Divinity The Serer people believe in a supreme deity called
Roog (or
Rog) and sometimes referred to as
Roog Sene ("Roog The Immensity" or "The Merciful God"). Serer tradition deals with various dimensions of life, death, space and time, ancestral spirit communications and
cosmology. There are also other lesser gods, goddesses and
supernatural spirits or genie (
pangool or
nguus) such as the
fangool Mendiss (or
Mindis), a female protector of
Fatick Region and
the arm of the sea that bears her name; the god
Tiurakh (var :
Thiorak or
Tulrakh) – god of
wealth, and the god
Takhar (var :
Taahkarr) – god of
justice or vengeance.
Roog is neither the
devil nor a genie, but the "
Lord of creation". Roog is the very embodiment of both male and female to whom offerings are made at the foot of trees, such as the sacred
baobab tree, the sea, the river (such as the sacred
River Sine), in people's own homes or community shrine, etc. Roog Sene is reachable perhaps to a lesser extent by the Serer high priests and priestesses (
Saltigue), who have been initiated and possess the knowledge and power to organise their thoughts into a single cohesive unit. However, Roog is always watching over its children and always available to them.
Divinity and humanity In Serer,
Roog Sene is the lifeblood to which the incorruptible and sanctified soul returns to eternal peace after they depart the living world. Roog Sene sees, knows and hears everything, but does not interfere in the day-to-day affairs of the living world. Instead, lesser gods and goddesses act as Roog's assistants in the physical world. Individuals have the
free will to either live a good and spiritually fulfilled life in accordance with Serer religious doctrines or waver from such doctrines by living an unsanctified lifestyle in the physical world. Those who live their lives contrary to the teachings will be rightfully punished in the afterlife.
Ancestral spirits and saints Ordinary Serers address their prayers to the
pangool (the
Serer ancestral spirits and saints) as they are the intermediaries between the living world and the Divine. An orthodox Serer must remain faithful to the ancestral spirits as the soul is sanctified as a result of the ancestors' intercession between the living world and the Divine. The pangool have both a historical significance as well as a religious one. They are connected to the history of the Serer by virtue of the fact that the pangool is associated with the founding of Serer villages and towns as a group of
pangool would accompany village founders called "
lamane" (or
laman – who were their ancient kings) as they make their journey looking for land to exploit. Without them, the lamane exploits would not have been possible. In the religious sense, these ancient lamanes created
shrines to these pangool, thereby becoming the priests and custodians of the shrine. As such, "they became the intermediaries among the land, the people and the pangool". Whenever any member of the lamanic lineage dies, the whole Serer community celebrates in honour of the exemplary lives they had lived on earth in accordance with the teachings of the Serer religion. Serer prayers are addressed to the pangool who act as intercessors between the living world and the Divine. In addressing their prayers to the pangool, the Serers chant ancient songs and offer sacrifices such as bull, sheep, goat, chicken or harvested crops.
Afterlife The
immortality of the soul and
reincarnation (
Ciiɗ in
Serer) is a strongly held belief in Serer religion. The
pangool are viewed as holy spirit/saints, and will be called upon and venerated, and have the power to intercede between the living and the Divine. The Serer strive to live a righteous life so they can be accepted by their ancestors who have long departed. To be righteous, means one has the opportunity to enter
Jaaniiw (the place where good souls go Serer spirituality rejects the notion of heaven and hell. In Serer spirituality, acceptance by the ancestors, and the ability to enter
Jaaniiw (or
Jaaniw) so one can be closer to the Divine is as close to the notion of heaven. Being rejected by the ancestors (those who have reincarnated and became holy, and serve as interceders between the physical world and the Divine) is equivalent to hell. However, Serer spirituality rejects the notion of "hell fire". The soul's inability to enter Jaaniiw means that it cannot return to its purest and natural form, and peace. Thus, it won't be able to fly from Jaaniiw to ciiɗ, and return to earth for a new course of
human evolution. == Family totems ==