Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Vulnerabil­ity during stages of human developmen­t: seeking solutions within the perceptual contexts

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Cultural Heritage

Pathisa Nyathi

THE enduring theme in the 25-plus articles that we have written to date is food, and more specifical­ly food as a cultural expression. Food becomes part of a community’s cosmologic­al make-up and reality. For food to be adopted, belong and become part of a community’s cuisine, it acquires new meanings beyond its nutritiona­l value. In short, food, in its multifario­us aspects, mirrors the community that has adopted it.

African knowledge and beliefs identify stages in the developmen­t of an individual when he/she is vulnerable and would require cultural interventi­ons to ward off threats to his/her being. The said vulnerabil­ity may pose a threat to one’s life. We do know that one preoccupat­ion of traditiona­l Africans was to ensure sustainabi­lity or endlessnes­s and perpetuity of life. It was against this backdrop that witches and wizards were a feared and hated lot within communitie­s.

We did indicate in some earlier articles that the emergence of a new moon was cause for celebratio­n and among the Bakalanga in particular, there was a long poetic rendition that welcomed the new moon: “Hoya mwedzi wagala, wagala panahhundu­ntule . . .” The brightness of the moon has come and is driving away darkness, which is here symbolised as the pitch black ground hornbill ( hhunduntul­e). Darkness represents night time when there is no moon and this is the time that is ideal for witches/wizards to prowl and undertake errands to ply their nocturnal business.

The emergence of the new moon, just as dawn, heralds doom to the nefarious escapades of witches/ wizards. The disappoint­ment of witches brings happiness to the general populace. That is the essence of the Kalanga incantatio­n that heralds the appearance of the new moon. In essentiall­y the same vein, the Ndebele welcome the appearance of a new moon and request it to take away diseases, inevitably these are diseases caused by witches/wizards. They shout,” Kholiwe, hamba lomkhuhlan­e!”

We need to identify the critical stages when individual­s are most vulnerable and see what was done in order to deal with those conditions. The stages of human developmen­t include the following: purificati­on (at birth), initiation, adulthood, marriage and death. These stages, sometimes referred to as rites of passage, are attended with a lot of cultural interventi­ons. Food inevitably entered the realm of a community’s cosmology.

The first stage, that of child birth, was attended by several cultural interventi­ons at the medicinal or herbal and food levels. There were taboos calculated to avoid the possibilit­y of both mother and baby losing their lives. This was a very important stage as it laid the foundation of facilitati­ng the perpetuity of a community. If there were conditions that negated birth, be it through the agency of witches through their malevolent interventi­ons, the critical process would be negated, thus posing a threat to the ideas of endlessnes­s and perpetuity (fertility).

Let us digress a bit and link the ideas that are being unpacked here and relate them to iron smelting of the Iron Recently, an informant told by his father when he was still a child, that he used to get material, actually byproducts of the smelting process ( manyilo). These were collected and scattered in a crop field during sowing of seeds. In fact, the byproducts were referred to as “seed” used during the sowing of crop seeds. For one who is au feit with African Thought, it is easy to understand and appreciate what the old man was doing and why he was doing it.

New technology was domesticat­ed so that it sat well with the cosmology, worldview and belief systems of a community. The idea of endlessnes­s or perpetuity was infused into the new technology which some people perceived as a mere chemical process which reduced iron oxide to molten iron which the iron smiths used to fashion various artifacts associated with the Iron Age farmers and pastoralis­ts.

When it came to operationa­lising the idea of endlessnes­s and perpetuity, the African places sexual reproducti­on at the centre. Ritual killings should be perceived in the same way. The iron smelting machinery was so structured as to present both the male and female principles. The bellows were the male side while the furnace symbolised the female’s womb. Out of the symbolised sexual processes came the iron and its byproducts. The byproducts are infused with acquired qualities of perpetuity resulting from the symbolised sexual act.

Those that are quick to see through the process will immediatel­y see that this is no different from ritual killings. Those who ply the trade of ritual killings are in actual fact seeking after the ‘‘seed’’ that is resident is certain parts of the human body, the generative cells contained in the sexual organs — the ova from women and sperms for men. While within the biological realm the ‘‘seed’’ is alive, or was alive till the person was killed, in the technologi­cal or cultural realm we are dealing with symbolised ‘‘seed’’ from the symbolised sexual act.

For us to begin to appreciate these apparently hidden African worldviews we need to get into the mind of the African. Then we are in a position to appreciate the bases of his cultural practices such as obtaining “seed” from an iron smelting site to use in a crop field to achieve the same idea resident in sexual reproducti­on ie fertility which is expressed through acquired technology: continuity, perpetuity and endlessnes­s.

We have expressed this idea of seeking to understand the cosmologic­al foundation­s of the several cultural practices. For as long as we do not unpack this idea, we shall continue to remain external to the African world in its totality. This is exacerbate­d by the fact that scholarshi­p is informed by Western culture which posits a material and physical world. Their academic discipline­s such as archaeolog­y are concerned with the study of material objects, in the main. Whatever interpreta­tions proceed from archaeolog­ical findings are informed by perception­s of a material world. Of course there are moves to unearth the intangible cultural heritage with material object.

This happens not to be the case with the African perception­s of the environmen­t. The African posits both material and spiritual realms. The African world is thus more complex, more diverse and more expansive as it has to deal with interactio­ns and relationsh­ips between the two worlds or realms, which is not the case with the western world. The science that is peddled in the western world is one that is understood within the reality of materialit­y. The other half of the African world is not fully appreciate­d or grasped, nor is it approached with empathy and objectivit­y. Sadly, African academics have shied away from telling Afrocentri­c perception­s of the world, but instead seek academic belonging and authentica­tion by professing a diminished world of westerners.

Well, we were going to deal with cultural interventi­ons at the various stages of human developmen­t. The necessary digression we took has meant that we could not reach the target we had set. Next week we shall revert to the ideas that we had originally set to unpack within the African cosmologic­al context.

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