by Fr. Peter Tynan, O.S.B. (aka Papa Pete)
Since it is October, why not treat yourself to some masks that are not made out of plastic or rubber? On display outside the Special Collections Room in the O’Grady Library (lower level) are 10 West African Masks that were recently donated to Saint Martin’s University by Joe Spacciante, a Saint Martin's College graduate (1969) and retired teacher at Timberline High School, who collected the masks through his friend James Oatfield who worked in West Africa.
The collection consists of more than 16 masks collected in
Mali and the Ivory Coast. They were made for use in traditional religious ceremonies.
During these ceremonies the masks were worn by members of tribe who then
embodied the spirit the mask represented. So the wearer of the crocodile mask,
for example, would no longer be himself, but would stand for the spirit of the
crocodile and all it represented to the members of the tribe for the duration
of the ceremony. This kind ritual falls under the category of Animism, the
religious belief that all of nature is endowed with spirits that can be invoked
and entreated.
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Crocodile mask |
A couple of the masks on display depict the faces of blind
persons. These represent the victims of “river blindness,” or onchocerciasis.
It is a disease caused by an infection from a parasitic worm. A person is infected by being bitten by a
black fly that carries the parasite. The worms breed and multiply under the
person’s skin. They will then migrate throughout the body including the
eyes. In some West African tribes, over half the adults over the age of forty are river
blind.
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The blind face masks were used in ceremonies to ward off the
disease from the tribal members. Men wearing masks representing good spirits
would ritually drive off those wearing the masks representing river blindness. As for the science, there is no known vaccine
for the disease, but it can be prevented by avoiding insect bites, using
insecticide, and wearing proper clothing. An infection is treated by killing
larvae and waiting for the adult worms to die. Surgery may be required to
remove lumps created under the skin.
Special thanks to Joe Spacciante for donating these fabulous
cultural artifacts and works of art.