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AN INTRODUCTION TO SHAX
A SOMALI GAME
Originally prepared in December 1988 by Rick Davies, in consultation with Ibrahim Awad, Abdidahir Ali Hirsi, Axmed Ismacil Jamac, Axmed Liban Axmed and others in Mogadishu. Contributions by others to this paper would be welcome, and acknowledged. Write to rick@shimbir.demon.co.uk
"Shaxda jeexannaye jaalkayoow, jare haddaan yeesho
marna inaan ku jixinjixeyn, jiri calooshaada..." - suugan bulsho
"Oh my friend that now we have drawn the shax board
if I score a jare let it be known to you that I will never be lenient to you at all.
BACKGROUND
Shax is one popular name for a game played throughout much of the Somali inhabited regions of the
Horn of Africa. While in the northern regions of Somalia it is known as shax, in the central and
southern regions it is called jar (literally meaning "cut").
In the nomadic areas it is played mainly by the older men with few day to day responsibilities. In the
city it is played by older men but also by younger men who are unemployed. One public notice in
central Mogadishu exhorts such people saying "jaraystoow jinkaa ku dhaaf" - you players of jare, your
generation has left you (i.e get moving and do something). Shax is played exclusively by men. One
Somali male player of shax has offered the following explanation:
"First, women keep aloof from playing it perhaps because, like
chess, it stands for war and thus calls for a quick and sharp
mind to conduct tactical and strategical planning.
Secondly, this may be so because, like all games, it is a time
killer and women hardly afford, at least in the good old
traditions, the luxury to let time pass-by unutilised."
In Mogadishu people can be seen playing shax on the ground in a
number of places: around Yoobsan, down from the Dhagax Tuur
Monument, on the edges of Suuqa Bakhaaraha, Suuqa Medina, behind
the Xamar Weyne meat and vegetable market, and under the trees near
the entrance to the port.
Usually it is played on the ground. Holes are marked on the ground
to represent the spaces where the pieces can be placed. Stones,
shells, broken glass, charcoal, camel dung, and date seeds are
often used. More recently in urban areas the tops from Coca Cola
bottles are being used.
Although it is only a two person game, in practice it often
involves many more. Observers usually hover nearby, offering advice
and often even making moves for the players, sometimes even without
consulting them. The games are played very quickly by
"professionals" and more slowly by "amateurs".
References to shax occur in many stories about people famous in
Somali history and folklore (Garaad Xirsi Garaad Faarax better
known as Wiilwaal, Sayid Maxamed Abdulle Xasan and Suldaan Yusuf
Ali of Obbiyo). Often one player will talk about the movement of
the pieces using them as a metaphor for a larger plan of action
which he wants to communicate to the other player. The other player
will then reply..
"in the same fashion of subtle dialogue or debate. This could
be in the case of a player threatening his arch enemy or that
of a player searching the inner soul of a beloved kinsman for
information"(1)
Two well known examples are recounted below:
1."When Suldaan Yuusuf Cali from Bargale traveled all the way to
Hobbiyo to establish and consolidate his grip over clansmen there
late last century he was quoted as saying the following poem in
the shax he played with one of the prominent elders in the area.
"Kanaan degay kanaan degahayaa, kanina ii laaban
ku kaloo an kuu qarinayaa, kayd qotoma weeye"
" I have put (my piece) there
I shall put it here
and here is yet to be filled.
Another secret move
is reserved for you"
The implication of this poem is that Suldaan Yuusaf Cali was
actually referring to his subtle intention of dominating these
clansmen. However, whether or not his wisdom was perceived by
his opponents is not clear from the story....This can be
classified as a case of passing on a message of threat.
2. Another story recounts how Wiilwaal was fond of conducting business with enigmatic wits and
riddles. Suspecting that his nephew might be had an affair with his
wife, he invited him to a shax and then engaged him into poetic
riddles as follows:
(If) there is a nice cow with a female calf near a
well
and this crazy cow chases the boys
that you never touched its teat,
swear by God!
The nephew answered:
Oh uncle you gave me an advice,
let me ask you a question
(if) a she-camel is killed by hyena,
and slaughtered by the owner
if you are told to take a quarter free
that you wont bring a vessel for it,
swear by God!
This is a case of soul searching.."(1)
THE RULES OF THE GAME
Each player has twelve pieces which he has to place on the "board"
(shown below). In the first phase of the game each
player takes a turn in placing a piece on any of the corners or
intersections on the board. At this stage players try to locate
their pieces in a way that will be to their strategic advantage in
the second phase of the game. This is usually done very quickly.
While placing their pieces each player also aims to be the first to
place three in a row, on any part of the board. This is called a
jare. In doing so players have to be very careful not to score a
jare at the expense of poor deployment of pieces, thus badly
effecting the future outcome of the game.
The second phase then begins:
When both have placed all their pieces on the board the player who
first made a jare has the right to remove one piece belonging to
the other player, from anywhere on the board.
Then the other player has the same right.
The player who first made a jare then takes the first turn to move
one of his pieces to any adjacent empty space that has now been
created.
If no jare was created in the first half of the game then the
player who did not make the first move of the game now makes the
first move.
Each player then tries by such moves, in turn, to establish new
jare.
Each time a new jare is established the maker has the right at that
time to remove one of the other players pieces from anywhere on the
board.
If one player by his moves happens to block all possible moves
for the other player, the other player can cry out "jid i sii aan
jar aheyn" (give me a way without jare). The besieger is bound to
open up a space to move by moving one of his pieces without scoring
a jare. If such a move happens to result in the besieger scoring a
jare, that player is not allowed to exercise his normal right to
remove one of his opponents pieces from the board. Oodan (closed)
is the term used to describe this situation.
The players continue until one player has removed all but two
pieces of the other player off the board (three pieces are needed
to make a jare). Alternately a player may decide to forfeit the
game before then.
POSITIONS
There are a number of significant patterns of deployment which
frequently occur in games of shax and which have distinct technical
names familiar to many people, including those who do not play
shax. Some of these names are often used in daily life where people
find themselves in social or economic circumstances which have a
paralell to events in shax.
Some of the technical names for the positions in shax are given
below:
1. Jare (meaning that which cuts)
2. Laba-qaad/laba-jaraale (having two jare)
3. Suran (hanging)
4. Afarrey duuban (having folded four)
5. Afarey (having four)
6. Afarey duuban (second type - having four protected with two jare)
7. Afarrey kataan leh (having four with kataan, (possibly related to kataan/kutaan meaning blood sucking bug !))
8. Irmaan dhereran (straight irman (literally meaning a camel/goat/sheep that has given birth and from which it is possible to collect milk))
9. Irmaan gudban (cross irmaan)
10. Irmaan oodan (closed irmaan)
11. Iramaan oodan iyo lixley (closed irmaan with six)
12. Irmaan oodan iyo afarrey (closed irmaan with four)
VARIETIES OF SHAX
A simpler version of shax played with eight pieces.
Some children on the streets of Mogadishu play a version of shax
using this layout.
They call this game jar. It is played using three pieces per
player, in the same basic way as with shaxda. However there is no
middle stage where each can take off one piece belonging to the
other, regardless of whether they have initially formed a jare or
not. It is a much simpler game to play. The children call the more
complex form of shax "jar duqeed" ("jar of the old men").
Other countries other versions
In Lesotho a similar game called Morabaraba is played by sheperds high in the Maloti mountains, and in the
shebeens (cheap bars) in the small towns and rural areas, and less so in the capital Maseru. See "A GAME FOR TWO: MORABARABA", by Chris Dunton, Bernard Ntaote and
Nthatisi Bulane, in Sethlala, March /April 1990 p30-31, Lesotho.
In Europe there are games using the same "board" as shax, but
having slightly different rules. In England the game is called Nine
Men's Morris. In Germany the game is called Muhle (meaning "mill").
Muhle differs from shax in three respects. Firstly, it is played
with two sets of nine pieces rather than twelve. This leaves the
players with more choice of where to move at the beginning of the
second phase of the game than exists in shax, Secondly, in the
first half of the game when the pieces are being set up the player
who makes the first jare (known as muhle) takes an opponents piece
off the board as soon as the jare is made, not after all the pieces
have been placed on the board. This reduces the strategic value of
obtaining a jare at this stage of the game at this stage since the
opponent can simply place another piece in the same position, with
the next move. The opponent is simply disadvantaged by having one
less piece on the board. Thirdly, in the last stage of the game
when one players pieces have been reduced to three, that player
then has the right to move any piece, not simply to any adjacent
empty space, but to any empty space anywhere on the board. This
gives an interesting "last chance" to a player who would otherwise, in the case of shax,
very likely be defeated.
In contrast to shax, there are only two positions in muhle which
are given names: muhle itself, when three pieces have been placed
in a row, and zwickmuhle (meaning "in a pinch"), for the position
known as irmaan in shax.
OTHER SOURCES:
Written references to shax are few and hard to find. Two are listed below:
Marin, G. "Somali Games," J. Royal Antrhopological
Institute,vol. 61, 1931, pp. 499-512
Drake-Brockman, Ralph E. British Somaliland. London: Hurst and
Blackett, 1912, pp. 129-133
I have recently started to track down related materials on the WWW.
Information on other sources would be welcomed. Write to me at rick@shimbir.demon.co.uk
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