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Dini Ya Msambwa

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Masaba cave shrine
Shrine of Elijah Masinde

'Dini ya Msambwa(Religion of the Ancestor) is anAfrican traditional religionthat has been labeled an anti-colonial religion.[1]It is practiced primarily among speakers of theLuhya languageof WesternKenya.[2]

History[edit]

Dini ya Msambwa stood againstcolonialismduring the British colonial rule of Kenya. Among other things, it criticized the undermining, by the British colonial government, of elder authority and of the cultural values that had held Kenyan peoples together for ages.

The first European to reach theBukusuwas Joseph Thomson, who upon arriving in 1883, found the Bukusu living in fortified villages surrounded by moats. These were a protection against raids from theUasin Gishu peopleand theTeso people.British administration was established in North Nyanza in 1894. The following year the Bukusu killed 25 soldiers of theSudanesegarrison and a punitive expedition was undertaken against them. Their fortified villages were stormed by Sudanese troops and Africans from other tribes, and the fighting ended when the Bukusu acknowledged British rule and promised to abandon their villages. Today they live in scattered homesteads.[3]

The old authority of the tribal elders had been undermined with the advent of colonial rule. It was the elders in turn who had lent power to the old tribal religion orAfrican traditional religionand hence it too was also undermined. Left in a spiritual vacuum, many Bukusu andLuhya,insecure in the rapidly-changing world, gravitated naturally intoChristianity.[3]Masinde, being an elder, refused to convert.

The religion was founded byElijah Masindein 1936. After Kenyan independence in 1968, Dini ya Msambwa was declared illegal and Masinde was arrested for fomenting hatred of the Christian religion.[4] Dini Ya Msambwa takes the form of an African traditional religion; its followers worshipping through ancestral Spirits (known asMsambwa) in shrines. The veneration of ancestors is an important part of the religion.

References[edit]

  1. ^Newsletter,Institute of Current World Affairs,August 1, 1954
  2. ^Kustenbauder, Matthew (2008)."Prophetic Movements: Eastern Africa".In Middleton, John; Miller, Joseph C. (eds.).New Encyclopedia of Africa(4th ed.). Thomson/Gale. pp. 261–270.ISBN978-0-684-31454-9.
  3. ^abReed, D. E. (1954). Dini ya Msambwa I: The Bukusu and The Suk. Institute of Current World Affairs, 1–18. Retrieved fromhttp://www.icwa.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/DER-20.pdf
  4. ^Bonsu, Nana Osei (2016)."African traditional religion: an examination of terminologies used for describing the indigenous faith of African people, using an Afrocentric paradigm"(PDF).Journal of Pan African Studies.9(9): 108–122.

External links[edit]