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NONTETHA [NKWENKWE] |
Nontetha is one of the remarkable figures to have emerged
directly from the conflict between modernity and tradition in South African
history. Emerging from the historical drama of the defeat of the Xhosa
nation by British imperialism, she founded the Church of the Prophetess
Nontetha immediately after the world influenza epidemic of 1918 as a means
of negotiating the imposed European modernity on terms which she thought
would be favourable to the interests of Africans. Her sphere of activity
was Christianity. She wished to Africanize Christianity in the hope of
transforming it into a historical bridge through which the African people
can make a transition from tradition into modernity. Being illiterate,
Nontetha sought to effect this transition in largely spiritual terms. In
seeking to effect this revolutionary transformation, Nontetha belongs to
an extraordinary lineage that stretches from Ntsikana through Mangane Maake
Mokone and James Dwane to Isaiah Shembe. Adjacent to this lineage, she
was a creator of another intellectual and political heritage, that of women
playing a leading and fundamental role in the construction of South African
modernity. In this, she was similar to her contemporary Charlotte Manye
Maxeke (1874-1939). It is unlikely that their historical paths ever crossed
each other in a conscious way. In her historical role, Nontetha was in
many ways New African, particularly in the way through her activity and
practice she attempted to negotiate a historical understanding between
Christianity and Ethiopianism. Since Nontetha belongs to the tradition
of Ntsikana, the first famous and known African (Xhosa) convert to Christianity
in the early part of the nineteenth-century, it is perhaps proper to try
to understand the beginning phases of this ideological hegemonic domination
which resulted in European history suppressing African history in South
Africa. This historical act of subversion seems to have been ‘necessary’
in order for the kind of modernity that eventuated in South Africa to occur.
In his book, Ntsikana: The Story of an African Convert (Lovedale
Press, 1914 [1904, a slightly different version]), capturing this particular
moment of European entrance into African history through the conversion
of Ntsikana, John Knox Bokwe writes: “Ntsikana one morning went, as usual,
to the kraal. The sun’s rays were just peeping over the eastern horizon,
and, as he was standing at the kraal gate, his eyes fixed with satisfied
admiration on his favourite ox, he thought he observed a ray, brighter
than ordinary, striking the side of his beast. As he watched the animal,
Ntsikana’s face betrayed excited feelings. He enquired of a lad standing
near by: ‘Do you observe the thing that I now see?’ The lad, turning his
eyes in the direction indicated, replied: ‘No, I see nothing there.’ Ntsikana,
recovering from the trance, uplifted himself from the ground, on which
he had meantime stretched himself, and said to the puzzled boy: ‘You are
right; the sight was not one to be seen by your eyes.’ . . . . In the afternoon
Ntsikana at last appears, stalking slowly from the company of lookers on
towards the dancing party. For some reason or other, he appears today not
to be quite in the humour for this dancing. One of his admirers nitices
this, and, by way of trying to put him right, shouts out a flattering address,
well known to, and greatly appreciated by Ntsikana:--‘Wesuka u-Nokonongo,
imaz egush’ ibele’ [There goes Nokonongo (nickname), cow that conceals
her udder, i.e., keeps back her milk, hinting at great reserve of power.]
He gives a start. Suddenly a violent gale arises. At first, no one heeds
it. It keeps on, however, till at last the dancers stop for a little, and
Ntsikana returns to his seat. Strange to say the wind suddenly subsides!
His neighbors resume the dance; and he too after a while gets up again.
But, immediately the gale rises once more! Again Ntsikana returns to his
seat, as crest-fallen as ever; and the wind ceases. A third time, he gets
up, and a third time this horrid gale arises as furiously as ever. The
interested and superstitious gazers exchange looks of astonishment at this
strange occurrence repeating itself each time the son of Gaba rises to
join the dance! Who has bewitched him? All at once, the vision of bright
rays which he saw in the morning shining gloriously on the side of his
favourite ox, Hulushe, is recalled to his remembrance, and without a single
word of explanation, or apology to any one, he orders his people to get
ready to return home! All of them, surprised, and whispering puzzled enquiries
as to the cause of so early a departure, obet the order and march home,
greatly vexed that their pleasure had been so abruptly brought to an end,
with no explanation hinted as to the reason why. As they neared home, they
came to a small river. Here Ntsikana threw aside his blanket, plunged himself
into the water and washed off all the red ochre that painted his body.
He then proceeded on his way, while his followers were yet more surprised
at this additional strangeness and eccentricity of behaviour. That night
all the inhabitants of Ntsikana’s kraal betook themselves to their huts
with not a little to comment upon. This introduced the precedent of washing
off the red-clay when any one professes conversion, or of becoming what
is sometimes spoken of as a School-Kafir, because he has discarded red
ochre for civilized clothing.” The two gestures of threwing off the blanket
and wading in the water to wash off the red ochre painted on the body became
a symbolic representation of the African people’s entrance into modernity
in the form Christianity. Once inside modernity, the New Africans discovered
and realized that it was not only constituted by Western civilization and
education, but also by repression, genocide, racism, colonialism and repression.
On realizing the negative side of Christian modernity, some of the New
Africans who came on the historical scene about three generations after
Ntsikane such as Mangane Maake Mokone, James Dwane and others forged a
particularized ‘African’ form of Christianity known as Ethiopianism. Ethiopianism
was an attempt to construct African modernities in replacement of European
modernities. It is to this religious and cultural tradition that Nontetha
and her Church of the Prophetess Nontetha belong. The emergence of Ethiopianism
caused an upheaval within the New African Movement because some of the
powerful members of the New African intelligentsia were opposed to it:
for instance John Langalibalele Dube through his newspaper Ilanga lase
Natal, John Tengo Jabavu through his newspaper Imvo Zabantsundu,
and Walter Rubusana, Allan Kirkland Soga, Nathaniel Cyril Umhalla through
their newspaper Izwi Labantu. It was practically left to the Ghanian
(New African) in the Cape Town, F. Z. S. Peregrino, through his newspaper
South African Spectator, to defend Ethiopianism as a form of Pan-Africanism.
But the most spectacular defense of Ethiopianism was undertaken by (His
Highness Prince) Bandele Omoniyi while completing his University studies
in Britain. He writes the following in his book, A Defense of the
Ethiopian Movement (Edinburgh, 1908): “The Ethiopian Movement is
the result of the unsatisfactory work of the missionaries. Christianity
we claim to be the vanguard of civilisation, and its true object we believe
is to renovate, to purify and also to perfect the whole man by liberating
his intellect, elevating his standard of duty, and developing to the full
all his powers. Unfortunately for the natives their spiritual leaders deny
the equality of men, and maintain ‘the dignity of labour’ in no better
way than the British capitalists, which is something tantamount to slavery.
Now and again they talk of ‘the blessings of civilisation,’ which is nothing
short of the demoralisation of the natives by gin, oppression and disease.
In the case of the natives it is a vice to be exacting and austere, but
a merit in the case of the white men. They have appealed to the Eternal
Power to assist them to crush the natives---even those natives who are
thankful to, and praise, God for the Gospel message brought them through
the Europeans. The natives think that if it is the bounden duty of the
English people to preach the Gospel to them, it is also theirs to preach
it to their own people; that there is no monopoly of God’s grace, to be
good and acceptable, and the Bible is a universal book and God is a universal
God, that no church, no creed, no particular tenets are His sole medium
of communication with mankind.” In defense of the Bambata Rebellion of
1906, Bandele Omoniyi, writes further: “I hold that in resorting to active
resistance against oppression, when that hope was finally withdrawn, they
might plead human sympathies, broad, deep and legitimate, and that they
committed no moral offence.” It is in the context of these complex web
of historical interrelationships that Nontetha should be situate. The indomitability
of her spirit is explained by a self-awareness of belonging to a great
and resilient tradition. Her spirit and determination were broken even
when she was imprisoned in psychiatric hospitals for approximately two
decades. In a recent critical study of Nontetha, Robert R. Edgar and Hilary
Sapire make these observations: “Nontetha was a minor religious figure
who probably would not have come to our attention but for her collision
with the state. She operated within a limited area, she attracted a relatively
small following, and she never defined her mission in grandiose terms.
. . . Because the story of Nontetha reflects just such a local perspective,
it provides insights into the incremental ways that religious cultures
evolve and illuminates how Africans in the eastern Cape engaged with Christianity.
. . . As the figure at the center of a prophetic movement, Nontetha takes
place among an impressive circle of African women who took active leadership
roles in their churches and communities, rural homesteads, locations, or
urban townships immediately after the First World War. . . . Although Nontetha
and her followers did not define their movement in overt political terms,
many of their ideas and the issues they raised overlapped with those of
nationalist and trade union movements, in nearby East London. As noted
above, they all could and did draw from a common pool of traditions, experiences,
ideas, and images---for example, Ntsikana and his prophecies, the appeals
to chiefs to play a constructive and unifying role in mobilizing Africans,
and the expectations of Garveyite liberators” (African Apocalypse: The
Story of Nontetha Nkwenkwe, A Twentieth-Century South African Prophet,
Ohio University Press, 2000). Nontetha became an item of international
news more than sixty years after her death, two years before the end of
the twentieth-century, when the New York Times reported on the successful
effort of Robert R. Edgar and Hilary Sapire in locating her unmarked grave
near Pretoria and removing her remains to near East London where she was
reburied in accordance with the wishes of the members of the Church of
Prophetess Nontetha: “The story of how Robert Edgar, a 50-year-old professor
of African history at Howard, the historically black university in Washington,
came to uncover the bones of a long-dead religious figure here is a triumphant
tale of American-South African cooperation. And her village’s quest to
get the new Government to release her body after the old Government had
refused for six decades to part with it is a parable of change in South
Africa, where black historical figures are finally getting the monuments
that English and Afrikaner conquerors had long reserved for themselves.”
Although Nontetha may have been a minor figure, she symbolizes a grand
historical vision.
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