In neighbourhoods from the coast to the inland towns, the presence of marabouts and the small charms they produce is quietly woven into daily life. You see the neat packets of inked paper wrapped in leather at market stalls, feel the slight weight of a charm against the throat when someone tucks it beneath clothing, and hear the careful, low voices as requests are made for prayers or protection. Discarding such an object casually is frowned upon in many families; better to return it to the marabout or to bury it, a practice carried out with the same deliberate care used when tying a knot in a cloth. These gestures speak less of fear than of a lived sense that certain things are both fragile and powerful, and deserve respectful handling. Certain trees, shrines and burial grounds carry their own unspoken rules.
Under the wide arms of a baobab or by a tiled tomb, conversation softens and shoes are sometimes left at the edge of the sacred space; the cool shade, the rustle of leaves and the smoke of incense shape a mood of restraint. In some places it is considered improper to cut branches, to take soil, or to enter without first asking, and offerings or small tokens may be placed at the base of a tree. Such care keeps a rhythm between the everyday and the places considered set apart, a rhythm that people often mark through touch and silence as much as through words. Everyday manners carry taboos that are practical and symbolic at once. Greetings are more than politeness; failing to greet can halt a conversation before it starts.
It is common to avoid stepping over someone who is seated, to spare the pointed index when indicating a direction, and to avert certain gestures thought likely to call attention in the wrong way. At night, in quieter quarters, some will avoid whistling on the streets—an act said by many to invite trouble—while others might tie a small protective piece of cloth to a child’s clothing, not as a statement but as a habitual care passed down through mothers and grandparents. Tradition and the modern city often meet in small, everyday compromises. A talisman might sit tucked inside a plastic phone case, or an old saying about luck might be quoted with a laugh at the roundabout; people adapt while still noticing the line between what should be treated lightly and what should be treated with respect. The result is a patchwork of customs that can feel intimate: the smell of coffee at a corner café, the flick of the wrist as an offering is made, the hush that falls when a sacred place is entered—all reminders that unseen rules shape how life is lived, step by step.