Ethnozoology among the Berbers: pre-Islamic practices survive in the Rif (northwestern Africa).
Aymane BudjajGuillermo BenítezJuan Manuel PleguezuelosPublished in: Journal of ethnobiology and ethnomedicine (2021)
The use of primarily mammalian species and of many animal body parts is likely related to the Berber belief in homology between the area of the human body in which the ailment occurs and the corresponding animal body part. These findings unveil the nature of ethnozoological practices, highly linked to folklore and culture-bound conditions, and lacking in the Western empirical rationale for nearly one third of reported uses. The consumption of animals considered impure according to Islam was probably initiated before the conquering of the Maghreb by Arabs in the seventh century and was maintained through the secular isolation of Riffians in mountain areas. This can reflect traditional healing habits being maintained over thousands of years.