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Kuomboka: The Ritual Voyage of the Lozi Paramount
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16284 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
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3 / 1989 |
5,539 Words |
| Author
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Joseph O. Vogel and Jean E. Vogel Joseph O. Vogel is professor of anthropology at the University
of Alabama; from 1965 to 1975 he was Keeper of Prehistory of
the National Museums of Zambia. Jean E. Vogel is a free-lance
author, painter, and commercial artist. During their ten-year
residence in central Africa, the Vogels traveled widely to
conduct archaeological and ethnological research. Their
article "Kuomboka: The Ritual Voyage of the Lozi Paramount"
appeared in the March 1989 issue of THE WORLD & I. |
The decade of the 1960s was a tumultuous period of political and social change throughout south central Africa. Malawi, Zambia, and Botswana were newly independent, aspiring states with black nationalist governments, surrounded to the east, west, and south by other countries still in revolutionary ferment. In those independent states for the first time in his century, black Africans were responsible for their own national affairs and occupied the positions of heads of state.
However, many older traditional leaders, who had occupied special places under the colonial regimes, felt threatened by the idea of nationhood and the new centralization of power. The period was marked by considerable tension between tribal politics and the political concerns of the emergent national governments. Sometimes, as in Uganda, Burundi, and Nigeria, this tension erupted into violent suppression of traditional authority or into civil strife. But elsewhere, it was dissipated to other more subtle ways. In Zambia, the kuomboka--the annual ceremonial voyage of the Lozi Litunga (paramount or king) across the flooding Zambezi Valley to his dry land capital--was notable in 1969 for bringing these tensions into focus. It was, in retrospect, a unique and pivotal historic event.
The first years of Zambian independence had passed. The fabulous copper-covered dome of the parliament building in Lusaka still gleamed untarnished in the sun, but unbridled optimism had given way to more sobering considerations of international politics and economics. A plunge in copper prices on the foreign markets had left Zambia's economy on shaky ground. The British blockage against Rhodesia had interrupted the supply of food, gasoline, mining machinery, and other necessities
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