Online Encyclopedia

PURROII PURRAH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 666 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PURROII

PURRAH  , or Pogo, a secret society of Sierra Leone, West Africa . Only
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males are admitted to its ranks, but two other affiliated and secret associations exist, the Yassi and the Bundu, the first of which is nominally reserved for
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females, but members of the Purrah are admitted to certain ceremonies . All the
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female members of the Yassi must be also members of the Bundu, which is strictly reserved to
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women . Of the three, the Purrah is by far the most important . The entire native population is governed by its code of
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laws . It primarily represents a type of
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freemasonry, a "friendly" society to which even infants are temporarily admitted, the ceremony in their case consisting merely of carrying them into the Purrah "
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bush" and out again . But this side of the Purrah is merged in its larger
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objects as represented by its two
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great aspects, the religious and the
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civil . Under the former, boys join it at puberty, while under the latter it is practically the native governing
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body, making laws, deciding on war and peace, &c . The Purrah has its
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special ritual and language, tattooing and symbols, but details are unknown, as the oath of secrecy is always kept . It meets usually in the dry season, between the months of
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October and May . The
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rendezvous is in " the bush," an enclosure, separated into apartments by mats and roofed only by the over-
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hanging trees, serving as a club-house . There are three grades, the first for chiefs and " big men," the second for fetish-priests and the third for the crowd .

The ceremonies of the Purrah are presided over by the Purrah "

devil," a man in fetish dress, who addresses the meeting through a long tube of wood . The Purrah can place its taboo on anything or anybody; and as no native would venture to'defy its order, much trouble has been caused where the taboo has been laid upon crops . In 1897 the
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British or
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local government was compelled to pass a special ordinance absolutely forbidding the imposition of the taboo on all indigenous products . Of the affiliated societies the Yassi appears to some extent to be an association for providing men and women, who believe themselves
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ill through "fetish," with medical treatment, on payment of certain fees . The women's Bundu is in many ways a replica of the men's Purrah, though without
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political power . See T . J . Alldridge, The Sherbro and its Hinterland (1901) .

End of Article: PURROII PURRAH
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