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When a rash has two names: pese sorcery and kisigo spirits at Lake Tanganyika.

Eva Bleyenberg, Koen Stroeken

Anthropology & medicine August 1, 2018 DOI: 10.1080/13648470.2017.1308187 via PubMed

Summary

An affliction of the skin called pese, found in Kigoma, Tanzania, has been overlooked in medical anthropology. Based on 27 interviews, the study describes pese alongside a similar local condition, kisigo, and suggests that two illness concepts for the same affliction exist because they originate from different cultures: pese is linked to witchcraft (sorcery), while kisigo is tied to spirit possession. A symbiotic relationship between the healing traditions of the Bembe and Ha peoples appears to exist. Government policies that prohibit witchcraft and target traditional healers have seemingly pushed witchcraft practices and beliefs to the periphery, where they survive clandestinely.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Qualitative study Peer reviewed
Sample size 27
Population People in Kigoma, Tanzania
Keywords Kigoma Skin Governance Illness construction Medical anthropology
Key finding The skin affliction pese and the similar condition kisigo arise from different explanatory models—witchcraft and spirit possession, respectively—and government policies have driven witchcraft practices underground.

Abstract

This explorative and qualitative study, based on 27 interviews during two months of fieldwork, describes pese, an affliction of the skin that has conspicuously stayed under the radar of medico-anthropological research in Kigoma, a rural city in the northwest Tanzania. The condition reminds of a locally better known condition labeled kisigo, raising the question why two concepts of the same affliction exist side by side. It seems indicative that the two illness concepts stem from different cultures and that each specializes in an explanatory model: the former witchcraft (sorcery) and the latter spirit possession. Moreover, a symbiotic relation seems to exist between the healing traditions of the Bembe and the Ha. Government policies prohibiting witchcraft and targeting traditional healers seem to have created a situation where witchcraft practices and beliefs have come to represent the periphery and survive there, clandestinely.

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