Atlantida - Page 32/145

"The first day of my arrival at the cloister I was assigned to Dom

Granger, and placed by him at work on the Atlas of Christianity. A

brief examination decided him as to what kind of service I was best

fitted to render. This is how I came to enter the studio devoted to

the cartography of Northern Africa. I did not know one word of Arabic,

but it happened that in garrison at Lyon I had taken at the Faculté

des Lettres, a course with Berlioux,--a very erudite geographer no

doubt, but obsessed by one idea, the influence the Greek and Roman

civilizations had exercised on Africa. This detail of my life was

enough for Dom Granger. He provided me straightway with Berber

vocabularies by Venture, by Delaporte, by Brosselard; with the

Grammatical Sketch of the Temahaq by Stanley Fleeman, and the Essai

de Grammaire de la langue Temachek by Major Hanoteau. At the end of

three months I was able to decipher any inscriptions in Tifinar. You

know that Tifinar is the national writing of the Tuareg, the

expression of this Temachek language which seems to us the most

curious protest of the Targui race against its Mohammedan enemies.

"Dom Granger, in fact, believed that the Tuareg are Christians, dating

from a period which it was necessary to ascertain, but which coincided

no doubt with the splendor of the church of Hippon. Even better than

I, you know that the cross is with them the symbol of fate in

decoration. Duveyrier has claimed that it figures in their alphabet,

on their arms, among the designs of their clothes. The only tattooing

that they wear on the forehead, on the back of the hand, is a cross

with four equal branches; the pummels of their saddles, the handles of

their sabres, of their poignards, are cross-shaped. And is it

necessary to remind you that, although Islam forbids bells as a sign

of Christianity, the harness of Tuareg camels are trimmed with bells?

"Neither Dom Granger nor I attach an exaggerated importance to such

proofs, which resemble too much those which make such a display in the

Genius of Christianity. But it is indeed impossible to refuse all

credence to certain theological arguments. Amanai, the God of the

Tuareg, unquestionably the Adonai of the Bible, is unique. They have a

hell, 'Timsi-tan-elekhaft,' the last fire, where reigns Iblis, our

Lucifer. Their Paradise, where they are rewarded for good deeds, is

inhabited by 'andjelousen,' our angels. And do not urge the

resemblance of this theology to the Koran, for I will meet you with

historic arguments and remind you that the Tuareg have struggled all

through the ages at the cost of partial extermination, to maintain

their faith against the encroachments of Mohammedan fanaticism.