Back from the Precipice
First published in the German Sighthound
magazine "Unsere Windhunde" November 2008
\y DVM Gabriele Meissen, PhD
translated into English by David Moore
(Daoud Abdullah Abdullah)

Amanar Import
Mali 1996
Though the focus of
this article is a pressing current issue, a
brief history of the breeding of Azawakh in
Europe is in order--beginning with the first
importations from Mali, Niger, and Burkina
Faso. Outlining this history will help to
clarify and reinforce
the
need for, and benefits of, the continuing
use of desert-bred Azawakh in western
breeding programs.
It should be well
known by now that the breeding of Azawakh in
Europe began with very few specimens.
Between 1972 and 1978 a total of five
Azawakh were
either imported into France or used for
breeding by returning civil servants from
what was then French Colonial West Africa:
the bitch TOBORO II (imported by Parigi) and
the dogs AIKAR, AOURAKH, ADIGNAZ and TARGOUI.
Not all the
dogs were imported directly
into France. TOBORO II herself was
imported earlier, but some of the matings
took place between 1972 and 1978 when Parigi
bred TOBORO II in Mali and returned to
France with her in whelp. What would come to
be known as the French Line began with
TOBORO II's production of four litters, one
by each of the four dogs. In essence, a line
was started through crossing half-siblings.
Half its genetic 'base' was one Azawakh
bitch.
In 1975
Francois Roussel imported the desert-bred
bitch TAHOURA. TAHOURA was bred to Ouleda (TOBORO
II x AIKAR) and from the resulting litter
the dog Azeraf was later introduced into
European breeding programs. Kaola, a
daughter of TOBORO II (X
ADIGNAZ) was bred in
1979 to the desert-bred TAKADAMAT.
From this mating the bitch

Timgad
Pegga resulted, who in turn whelped the
well-known sire Timgad, who today can be
found in the ancestry of almost every living
western-bred Azawakh.
As can be
seen, the French line was based on only
seven desert-bred Azawakh. The line was
carried forward from a genetic base that was
extremely small, its future compromised by
the fact that only two of the seven were
bitches.
The genetic
base of the Yugoslavian Line was
even more compromised. It was founded on
only three desert-bred Azawakh: one bitch,
LARA, and two dogs, GAO and DARKOYE SIDI.
Dr. Pecar, a
Yugoslavian diplomat stationed in Mali, imported
GAO and LARA from the region of Menaka in the Azawakh
Valley to Yugoslavia and began breeding them.
These importations were contemporary to the
first importations to France. All told, GAO
sired nine litters, seven of these after being
mated to his direct descendants. In 1976,
DARKOYE SIDI was imported from the province of
Oudalan, Burkina Faso. By today's western
standards DARKOYE SIDI would be considered a dog
of very rustic type. Anyone importing a dog of
this type today (at least in Europe) would face
challenges in obtaining permission for breeding.
However, DARKOYE SIDI sired eight litters out of
bitches descending from GAO and LARA as well as
out of his own descendants or bitches closely
related to him, in Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia
and Germany. The breeding of Azawakh in
Switzerland and Poland also started from this
base.
From the beginning. with
both lines, very close inbreeding was inevitable.
Such inbreeding is defined as the mating of
individuals sharing extremely close degrees of
relationship, such as full or
half-siblings, or parents and their direct
offspring. Unfortunately for the Azawakh race in
the west, this inbreeding resulted in a very
rapid impoverishment of the genetic base of the
breeding population; almost dizzying inbreeding
coefficients, in some cases as high as 40%, and
high ancestral loss were the two immediate and
dire results of an unavoidable breeding strategy.
Inbreeding depression was
clearly adversely affecting the dogs, evidenced
by a reduction in vitality, fertility and
performance. With
uninterrupted inbreeding, each generation of
offspring displayed increased homogeneity, in
both phenotype and genotype. But with this
increase in homogeneity came the risk of
defective genes (i.e. genes responsible for the
occurrence of hereditary diseases) meeting,
leading to an increased probability of genetic
disorders. The most unfortunate example was the
Yugoslavian Line, where many specimens suffered
from idiopathic epilepsy. With each increasing
degree of inbreeding from generation to
generation, the frequency of occurrence of
epilepsy increased as well.
Such close
inbreeding and line-breeding also produced a
change in both type (increased refinement which
implied an increase in nobility) and anatomy.
The changes in anatomy were typical
and negative: common examples were
extremely narrow fronts, fragile bones, weak
joints, hackneyed movement, and shortened ribs.
Add to this list missing teeth, un-descended
testicles in the dogs, and dogs lacking in
masculinity, and the picture is clear.
Years passed. Finally some
breeders faced reality: breeding forward with
the two lines distinct but unrelated and
isolated, was untenable. These breeders,
including the owners of the German Kennel Aulad
al Sahra, began to cross specimens from the two
lines.
The results were an immediate decrease in the
degree of inbreeding combined with an overall
increase in health. However, one important
coefficient did not change: ancestral loss. And,
since soon closely related dogs were again being
mated, the positive results of the crossing of
the two lines were understandably short-lived.

More years
passed and finally, in the mid-80s, three more
desert-breds were imported into France by
Gervais Coppe: the dogs EJEKER and BABASH
and the bitch TEKEWELT. The Coppe's founded the
Kennel Kel Tarbanassen to which they later added
the European-bred bitch Cenerentola des Nomades
Bleus. Specimens from their breeding program
would come to exert a profound influence on the
breeding of Azawakh in the west, and today
Azawakh from the Coppe's breeding are found in a
vast majority of western pedigrees: Firhoun,
Guerwane, Geurougeurou, Farah...to name only a
few.
If one adds the
three Coppe desert-bred imports, we can say that
the race in the west was created from thirteen
foundation specimens. Anyone with even the
slightest idea of modern genetics would have to
agree that, as a base for the creation of a
healthy breeding
population, this number was woefully
insufficient.
Were it not for the addition over the past
twenty years of desert-bred specimens imported
from their region of origin, breeding of Azawakh
could not have continued in good
conscience. The fact
remains that all Azawakh in the west are
intimately related, a fact perhaps not
immediately obvious to an the casual observer.
The generations have progressed, a few
out-crosses have been used, but look further
back in the pedigrees
and it is
obvious that all western-bred Azawakh share the
same ancestors. Again, without the the addition
of fresh desert-bred stock to western breeding
programs in the last two decades, breeding
forward would have been next to impossible.
To
say these
additions happened just in time would be an
understatement
The
impoverishment of the genetic base was further
exacerbated by the multiple-use of particularly
popular sires during the mid-nineties. These
Super Sires, extremely successful show dogs,
each of
an unique type and prepotent in the sense that
each stamped his descendants with his type,
changed the course of Azawakh breeding in the
west. Three prime examples are Kel Tarbanassen
Firhoun (sire of 12 litters), and the full
brothers Gefell and Greboun de Garde Epee who
each sired 10 litters. Simply note that these
males were either full brothers or closely
related (i.e. cousins), and that each year only
a few litters are born in the west, and one sees
the classic genetic bottleneck. Its consequence:
the loss of future genetic and phenotypic
variance.

Kel Tarbanassen Firhoun
This brief history of
Azawakh breeding should be evidence enough that
increased and continuous inclusion of
desert-bred specimens imported from their region
of origin is
absolutely essential. The genetic base must be
supplemented to guarantee the future of the
Azawakh race in the west.
Fortunately,
desert-bred specimens have been incorporated
into several western breeding programs since the
early nineties. Even in France,
the patron country of the Azawakh, several
kennels have used desert-bred specimens and
their offspring, though these efforts have been
met with resistance. Since the desert-bred
Azawakh are predominantly of a
different
type than the type
designed to win in western show rings, one
must see their addition to the gene pool as
an enrichment and assurance of the future:
there is no need for them to prove
themselves in competition against the modern
show dogs. But there are roadblocks. For
example in Germany it is forbidden to mate
two desert-breds together. Fortunately in
other countries there is no such restriction
and as an example of the positive results
possible from such matings I have provided
an image of Takama, bred by Corine Lundquist,
owner of the French Kennel Azawakh de Garde
Epee, daughter of the dog RAMSES and the
bitch TAIRA, both desert-bred specimens.

Tainoss , Import
Burkina Faso
A sampling
of some of the desert-bred specimens used
for breeding in the past two decades are:
DAZOL IN CHENAN, YARIS and BIYANOU
(imported by Ursula Arnold); AZABOR,
TAIKOUSSOU AK INTANGOUM, AMANAR, TAINOSS,
HATSHEPSUT, TAYTOK, AURAK INJAKOK, KELA,
SIKARA, TIGIDIT, AGAROUF, DJANGO, ANZA LAYLA,
TAUSSIT KEL DINNIK, TAMAHAN and TIRAOUT (all
imported by ABIS and used in various western
breeding programs); SALOME, AIKAR and AKCHI
(imported by Elisabeth Eiles and HansJürgen
Strassner), E'CHIPIE MENAKA and more
recently the aforementioned RAMSES and TAIRA
(used by Corine Lundqvist).
Of course
since the type cultivated in the west is in
many cases very far from its roots and
firmly established in the western
consciousness as the Azawakh, there has
been
controversy regarding the relative quality
of the recent imports. One must ask oneself
if the specimens bred in the west, without
the infusion
of fresh desert-bred stock, are perfect.
Here we come
to the point where it necessary to demystify
the romanticized creation legend of the
Azawakh: that the ten original specimens
imported to Europe were the last surviving
specimens of an incredibly noble race of
sighthounds bred by the incredibly
noble Blue Lords of the Desert, isolated in
time and history in some mysterious, deep
corner of the Azawakh Valley of Mali (the
race in the west is named for this valley);
essentially that only specimens descending
from these original ten were purebred. By
default all other dogs in the Sahel were
impure and not to be considered for
inclusion in any purist breeding program.
Fortunately fifteen annual expeditions to
the race's region of origin have debunked
this myth (though a few breeders still hold
out hope!). The empirical research,
evidenced by thousands of photos and film
footage taken over the last 15 years by ABIS
contradict the ridiculous if beautifully
colored legend. One hopes it has been safely
assigned its appropriate place within the
realm of myth.
No doubt
desert-bred specimens of noble type were
among the first imports, just as in the
present. But rustic racial representatives,
such as DARKOYE SIDI or later BABASCH, were
also present. It is highly likely that today
they would be considered inferior
to the majority of recently imported
desert-bred specimens. Nevertheless,
breeding forward from them has been both
rewarding and essential.

C´Babash,
Import Mali
If one needs further
proof of the quality of the recent
desert-bred imports, there is ample
evidence to be found in both the show ring
and performance venues. The desert-bred MALI
(a dog imported from Mali by Rudolf Caster
in 1982) was German Champion. YARIS (a
desert-bred dog imported from Niger in 1984
by Ursula and Arnold Reinhard) was German
Champion and Regional Winner NRW in 1986 and
1987. He ran successfully on the racetrack
and was awarded the German Performance
Certificate. In 1986 DAZOL IN CHENAN (a
desert-bred bitch imported from Mali, also
by the Arnolds) was German Champion, 1988
International Derby Winner, and in 1991 was
awarded the Short Distance Racing and
Performance Certificate . AKCHI (a bitch
imported from Mali in 1986 by Elisabeth
Eiles and Hans-Jürgen Strassner) was German
Champion. AIKAR ELKOR (a dog also imported
by Stassner and Eiles in 1987) was German
and Austrian Champion. In 1989 the imported
desert-bred bitch SALOME was German
Champion, VDH Champion and during her life
won numerous Regional Champion titles.
SALOME was the founding bitch of the Kennel
Kel Tin-Hinan, Germany.
From the 1993 ABIS
Expedition TAIKOUSSOU AG INTANGOUM (a
desert-bred bitch imported by Werner Roeder,
Azawakh of Silverdale, Germany, from the
well-known Sahelian breeder Ayad ag
Inachanan in Burkina
Faso), already a German Champion, was the
Veteran Class Winner in the 2003 Azawakh
Specialty. She won against stiff competition
against a large showing of 40 bitches in six
classes (6 x Puppy Class, 2 x Junior Class,
17 x Open Class, 6 x Working Class, 6 x
Champion Class, 3 x Veterans Class).
Furthermore she was a VDH Champion and
Regional Champion Bayern the 1995. TAYTOK, a
bitch imported from Mali by ABIS during the
2000 Expedition, was the first desert-bred
Azawakh to receive the title of Champion of
Beauty and Performance. She has produced
three litters for me.

Ch.Taikoussou ag Intangoum,
Import Burkina Faso
In 1995 the
desert-bred dog AZABOR, (another Azawakh
bred by Ayad ag Inachanan, Burkina Faso),
imported by ABIS, proved his outstanding
athleticism. From 12 races he finished first
9 times,
twice won the title Landesrennsieger
Berlin-Brandenburg and ran 480 meters in the
sensational time of 33.70 seconds. He sired
the C-litter of Christiane ThierRostaing,
Amaias Agg Azawakh, Germany. From the 1997
ABIS Expedition Alberto Rossi imported the
desert-bred dog TIGIDIT. Rossi named his
kennel after his beloved TIGIDIT, who in
addition to winning the European Coursing
Championships in 2002, sired three litters.

Taytok, Import Mali
Upon close inspection
one simply cannot fail to notice how,
breeding forward from even
the most rustic desert-bred specimens,
Azawakh of excellent type and athleticism
can be produced. It requires a rapid
generational turnover combined with a
breeder's talent and vision. It would be
beyond the scope of this article to list the
successes of the first and second generation
crosses to the desert-bred specimens, though
they deserve note.

Tigidit, Import Mali
In closing I
want to say that the continued use of
desert-bred Azawakh imported from their
region of origin is imperative to get our
race onto a better footing,
both as regards health and
type. The current FCI
Standard of the Azawakh, even if to expand the
allowable colors and markings, still fails to
provide sufficient breeding options. It should
be possible, despite differing opinions on the
genetic and phenotypic situation, for breeders
to co-exist, working side by side to breed for
the future of the race.
Breeding
for me means to think in generations, not just
the next
litter. And it is my hope that as more breeders
in the west become focused on the preservation
of the race, they will realize the long-term
benefits of using desert-bred stock in their
breeding programs. Such inclusion, if not
encouraged by the powers-that-be, should at
least not be blocked. Surely the Azawakh deserve
this chance.
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