Lafforgue, makes them
enormously appealing to Western collectors.
The
photographer says families are appalled at the thought of collectors
buying the dolls and liken it to parents 'selling' their children.
Next
it's time for lunch. 'She put the twins on two miniature iron chairs
around the table where we sit,' explains Lafforgue. 'It’s 1pm and she
must serve lunch to the twins.'
The
food is accompanied by water and carbonated drinks like Fanta and Coca
Cola because, according to the voodoo belief system, sugar is equated
with peace.
'In
giving sugar to the statues, you increase your chances of having a
better life because the twins have supernatural powers and the ability
to affect your destiny,' Mr Lafforgue explains.
After
lunch, Hounyoga visits a small temple with the dolls, where she feeds
the rest of the meal to a snake deity called Dan. Then, after biting a
cola nut in half with her teeth, she seasons it with strong spices and
offers it to the twins.
'She tells me that they accept the offering and are satisfied,' Mr Lafforgue says. 'Now it’s the humans’ turn.'
Hounyoga
told him: 'If we take bad care of a twin, he or she will get angry and
all of a sudden, will disappear. We will wake up in the morning and they
will no longer be in the house. So a great tragedy will soon come.
'On the
other hand, if we take good care of the twins, when someone is
harassing me or wanting to cause me harm, I tell the twins and they
protect me.'
Come nightfall, the statues are put to sleep like children in a bed made from a mat and an immaculate white blanket.
'This
contrasts with her room which contains a dirty mattress and an old
mosquito net,' Mr Lafforgue remarks. 'It’s clear that the best goes to
the twins.'
She
undresses them, and lays them on their back, side by side, in their
miniature bed and waits for them to 'sleep' before turning them over
onto their stomachs.
If the
mother doesn't have time to take care of the statues, then the father
does it. Hounyoga’s husband always takes them with him in his waistband
when he drives his car to Cotonou, Benin’s capital.
He
says: 'I put my twins in my belts because I know they protect me.
Nothing bad will happen to me with them. I won’t get robbed, won’t get
in a car accident, nothing.'
The
brothers and sisters of the dead twins do their share as well. They walk
with them, keeping them snug in their belts. Under no circumstances do
they ever play with them like toys.
If the family is travelling, the statues are kept at a nursery.
Mr
Lafforgue visited one such nursery and notes that the sheer number of
dolls present reflected the region's high mortality rate.
He also
met a woman called Mrs Ablossi, who lost two pairs of twins and a set
of triplets. Since their death, she says she has been blessed with good
luck and became a 'Queen' of the tribe.
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