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Traditions of Lesotho: Kingdom in the African Sky
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14398 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1988 |
3,995 Words |
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Karinjo Nelson DeVore Karinjo Nelson DeVore is a free-lance journalist. She spent
ten years (1970-1980) in Lesotho, working in various cultural
and educational programs. |
A chilling voice resonated from a rugged peak, arousing countless echoes in a ravine below, through a veil of cool morning mist and dung smoke, the billowing silhouette of a blanketed seboholi (village crier) appears on the ridge ahead. He has received a distant message: "strangers are approaching!" With a deep, drawn-out bellow, this seboholi relays the news to an unseen village beyond.
This is the kingdom of Lesotho, sequestered high on the roof of Africa, where one person is a Masotho, collectively they are the Basotho, and they all speak Sesotho. Today, the Basotho form a homogeneous nation with allegiance to their paramount chief, King Moshoesoe II. They have a fascinating fusion of oral traditions, with the seboholi being only one of myriad performers.
The Basotho are a marvelous hybrid blend of Bantu peoples. In the early 1800s, clans from various tribes were gathered together by a minor Sotho chief, Moshoesoe I, and led to the mountain fortress that became Lesotho. The chief offered protection from warring Zulus and, later, aggressive Boers. Through his statesmanship and diplomacy, his group became strong and prosperous. Anyone wishing to live peacefully, even cannibals willing to reform, were welcomed to this land.
Moshoesoe I had heard stories of the great powers possessed by white settlers. Acting upon intuition, he invited French missionaries to Lesotho, who eagerly made the great trek from the Cape. Not only were they effective advisers and teachers, but the missionaries also helped to secure horses and guns. With their counsel, Lesotho appealed to the British for help in regaining territories lost to the Boers. The Basotho
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