The Fort Worth Press - In Dakar fishing village, surfing entices girls back to school

USD -
AED 3.672503
AFN 64.507172
ALL 81.624824
AMD 375.516815
ANG 1.790275
AOA 916.999838
ARS 1370.744204
AUD 1.419678
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.723004
BAM 1.667278
BBD 2.011082
BDT 122.671668
BGN 1.673387
BHD 0.377134
BIF 2967.989429
BMD 1
BND 1.272324
BOB 6.899962
BRL 5.006501
BSD 0.998508
BTN 92.62947
BWP 13.405226
BYN 2.865862
BYR 19600
BZD 2.008184
CAD 1.38559
CDF 2299.999628
CHF 0.79161
CLF 0.022739
CLP 894.940016
CNY 6.828
CNH 6.830425
COP 3645.78
CRC 462.128639
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 93.998551
CZK 20.835976
DJF 177.809983
DKK 6.390105
DOP 60.125314
DZD 132.132713
EGP 53.134197
ERN 15
ETB 156.679852
EUR 0.85512
FJD 2.214903
FKP 0.742933
GBP 0.745551
GEL 2.689686
GGP 0.742933
GHS 10.988449
GIP 0.742933
GMD 73.500338
GNF 8760.922382
GTQ 7.638208
GYD 208.899876
HKD 7.83245
HNL 26.518904
HRK 6.446501
HTG 130.923661
HUF 313.683973
IDR 17124.4
ILS 3.05766
IMP 0.742933
INR 93.372498
IQD 1308.043135
IRR 1316125.000364
ISK 122.449664
JEP 0.742933
JMD 157.870509
JOD 0.708961
JPY 159.5805
KES 129.249768
KGS 87.450453
KHR 3997.272069
KMF 420.000444
KPW 899.998178
KRW 1487.559795
KWD 0.30896
KYD 0.832104
KZT 471.85542
LAK 22019.52176
LBP 89419.71783
LKR 315.118708
LRD 183.726184
LSL 16.382337
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.347556
MAD 9.280849
MDL 17.20387
MGA 4143.898385
MKD 52.741452
MMK 2100.763326
MNT 3574.006152
MOP 8.05507
MRU 39.91049
MUR 46.520014
MVR 15.459654
MWK 1731.383999
MXN 17.383565
MYR 3.974497
MZN 63.95996
NAD 16.382337
NGN 1358.840311
NIO 36.741827
NOK 9.51985
NPR 148.206811
NZD 1.71584
OMR 0.384501
PAB 0.998508
PEN 3.369933
PGK 4.322066
PHP 60.350993
PKR 278.505946
PLN 3.636086
PYG 6457.525255
QAR 3.640254
RON 4.352898
RSD 100.383006
RUB 77.07568
RWF 1458.164614
SAR 3.748263
SBD 8.058149
SCR 14.900243
SDG 601.00025
SEK 9.322701
SGD 1.275935
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.624977
SLL 20969.496194
SOS 570.649162
SRD 37.448976
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.885725
SVC 8.737053
SYP 110.530532
SZL 16.386343
THB 32.25102
TJS 9.490729
TMT 3.505
TND 2.917693
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.71547
TTD 6.776352
TWD 31.797503
TZS 2595.553973
UAH 43.382209
UGX 3694.642172
UYU 40.288138
UZS 12141.852436
VES 475.837797
VND 26341
VUV 117.921501
WST 2.734489
XAF 559.189293
XAG 0.013427
XAU 0.000211
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.799582
XDR 0.695452
XOF 559.189293
XPF 101.666596
YER 237.149738
ZAR 16.53735
ZMK 9001.200839
ZMW 18.996633
ZWL 321.999592
  • BCC

    -0.4100

    80.17

    -0.51%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.63

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    90.29

    -0.03%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    204.03

    -0.47%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.35

    -2.31%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    98.26

    +1.15%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.81

    -0.07%

  • BP

    0.5400

    46.44

    +1.16%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.3

    -0.12%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    15.69

    -1.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

In Dakar fishing village, surfing entices girls back to school
In Dakar fishing village, surfing entices girls back to school / Photo: © AFP

In Dakar fishing village, surfing entices girls back to school

For generations, Seynabou Tall's ancestors have fished, dived and rowed off the coast of Dakar, where the 14-year-old, who quit school nearly four years ago, is now learning to surf.

Text size:

She and some 20 other girls are participating in an inaugural Surf Academy which requires they enrol in school, incentivised by the chance to shred waves.

Nearly all come from the little community of Xataxely, a fishing village of narrow walkways that is part of the capital's larger Ngor neighbourhood.

The area is a stronghold of Senegal's Lebou ethnic group, a fishing people closely tied to the ocean who live throughout the Dakar region.

The capital's world-class, year-round waves not only serve as the backdrop to the girls' lives, but also attract surfers from across the globe, including to the famed Ngor Right wave where the girls often practise.

Khadjou Sambe, Senegal's first female professional surfer, also a Lebou from Xataxely, is the vice president of the Dakar chapter of Black Girls Surf, which put on the four-month Surf Academy.

The US-based organisation aims to train and increase the number of black women who participate in surfing, a sport historically dominated by white men.

While its Surf Academy centres on surfing and academics, it is also a "development program" meant to focus on the whole person, said the organization's founder and director, American Rhonda Harper, 57.

The first-ever Dakar academy was attended by 23 girls age seven to 17, of whom 17 had never gone to or were no longer in school. Nearly all were Lebou and live within 20 metres (yards) of the ocean.

They were provided with surfboards and wetsuits. And they participated in activities like fitness, meditation and surfing during the day, while receiving schooling at night in a program for students no longer in the formal education system.

While the academy ended at the end of January, the school portion lasts through July. Six participants already enrolled in school participated in the academy as a weekend and after-school activity.

- 'We don't have the means' -

Like many Lebou, Tall's father is a diver, plunging for fish which have drastically disappeared from Senegal's coast due to industrial trawling.

Her mother, who only went to primary school, sells fatayas and nems -- savoury pocket pastries and spring rolls -- outside the family's compound where their extended family lives.

Since leaving school Seynabou Tall has been "just staying at home", said 43-year-old Marieme Wade, adding that she advised her daughter "to continue with surfing, maybe it will open doors".

"We don't have the means to pay for her studies," she explained from their home's back courtyard, where young children capered about and two rams watched from an enclosure.

The girls in the academy are beginners at surfing. "I had never surfed before this program," Seynabou Tall told AFP, seated beside her mother.

Many are also beginners at education: Most had to be enrolled in the "first grade", said Silmang Pierre Ndior, an official at the Soeur Marie Luc Vaderloge literacy centre where they attend night school.

The nascent surfers' lack of elementary education is not rare in Senegal.

The country's primary school completion rate was just 60 percent for girls and 55 percent for boys in 2022, according to the UNESCO International Institute for Capacity Building in Africa.

- 'Good support' -

Soukeye Ndoye, 16, coaches in the Surf Academy, having participated in Black Girls Surf since 2019, and said she is delighted to "hold an important position that I never thought I would be able to hold".

"At first, I knew nothing about surfing... I was always falling and often getting hurt. But now, I go out on my own and I have good support."

Later this year Senegal will host the Youth Summer Olympic Games, the first African country ever to hold an Olympics event.

Surfing has been a part of the Olympics since 2020 but will not be included in the 25 competition sports in Dakar, to the dismay of the city's surf community.

Thirty-year-old Sambe, who grew up two to three metres from the beach in Xataxely, has her eyes on the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

As a child, her parents forbade her to surf, an activity they believed was for boys. In order to participate she would sneak out the window or leave the house dressed in formal attire to throw her family off.

"In the beginning, it was difficult because we are girls and we didn't see other girls who surfed," Sambe said.

Now several girls who started out in Black Girls Surf are participating in or even winning national competitions.

W.Matthews--TFWP