Kopé Tiatie Cac[1][2] (also Koh[3] and Koope;[4] in Ndut language, meaning god grandfather or god the grandfather) is the Supreme Creator in the Serer religion.[1][2] Kopé Tiatie Cac is the name used by the Ndut people to refer to the Supreme being.[1][2] Among the Ndut and followers of Serer religion, Kopé Tiatie Cac is associated with death[3] and plague (pisti).[5]
The Ndut people who adhere to the tenets of Serer religion refer to the supreme god as Kopé Tiatie Cac in Cangin-Ndut.[1] The name Kopé Tiatie Cac probably derived from the god Koox (var : Kooh). Ndut cosmogony posits that, the first humans did not die. The human species were not meant to die following the initial creation.[3] The dog was the first to die at that primordial time. Having witnessed the death of the animal, the Ndut people gave the animal a sacred burial at the foot of a baobab tree, and mourned its death. The women crying and wailing in sadness for the departed dog, attracted the attention of Kopé Tiatie Cac (or Koh) God of death. The god angered by the mourning women unleashed death to human kind in the following terms:
What! You make so much noise for a dead dog? Good! You die you too.[3]
The deity is worshiped through Serer ancestral spirits and saints. Various matrilineages (both on the paternal and maternal line) play a key role in its invocation.[6] The name koh a variant of the god's' name, is the feminine form. The masculine form is ala.[6]
^ abcd(in French) Ndiaye, Ousmane Sémou, "Diversité et unicité sérères : l’exemple de la région de Thiès", Éthiopiques, no. 54, vol. 7, 2e semestre 1991 [1]Archived 2020-06-30 at the Wayback Machine
^(in French) Dupire, Marguerite, "Totems sereer et contrôle rituel de l'environnement", p 39 [3]
^(in English) Echenberg, Myron J., "Black death, white medicine: bubonic plague and the politics of public health in colonial Senegal, 1914-1945", Heinemann (2002), pp 139, 160-161, ISBN0325070172
^ ab(in French) Dupire, Marguerite, "Sagesse sereer: Essais sur la pensée sereer ndut", p 61 [4]
Ndiaye, Ousmane Sémou, "Diversité et unicité sérères : l’exemple de la région de Thiès", Éthiopiques, no. 54, vol. 7, 2e semestre 1991 [6]Archived 2020-06-30 at the Wayback Machine
Echenberg, Myron J., "Black death, white medicine: bubonic plague and the politics of public health in colonial Senegal, 1914-1945", Heinemann (2002), pp 139, 160-161, ISBN0325070172
Dupire, Marguerite, "Totems sereer et contrôle rituel de l'environnement", p 39 (in French)[7]