'A sense of duty': Volunteer Muslims bury unnamed dead in Senegal
Volunteers of the Association For Solidarity and Perfection (JRWI) cover the 28 unidentified corpses which are laid out at a mosque ahead of a prayer in Dakar, Senegal, March 28, 2021. (AFP Photo)


A sombre Islamic funeral ceremony was held in late March in Senegal's Dakar for 28 unnamed bodies with people attending the funeral having no relation or friendship to the deceased, highlighting a simple sense of duty and charity in the West African country.

Neither Mohamed Diop nor his fellow mourners knew any of the people they were burying. Volunteers with the Association for Solidarity and Perfection (JRWI) have taken it upon themselves to provide the unidentified dead with a Muslim funeral, for almost 10 years.

For the dead to be buried in a mass grave without Islamic rites would be considered an abomination in a country that is 90% Muslim, so on a day in late March, 28 bodies without names, 23 men, two women and three children, received a dignified burial, with several hundred people in attendance.

The JRWI activates its network for the funerals, but not all the mourners are members. Faith, a sense of duty and the hope of divine recognition are some of the reasons why people gather to honor those to whom they have no ties.

Volunteers of the Association For Solidarity and Perfection (JRWI) carry one of 28 unidentified corpses to a mosque ahead of a prayer in Dakar, Senegal, March 28, 2021. (AFP Photo)

"I came thinking of my final fate. I do it hoping for a divine reward, and it is not the first time," acknowledged Diop, who is in his twenties.

Mohamed Gueye, an imam in a poor Dakar neighborhood, recalled what inspired him to help found the charitable organization.

"One day I saw a vehicle enter the cemetery and leave shortly afterwards. When I asked, they told me it had to do with unidentified people who were being buried and that it was often in a mass grave, without respect for Islamic rules."

The Islamic instructions include a ritual washing of the body, a white shroud and a prayer, the imam explained. Giving unknown people a proper burial is something "that we do for God," he added.

JWRI volunteers recover the people to be buried at public hospitals, as they had done that day at one called Le Dantec. Hospitals must keep deceased patients for 45 days before they are placed in the association's care, it said.

Senegalese hospitals did not respond to questions from Agence France-Presse (AFP) on the subject.

It was not known how many unidentified people die each year, nor what happens to bodies if the association cannot take care of them. It is not uncommon for bodies to remain unidentified or for families not to claim them, and the reasons can be various, from breakdowns in family ties to administrative failings.

The head of the capital's fire services, Colonel Papa Ange Michel Diatta, said unidentified bodies may be victims of road accidents, homeless people or others who suffer from mental illness. Once they have dealt with the emergency, the fire service leaves it up to hospitals to identify the deceased.

Volunteers of the Association For Solidarity and Perfection (JRWI) help sort one of the 28 unidentified corpses that will be loaded into a van in Dakar, Senegal, March 28, 2021. (AFP Photo)

In November, JRWI also buried 13 clandestine migrants. The group had suspended burials owing to the coronavirus pandemic to avoid exposing volunteers and because large gatherings were banned.

"In nine years, we have buried 1,029 people in Dakar and other regions," said Lamine Mandiang, the JRWI secretary-general who works in the oil sector.

A group burial can cost the equivalent of almost 700 euros ($800), about half the average per capita annual income, according to World Bank data, and the association does not always have the money, imam Gueye says.

It depends on contributions from members and others, aid from municipal governments or other public institutions and a foundation sponsored by Marieye Faye Sall, Senegal's first lady. Her Serving Senegal Foundation (Fondation Servir le Senegal) has provided vehicles to transport the deceased and mourners.

A column of hearses, ambulances and buses made its way from Le Dantec hospital along a 15-kilometer (9-mile) route to Dakar's Muslim cemetery.

JRWI volunteers wearing green and orange uniforms unloaded the bodies, brought them into a small mosque, where a prayer was said and bore them to a grave that had been dug beforehand.

Another imam, Mohamed Samb, said a final prayer, noting also that there were many tombs nearby that were fancier than stipulated under Islamic rules.

The 28 unidentified bodies will lie beneath a mound marked by a simple stone with no inscription, Samb said.