IN THE SHADE OF THE ACACIA TREES
It is said by those who knew first hand, that the Ferlo was a green and fertile land over 50 years ago.
But the burning sun, the extreme dryness and the Harmattan have transformed the harvest into desert.
The Ferlo Valley, in the north of Senegal, is one of most affected areas by desertification and climate
change. It has become an inhospitable place where the Sahara advances ruthlessly, covering the
intense and saturated greens that once dominated the landscape with ochres and yellows.
This area of the Sahel has always been inhabited by the Fulani people, who are nomadic shepherds
of enigmatic origin that have extended throughout West Africa. Subjected to tough climatic pressures
with extreme temperatures and little shade to take refuge in, the Fulani lifestyle is under threat, which
has been anchored on tradition and immutability and it has remained in balance for centuries. The new
circumstances force the nomads to settle down in order to survive. They dig 300 metres wells, and
often, do not find water. They have to move again, walking for days and weeks, while their livestock die
of hunger and thirst.
In the Shade of the Acacia Trees explores the silent and permanent battle of Fulani people against
their worst enemy, the desert, while they search for a stronghold of life next to the few trees that resist.
The acacia tree is their shield, their refuge, a truce in their long journey and their last hope. In the Sahel,
the future is an illusion that evaporates like a mirage. And the Fulani are at the front line of a battle that
concerns us all.
In the Shade of the Acacia Trees is a chronicle of shepherd people that invokes the rain while they
fight against the sand. And, meanwhile, they witness how their future dilutes little by little into a palette
of eternal ochres, of uncertain oranges, and unknown earth tones that nobody knows where they will
lead us.