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date: 17 February 2025

History of Laamb (Senegalese Wrestling)locked

History of Laamb (Senegalese Wrestling)locked

  • Tamba E. M'bayoTamba E. M'bayoDepartment of History, West Virginia University

Summary

Laamb, indigenous wrestling in Senegal, has its roots in the wrestling tradition of the Sereer people of west-central Senegal traceable way back to the far-off pre-colonial era. During this early period, the sport was popular in rural communities and attracted diverse groups of spectators, including men, women, and children. Most of the wrestlers were young men of different age groups who participated in laamb as a recreational sport to mark the end of the harvest season in agricultural areas or to celebrate the end of Ramadan, the month-long fasting period for Muslims. Even as an amateur sport without the lure of huge prize money, wrestling matches generated excitement, rivalry, and passionate debates among fans and wrestlers alike.

With its initial increase in popularity spanning the colonial period, Senegalese wrestling attracted more spectators in Dakar, the capital city, in the early 1900s and continued flourishing as a major spectator sport and cultural event in the country from the second half of the 1900s onward. Over the years, laamb attracted a larger fan base in Senegal and became more monetized, with commercial enterprises using it to promote their goods and services as prize monies increased exponentially for the topmost wrestlers. Consequently, laamb has become one of the most popular sports in the country and is surpassed only by soccer/football, though some observers suggest that the former is the dominant sport. Notwithstanding its popularity in Senegal, however, the country’s predominantly Muslim population frowns upon women wrestlers participating publicly in laamb. Hence, unlike their male counterparts, women have very few to no opportunities to become professional wrestlers.

Subjects

  • West Africa

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