MLOMP, Senegal — It's almost dusk, and the West African heat is finally faltering. In Mlomp, a village in southern Senegal, dozens of teenagers in colorful jerseys are throwing each other to the ground to the rhythm of Afrobeats against a backdrop of palm trees.
It's a common sight across Senegal, where wrestling is a national sport and wrestlers are celebrated like rock stars. The local variation of wrestling, called laamb in Wolof, one of the national languages, has been part of village life for centuries. Senegalese wrestle for entertainment and to celebrate special occasions. The professional version of the sport draws thousands to stadiums and can be a catapult to international stardom.
But in most of the country, wrestling remains off-limits for women.
There is one exception. In the Casamance region, home to the Jola ethnic group, women traditionally wrestle alongside men. At a recent training session in Mlomp, most teenagers on the sandy ground were girls.
''It's in our blood,'' said coach Isabelle Sambou, 43, a two-time Olympian and nine-time African wrestling champion. ''In our village, girls wrestle. My mum was a wrestler, my aunts were wrestlers.''
But once Jola women marry, they are expected to stop practicing and devote themselves to family life, considered the main duty of Senegalese women regardless of ethnicity or religion.
Sambou's aunt, Awa Sy, now in her 80s, was the village champion in her youth, and said she would even take down some men.
''I liked wrestling because it made me feel strong,'' she said, standing outside her house nestled between rice fields and mangroves. ''I stopped when I got married." She didn't question it at the time.