Ndar: A City Inside Two Waters and Two Worlds
Ndar: A City Inside Two Waters and Two Worlds Long before maps labeled it Saint-Louis, Senegal, the city was known simply as Ndar. The name continues to be used affectionately by residents and Senegalese across the country, carrying with it a sense of history, identity, and belonging that reaches beyond the colonial era. While scholars debate the precise linguistic origins of the name, many people understand Ndar through the landscape itself. The city occupies a remarkable position between waterways, resting on an island in the Senegal River and connected to both the mainland and the Atlantic coast. For generations, residents have described Ndar as a place "inside two waters," a description that captures the essence of the city and the lives shaped by its geography. To understand Ndar is to understand water. A City Shaped by River and Sea Ndar's historic center occupies an island in the Senegal River. To the east lies Sor, the mainland district connected by the Faidherbe ...