Prayer to the Masks
Prayer to the Masks
Briefly explain the connotations of the words 'prayer' and 'masks' as used in the title
Briefly explain the connotations of the words 'prayer' and 'masks' as used in the title
At the prayer point, Senghor greets the spirits in silence. The prayer takes place at the altar... a place of solitude. Masks representing each of the mighty tribes of Africa are displayed and worshippers congregate to pay their respects.
First Senghor pays homage to the spirits for their eternal greatness. He allows each one their due respect by acknowledging the color of their masks, including the colors of black, red and white The masks are prominently displayed at this place of worship.
The figure of the mask is Senghor's central image in the poem of the traditional past and the ancestors for whom it was a living reality. He uses the word "mask" as a kind of incantation to call up the ancestral spirits who in the present, implicitly, are hidden and hard to hear. The "silence" to which the poet refers suggests the need to greet the ancestors with attention and respectful awe. He also notes that the masks are the way that he can access the "breath of my fathers," that is, the living spirit of the ancestors who will inspire the poet to his song. His own face, he writes, resembles the face of the masks, because the masks bear the idealized features of the real faces of the poet's ancestors. The latter part of the poem admits that the ancestral past is in danger of being lost to the forces of modernity, which have come to Africa in the form of the colonial conquests of the French, British, Dutch, and Belgians.
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