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Father of Crows is the type of husband who neglects
his wives so that his second wife, Mother, of Pumpkins,
receives the (symbolic) seeds of her children from a pair
of sympathetic turtle doves, a common species in South Africa.
They are, no doubt, ancestral spirits in disguise. In Africa,
it is ever so often the ancestors who must act to rectify
the behavior of their children, who otherwise would remain
childless. This is the worst possible disaster for any family
in Africa—for if a woman is barren, who will look after
her late in life?
Mother of
Pumpkins
Once upon a time, there was a woman whose name was
Manyope, which means that she was childless. She was the
second wife on a chief whose first wife did have children,
but (oh, horror!) her children were all big black crows.
They would perch nastily on Manyope’s hut and cruelly soil
it, shouting, “hwa! hwa!” as they did so.
The chief used to lament his misfortune:
“Look at this lovely land!
Will it be ruled by crows?
Will birds inherit it?|
Who then will till the soil?
The people in the other villages sometimes referred
to him as Father of Crows.
Manyope was also unhappy, for there is nothing more
heartbreaking for a woman in Africa than to have no children.
Every morning she would go out to her fields to dig vegetable
gardens and plant mealies (maize). One day, when she was
tired, she sat down and cried: “Why should I work all day?
I have no children to grow vegetables for, none to cook
mealies for.”
Suddenly, two turtledoves cooed in a tree above her:
“Vukutu, vukutu …why are you crying?”
Surprised, she answered, “I have no child!”
The birds asked, “What will you bring us if we give
you a child?”
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