On May 23 during the launch of Ndabila, one of our senior Alchemists Mulenga Kapwepwe took us on an enlightening tour of our past and showed what a rich history of female leadership we possess as a country.
Below is part of her presentation. Be inspired!
In modern times, we tend to forget the contribution of women
to our rich heritage and history. In
Zambia, women have a long history of practical participation in public affairs,
and women have been closely associated with the exercise of power for
centuries. The women whose histories I am going to present are for me exciting
examples of our own traditional concepts of gender, and our long held respect
for female leadership and participation in politics, business, warfare,
diplomacy and peace building. To do this, I will take you back in time, and
take you from province to province.
1.
Lunda,
NorthWestern - 17th Century
Lueji wa Nkonde ruled the Lunda federation of Tubungo in the 1650’s. Lueji’s reign resulted in the migration of
various groups who became the Lunda, Luchazi, Luwena, Luvale and Chokwe. The
migrating groups settled in the North-Western Province of Zambia, and adjacent
areas in The Democratic Republic of Congo, Namibia ,
and Angola .
2. The Lungu- Azao or Sao, Northern Province - 17th Century
The Lungu people came down the
lake in canoes from the eastern side of Lake Tanganyika
at the end of the 17th century. They put to shore on the south end
of the lake. This group was of the Azamba clan, and their leader was Mwenya Mukulu, a woman, who also became
their chieftainess. She divided this area amongst her sisters, and one of her
sisters became the chief and leader of the Tabwa, who they found there.
3.
The Shila, Luapula Province – 19th Century
Na Chituti was a royal woman who
brokered peace between the Lunda of Mwata Kazembe and the Shila. Because of her
foresight and acute diplomatic skills, she saved her people from certain war,
defeat and serfdom.
4. Toka-Leya,
Southern Province- 18th Century
Be-Dyango was a ruler in her own
right until her people were conquered by the Leya, migrants from the Luba Lunda
Kingdom. She brokered an understanding with the invading Chief Mukuni and
became the co-ruler of the Toka-Leya people.
Her skillful handling of the invaders left her with many rights and
powers and ensured that the important aspects of her people’s rights were not
lost. Today as then, a woman who holds this now hereditary title co-rules the
area around Livingstone with Chief Mukuni.
5. The Lozi/Luyi, Western Province
-19th Century
Since
then, women royals have kept the number two spot position, that of the
Litunga-La-Mboela-ship. They have also
held the third position in the hierarchy of Barotse rulers, which is that of
the Mboanjikan-ship. These
powerful chieftaincies are retained by women, who also have great judicial
powers and functions.
Litunga-La-Mboela-ship:
there have been at least seventeen persons on the throne of Litunga-Ia-Mboela,
the second one and the last eight of them have been female.Mboanjikana: The royal stool of Mboanjikana, based at Libonda in the Kalabo area, has been continuously occupied by a female. Among Mbuywamwambwa‘s daughters was Mboanjikana, who became the first Ruler Mboanjikana, which has always been held by a female ruler.
The Great Mukwae of Nalolo, a
woman of remarkable talents and strength of character, and a sister to Lubasi,
a royal son who became Lewanika. She was instrumental in helping him reorganize
himself and regain his throne after rebels stormed the palace and forced him to
flee. The Mukwae of Nalolo besides
governing her own province, maintained a dignity second only to the Litunga,
and played an active part in the affairs of the nation at large. She filed in a
complaint against the Portuguese to the Italians, that they were encroaching on
her land and was instrumental in negotiating the 38th latitude
parallel which forms our current border with Namibia and Angola.
6. Soli- 19th Century
In 1889, Mukandamamba was the only leader, a chietainess who was acknowledged
by all branches of the Soli. The Shamba a subgroup of the Soli trace the
beginning of the Nkhomeshya chieftaincy to Shamba a slave woman who married a
chief, and became the grandmother to Chief Nkhomeshya.
7.
The Lunda,
Luapula Province-19th Century
Queen Kafuti, Nakafwaya, the woman who married four paternal
brothers of the Lunda Kazembe dynasty, Chinyanta Munona, Sunkutu, Chokonkole
and Lukwesa Mpanga. She is regarded as the greatest Mwadi (Mwata’s wife) of the
Lunda. She played a leading role in the preservation of the Lunda nation during
the times of internal power struggles and the Arab invasions. Queen Kafuti,
Nakafwaya, was a very beautiful woman. When Kabwebwe presented her at court, to
his older brother Chinyanta Munona who was then King, Chinyanta Munona
convinced Kafuti to marry him instead. When Chinyanta Munona died and Sunkutu usurped
the throne, he married her. When Chokonkole took over as Kazembe, he married
her and when Lukwesa Mpanga finally became Kazembe, he also married her. She is
the only Mwadi who is buried in the burial ground of the King’s children and has
her own Nkumbu, or praise poem.
8. Lala, Lamba, Swaka and Seba, Copperbelt Province- 19th Century
These tribes are the descendants of five famous sisters: Mushili,
Ngosa Mupeta, Nampongela or Musonda,
Mwewa Mwiba, and Nkhana. These five
famous sisters established the Nkhana and Mushili Chieftaincy. Among the Lamba
today it is still the women who choose the next Chief to succeed.
9. The Sala, Lusaka Province – 19th Century
Loongo became
Chieftainess of the Sala after the Ngoni invasion. Her prowess made her all
powerful, and though she was unable to repel the Makololo when they invaded, on
evidence of her powers and abilities, they released her and her sons from
captivity. She went back to her country and reorganised the people again. The
Makololo and the Lozi respected her so much that even though she was a
conquered queen, they never made her pay tribute like other conquered chiefs. Loongo created an all woman army and carried
a spear herself. She was also a seer and a prophet.
10. The Lamba, Copperbelt Province- 18th
Century
Kabunda Shimanjemanje brought agricultural knowledge and
seeds to Lamba country and thereby helped her brother to establish himself as
the first Chief of the Lamba.
11. Ntemba of the Chewa-19th Century
Sometime between the year 1885
and 1888, Ntemba, a Chewa woman of strong and vital character was eventually
driven to become her brother’s political opponent in order to counter
misgovernment with equity and the rule of law. She entered into an agreement
with Kambwili a trader from Chief Kopa of the Bisa who supplied her with guns
and a large number of mercenaries to overthrow her brother’s government in
exchange for trade opportunities and land ownership. For a long time, Ntemba held the Bisa-Chewa
alliance together, making it work for the mutual benefit of the people. When Ntemba died her daughter Chidote, ruled
and continued honoring the Bisa-Chewa alliance.
12. Amongst
the Bemba, women have sat on the highest council and ruled their own districts.
The Chanda mukulu, Mukukamfumu, and Ngoshe. In fact at a time under Chitimukulu
Chitapankwa, Ichinga province was ruled by a woman governor, NaMusenge, who was
extremely wealthy as she was a very astute business woman. Another chieftainess
in the area of Lubemba is Sekwila and she ruled alongside NaMusenge. Kangwa Chonya was a powerful Chandamukulu who
was the first woman to use the Western judicial system to stop another royal
son, Ponde, from becoming Chitimukulu.
13. Waitwika
-NaMwanga-Musyani was a Bisa who travelled up north and found himself among the
Namwanga, he was a very skilled craftsman and soon took leadership of the
people. Musyani had three children, Muchinga, Mwemba and Waitwika. He gave them
land to rule, and Waitwika became a chietainess on the Zambian side.
14. The
last Batwa (of the Lukanga Swamps) chieftainess before the Europeans came into
the country was Muyanje.
15. The
first Unga chief Mwewa Mfumu was succeeded by Mwape wa Masenga. She was
succeeded by her daughter, Kalumbi who ruled the area called Kaleya at Itili.
Kalumbi was the third Unga chief after the migration of the Unga from Luba
kingdom. Kalumbi was succeeded by
Pongaponga.
16. Na
Bwalya was a woman of considerable character and the type that commanded respect.
In her district, she was recognized as chief, and was upheld as such in the
person of her heirs. Na Bwalya died 13 May, 1914 and was succeeded by her
granddaughter who died in August 1916.
17. The Tonga,
Southern Province-19th Century
Nampeyo is a neighbourhood in Monze district in the Southern
Province of Zambia. Ten miles east of the town of Monze, one crosses its
western boundary. Its eastern boundary lies within the hills of the escarpment,
facing the Gwembe Valley. This is the seat of the Chona Chieftaincy. The Chona
chieftaincy descends from Naciteba who died in Nampeyo sometime in 1889.
Naciteba bore a daughter, Nangoma, who was born around 1840, and was her oldest
child. Nangoma grew up into a woman who inspired confidence and she was known
for her good sense and counsel. Nangoma came to be regarded as a leader of her
people.
The prestige of a leader is sometimes vested primarily upon
the power with which she is invested by the people. This was the case for
Namonga. In time, all the land depended on her powers for their wealth and
security; even the plants and animals were linked to her for their growth and
fertility. Thus Nangoma’s authority was not supported by any military
organization, but relied essentially on her wisdom, good sense and counsel.
Nangoma is particularly outstanding in her contribution in the area of health,
food security and agriculture.
Nangoma regulated the celebrations of the Lwiindi and
rituals of agriculture for all Nampeyo, telling people when they should start
each phase of agricultural work, thereby overseeing all aspects of food
security for the people.
In 1893, a small pox epidemic broke out and Nangoma saved
many lives, treating them with her own traditional medicine, and allowing those
who wanted to go to the doctor at the nearby clinic to do so. Unlike in the
other villages, only two people died of small pox at Nampeyo.
In 1919, an influenza epidemic broke out and Nangoma worked
tirelessly and saved a number of lives, although many people died.
Nangoma also knew how to treat and protect cattle from
various illnesses. When she heard of illness in the country she would go and
dig for medicines, crush and place the medicine in a big wooden trough and
which was then filled with water. She would then instruct the people to herd
the cattle in the hills until they were very thirsty. This made certain that
when they were brought back to the village they would go to the trough and
drink very deeply. Thus the people’s cattle were protected by her medicine. Nangoma
produced two heirs to the Chona chieftaincy. She died in 1925.
18. The Ambo,
Northern Province -19th Century
Ambo migration to the current
geographical location took place in the early 1800’s. They arrived from the
Luapula and settled in an area that spread from the east of the middle and
lower Lukusashi, the Muchinga mountains and extended to the Luangwa
valley. To the west lay the escarpment of the Lala plateau, from where many of
the permanent rivers flowed into the Lukusashi.
Mwape was undoubtedly the most a
remarkable woman of her epoch. While the outlook of the other Ambo chiefs were
merely parochial, Mwape’s was imperial. With her ascension to the throne, she
extended her authority acquiring a kingdom twice as large as any Ambo chief had
hitherto aspired to. Fortune favoured her throughout her reign and delivered
her safe from the most desperate situations.
The first daring act of power perpetrated by Mwape was the
assassination of Mushalila. Mwape invited him for a beer and then decapitated
him. Mushalila was a political opponent that she wanted out of her way.
Mushalila’s brother Chitopa at once attacked Mwape’s village at Munyangwa. By evening of that first day, Mwape’s powder
was exhausted and she only had a few guns, she decided to escape by night.
After some time, her people in Ambo country heard of her whereabouts and sent a
party of men to bring her back safely to Ambo country.
Once back in her own country, the incorrigible love of
battle revived in Mwape. Within a year, she had gathered an army and waged war
against Mutumpa, a Lala Chief who ruled on the Manda stream, defeated and
killed him. Not long after, Mwape came into conflict with two other Ambo
chiefs, Chikwashya and Mteme. Mwape’s forces were not as well armed as Mteme
and Chikwashya’s forces, whose advantage was bolstered by a large number of
guns and a healthy supply of gunpowder.
Then before the war was formally declared, two fortunate
incidences played themselves out in Mwape’s favour. The day previous to the
siege, a Portuguese hawker arrived in the area bartering gun powder for slaves.
Mwape commandeered the entire consignment of powder and sent the trader
packing. Shortly after, Mwape played another successful stroke; Chikwashya had
been trading with the Portuguese and had accumulated a large number of guns and
deposited them with his brother Mulonda at Kachunda’s village. Mwape made a
surprise attack on this village and captured Chikwashya’s entire armory. The
extra guns and gun powder now placed her in a strong position. The war was on.
With the help of another chief, Chikwashya surrounded Mwape
at her stockade in at Chilumba. The
engagement lasted two days and two nights. By the third day, Mwape’s forces
were reduced to a point of surrender. Mwape sent to Luwembe for help, and a man
from her stockde stole away at night and mastered help from Ntimba, whose
forces were soon seen approaching over the hills. The Chikwashya and his
allies, convinced Mwape was about to steal another victory, stole away to the
north to Mlembo after a brief exchange of fire. After this victory, Mwape moved
to Chisenga, where she reigned as chief over all the Ambo. Mwape was still
ruling over this area in 1888, when the German explorer and prospector Carl
Wiese met her. Mwape II lived until 1910, and is buried on the Chiwambila
stream.
When the African Lakes Company were exploring and signing
charters with different chiefs, they were strongly advised to avoid Mwape’s
country, as she was known for her aggressive and fearless stand. Notes on Mwape of the Ambo by J.E.Stephenson:
1900-We crossed to Lwangwa and got to Mwape. She was a remarkable woman, being
one of the only two polyandrists I have heard in these parts. She put no
obstacles in our way, but showed us the worst pass up the Muchinga Escarpment
to make our journey. The villages were deserted and one was stockaded and thus
we could not get much help.
All the women I
have talked about made a big difference to where we live and who we are today. Our
history, our ethnic composition, and indeed our borders would not have been
what they are without these women.
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