Wednesday, November 13, 2019
swazi :: essays papers
swazi  	  The Swazi of Swaziland     Introduction    Swaziââ¬â¢s are said to belong to the Nguni people who lived in central Africa and migrated to southern Africa. They speak the Siswati  language , a language earlier spoken by the Nguni group of the  Bantu family. They seem to have settle in Swaziland around five hundred years ago. They  were then ruled by the  British from the mid 19th century to mid  20th century. Swaziland is a monarchy and is ruled by King Mswati III.   	  Social Organization    The social organization in the Swaziââ¬â¢s is like any other African tribe. The homestead is  the economic and  domestic unit of the family. It is headed by the Umnumza or headman who is in charge of  the  family which includes his wives and  children. Sons  will bring there wives to the homestead and setup home within it while the daughters move to their in-laws. The occupants who reside in the homestead can also be  distant  relatives or  non  dependents.  Therefore the  number of people for whom the headman is responsible economically ,legally and by ritual may vary according his status and wealth. A wealthy headman may have many  wives therefore he has a large number of people he is responsible  for. The headman  usually would subdivide the  large homestead in order to gain access to larger tracts of cultivable land or  divide quarrelsome wives .    The homestead is planned according to the relationships between its inhabitants .   Usually in the center of the  homestead is the cattle pen and  grain  storage units, which are underground flask shaped pits. Women are not allowed access to theses places. The living quarters are grouped in a semicircle with the indlunkuku ( great hut) which  is  home to the most important woman in the homestead , the mother of the headman. If she  is dead  then a substitute mother is appointed. On the sides are the quarters of the wives ,each   with  her own  sleeping ,cooking and storage huts and enclosed with a reed fence for protection against `wind . The ranking of wives is not  rigid but it depends on the headman  and his preference  of wives. the clear demarkation of the wives huts and the fact that each of them own  their own garden land  and cattle  does not erase the fact that  the headmanââ¬â¢s motherââ¬â¢s  house is supreme.  					    
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