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NGOR - For generations, Seynabou Tall's ancestors have fished, dived and rowed off the coast of Dakar, where the 14-year-old, who quit school nearly four years ago, is now learning to surf.
She and some 20 other girls are participating in an inaugural Surf Academy which requires they enrol in school, incentivised by the chance to shred waves.
Nearly all come from the little community of Xataxely, a fishing village of narrow walkways that is part of the capital's larger Ngor neighbourhood.

Coach Khady Mbemgue (L) instructs new surfers of the Black Girls Surf Academy during a practice session on a beach in the Almadies Corniche in Dakar

Young participants of the Surf Academy programme prepare to set off for a two-hour training session at sea
Her mother, who only went to primary school, sells fatayas and nems -- savoury pocket pastries and spring rolls -- outside the family's compound where their extended family lives.
Since leaving school Seynabou Tall has been "just staying at home", said 43-year-old Marieme Wade, adding that she advised her daughter "to continue with surfing, maybe it will open doors".
"We don't have the means to pay for her studies," she explained from their home's back courtyard, where young children capered about and two rams watched from an enclosure.
The girls in the academy are beginners at surfing. "I had never surfed before this program," Seynabou Tall told AFP, seated beside her mother.
Many are also beginners at education: Most had to be enrolled in the "first grade", said Silmang Pierre Ndior, an official at the Soeur Marie Luc Vaderloge literacy centre where they attend night school.
The nascent surfers' lack of elementary education is not rare in Senegal.
The country's primary school completion rate was just 60 percent for girls and 55 percent for boys in 2022, according to the UNESCO International Institute for Capacity Building in Africa.
'Good support'
Soukeye Ndoye, 16, coaches in the Surf Academy, having participated in Black Girls Surf since 2019, and said she is delighted to "hold an important position that I never thought I would be able to hold".
"At first, I knew nothing about surfing... I was always falling and often getting hurt. But now, I go out on my own and I have good support."
Later this year Senegal will host the Youth Summer Olympic Games, the first African country ever to hold an Olympics event.
Surfing has been a part of the Olympics since 2020 but will not be included in the 25 competition sports in Dakar, to the dismay of the city's surf community.
Thirty-year-old Sambe, who grew up two to three metres from the beach in Xataxely, has her eyes on the 2028 Los Angeles Games.
As a child, her parents forbade her to surf, an activity they believed was for boys. In order to participate she would sneak out the window or leave the house dressed in formal attire to throw her family off.
"In the beginning, it was difficult because we are girls and we didn't see other girls who surfed," Sambe said.
Now several girls who started out in Black Girls Surf are participating in or even winning national competitions.