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Damba Festival Comes Off Successfully

After Series Of High Tension
By DAILY GRAPHIC
Regional News Damba Festival Comes Off Successfully
FEB 1, 2013 LISTEN

This year's Damba festival has come off successfully at the Gbewaa Palace at Yendi and other parts of the Northern Region with an admonition on the people to embrace peace and unite to chart a new course to accelerate development of the area.

The Regent of Dagbon, Kampakuya-Na Abdulai Yakubu Andani, in an interview with the Daily Graphic asked the celebrants not to use the occasion for only merry-making but to reflect on the future of the area.

“We need to bury our differences and gird our loins to fight the existing poverty, disease and ignorance which are our common enemies in this area.”

According to him, time tested festivals such as the Damba should be used as a rallying point to bring everybody on board to chart a defining course for Dagbon. He described this year's celebration as successful, since, according to him, it attracted people from both factions of the Dagbon chieftaincy divide and sons and daughters from other regions in the country.

Similar festivities were observed at Damongo, Nalerigu and Bimbilla, where the paramount chiefs in those areas led their people to commemorate the event.

In Tamale, hundreds of jubilant celebrants were on the major streets to join in the revelry. It attracted people from all walks of life including tourists.

Those who could not resist the euphoria generated by the occasion joined in the dancing and merry-making.

Thursday's ceremony referred to as “Damba Belli Kulisi” (Farewell to Damba) was the climax of the week-long festival.

The revellers were adorned in their colourful smocks of varying sizes and shapes as they danced to the throbbing beats from the gong-gong. Various youth groups, including their beautifully clad ladies, also paraded the streets singing and dancing.

The immaculately dressed sub-chiefs were the centre of attraction as they sat on their equally decorated horses and danced majestically to the beats of the “Lungsi” drummers amidst musketry.

The joyous crowd accompanying the chiefs had to meander their way to the Dakpema's Palace for the durbar.

By 5:30 pm, almost all the sub-chiefs, accompanied by their respective retinues and ''warriors'' from the suburbs, had gathered at the palace to demonstrate the rich cultural displays associated with the festival.

The event, which is a blend of Islam and tradition, is celebrated by majority of the Muslim-dominated communities in the north including Dagombas, Nanumbas, Gonjas and Mamprusis.

It is to mark the birth and subsequent naming of Prophet Muhammed (S.A.W), the Founder of Islam. It is used to offer sacrifices to show appreciation to Allah and also chart a new course for the coming year.

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