look to dreams for their healing power, others might look for divine messages, and still others rely on dreams to guide their artistic creation. Among Zezuru healers in Zimbabwe, for example, dreams are said to be the source of all training on the medicinal use of plants, and also serve as a diagnostic tool, according to the University of Zimbabwe's Pamela Reynolds, who worked with sixty traditional healers of the region. And for all Zezuru people, dreams hold special interpretive possibilities that can shape waking experiences. She writes, "Zulu believe that without dreams, true and uninterrupted living is not possible. Zezuru believe the same: dreamless nights are said to be unhealthy."
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The Temne of Sierra Leone, too, look to dreams for divine training. "Among the Temne, the vision and knowledge of diviners are largely attributed to accomplishment in dreaming, through which they become experts on the dreams of their clients. Not only, then, do their dreams have power; they have power over other people's dreams," writes Rosalind Shaw, coeditor of Dreaming, Religion, and Society in Africa . This same volume includes an essay by Roy M. Dilley of the University of St. Andrews about the Tukolor, who believe dreams are associated with spiritual agents, and that in dreams the soul is allowed to roam free. To the Tukolor, some dreams are utter nonsense, others are meaningless entertainment, and still others are incubated to reveal new techniques they can use in their traditional weavings. Africa is a massive continent, and it is not surprising that dream beliefs vary from culture to culture. And, contrary to the stereotypes that are associated with native peoples, not all African tribes invest dreams with special significance. The Berti, for instance, "are not encouraged to dream and to remember their dreams," according to Ladislav Holy, also of the University of St. Andrews. In fact, they rarely tell their dreams to others, and claim not to dream very often at all, despite the biological
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