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Zambia’s misplaced language invented by girls however nearly killed by colonialism

Women’s History Museum Zambia Samba Yonga from Women's History Museum of Zambia holds up a frame over her face showing a photograph of a sacred mask with Sona symbols etched on to its surface, each telling stories of women's significance, wisdom, and the vital knowledge they carried.Ladies’s Historical past Museum Zambia

This sacred masks is etched with symbols of Sona, a classy and now not often used writing system

A wood hunters’ toolbox inscribed with an historic writing system from Zambia has been making waves on social media.

“We have grown up being informed that Africans did not know learn how to learn and write,” says Samba Yonga, one of many founders of the digital Ladies’s Historical past Museum of Zambia.

“However we had our personal approach of writing and transmitting information that has been utterly side-lined and neglected,” she tells the BBC.

It was one of many artefacts that launched a web based marketing campaign to focus on girls’s roles in pre-colonial communities – and revive cultural heritages nearly erased by colonialism.

One other intriguing object is an intricately adorned leather-based cloak not seen in Zambia for greater than 100 years.

“The artefacts signify a historical past that issues – and a historical past that’s largely unknown,” says Yonga.

“Our relationship with our cultural heritage has been disrupted and obscured by the colonial expertise.

“It is also surprising simply how a lot the function of ladies has been intentionally eliminated.”

Women’s History Museum Zambia Samba Yonga from Women's History Museum of Zambia holds up a frame showing a photo of a wooden hunters' toolbox inscribed with an ancient writing system. She has long braids, pink eyeshadow, red nail varnish on her nails and is wearing yellow, orange, black and blue African print dress. She is pictured against a purple and black African print design backdrop.Ladies’s Historical past Museum Zambia

Samba Yonga holding the wood hunters’ toolbox in one of many fantastically photographed pictures posted on social media for the Body venture

However, says Yonga, “there is a resurgence, a necessity and a starvation to attach with our cultural heritage – and reclaim who we’re, whether or not via trend, music or tutorial research”.

“We had our personal language of affection, of magnificence,” she says. “We had ways in which we took care of our well being and the environment. We had prosperity, union, respect, mind.”

A complete of fifty objects have been posted on social media – alongside details about their significance and goal that reveals that girls had been usually on the coronary heart of a society’s perception programs and understanding of the pure world.

The pictures of the objects are introduced inside a body – taking part in on the concept that a encompass can affect the way you take a look at and understand an image. In the identical approach that British colonialism distorted Zambian histories – via the systematic silencing and destruction of native knowledge and practices.

The Body venture is utilizing social media to push again in opposition to the still-common concept that African societies didn’t have their very own information programs.

The objects had been principally collected in the course of the colonial period and saved in storage in museums everywhere in the world, together with Sweden – the place the journey for this present social media venture started in 2019.

Yonga was visiting the capital, Stockholm, and a pal advised that she meet Michael Barrett, one of many curators of the Nationwide Museums of World Cultures in Sweden.

She did – and when he requested her what nation she was from, Yonga was stunned to listen to him say that the museum had a variety of Zambian artefacts.

“It actually blew my thoughts, so I requested: ‘How come a rustic that didn’t have a colonial previous in Zambia had so many artefacts from Zambia in its assortment?'”

Within the nineteenth and early twentieth Centuries Swedish explorers, ethnographers and botanists would pay to journey on British ships to Cape City after which make their approach inland by rail and foot.

There are near 650 Zambian cultural objects within the museum, collected over the course of a century – in addition to about 300 historic pictures.

Women’s History Museum Zambia Mulenga Kapwepwe, from Women's History Museum of Zambia wearing a green, purple and yellow African print headwrap, cream long-sleeved shirt and blue latex gloves, bends over at a Swedish museum to examine the intricate patterns of Batwe cloaks.Ladies’s Historical past Museum Zambia

Mulenga Kapwepwe seems to be at one among 20 pristine leather-based cloaks within the Swedish archive collected throughout an expedition between 1911 and 1912

When Yonga and her digital museum co-founder Mulenga Kapwepwe explored the archives, they had been astonished to search out the Swedish collectors had travelled far and broad – among the artefacts come from areas of Zambia which can be nonetheless distant and laborious to succeed in.

The gathering consists of reed fishing baskets, ceremonial masks, pots, a waist belt of cowry shells – and 20 leather-based cloaks in pristine situation collected throughout a 1911-1912 expedition.

They’re comprised of the pores and skin of a lechwe antelope by the Batwa males and worn by the ladies or utilized by the ladies to guard their infants from the weather.

On the fur exterior are “geometric patterns, meticulously, delicately and fantastically designed”, Yonga says.

There are photos of the ladies carrying the cloaks, and a 300-page pocket book written by the one that introduced the cloaks to Sweden – ethnographer Eric Van Rosen.

He additionally drew illustrations exhibiting how the cloaks had been designed and took pictures of ladies carrying the cloaks in several methods.

“He took nice pains to indicate the cloak being designed, all of the angles and the instruments that had been used, and [the] geography and placement of the area the place it got here from.”

The Swedish museum had not accomplished any analysis on the cloaks – and the Nationwide Museums Board of Zambia was not even conscious they existed.

So Yonga and Kapwepwe went to search out out extra from the group within the Bengweulu area in north-east of the nation the place the cloaks got here from.

“There is no reminiscence of it,” says Yonga. “Everyone who held that information of making that exact textile – that leather-based cloak – or understood that historical past was now not there.

“So it solely existed on this frozen time, on this Swedish museum.”

Women’s History Museum Zambia Samba Yonga, wearing a beige linen top hemmed with gold-coloured trim, holds up a frame showing an archive photo from the Swedish collection of three women in a field in what is modern-day Zambia, with their backs to the camera, wearing leather cloaks - two children are under the cloaks of two of the women. Ladies’s Historical past Museum Zambia

The Swedish assortment consists of 300 historic pictures, together with this one among girls carrying leather-based cloaks

One in every of Yonga’s private favourites within the Body venture is Sona or Tusona, an historic, refined and now not often used writing system.

It comes from the Chokwe, Luchazi and Luvale folks, who stay within the borderlands of Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Yonga’s personal north-western area of Zambia.

Geometric patterns had been made within the sand, on material and on folks’s our bodies. Or carved into furnishings, wood masks used within the Makishi ancestral masquerade – and a wood field used to retailer instruments when folks had been out searching.

The patterns and symbols carry mathematical rules, references to the cosmos, messages about nature and the surroundings – in addition to directions on group life.

The unique custodians and academics of Sona had been girls – and there are nonetheless group elders alive who bear in mind the way it works.

They’re an enormous supply of data for Yonga’s ongoing corroboration of analysis accomplished on Sona by students like Marcus Matthe and Paulus Gerdes.

“Sona’s been one of the vital fashionable social media posts – with folks expressing shock and big pleasure, exclaiming: ‘Like, what, what? How is that this attainable?'”

The Queens in Code: Symbols of Ladies’s Energy submit features a {photograph} of a girl from the Tonga group in southern Zambia.

She has her palms on a mealie grinder, a stone used to grind grain.

National Museums of World Cultures An archive photo showing a kneeling pregnant Tonga woman leaning on a mealie grinder and looking down at a young child standing by her side with their hand on her waist. They are both smiling, pictured in front of a wood and mud structure.Nationwide Museums of World Cultures

This archive picture reveals a grinding stone utilized by Tonga girls that might go on to used as a headstone

Researchers from the Ladies’s Historical past Museum of Zambia found throughout a area journey that the grinding stone was greater than only a kitchen device.

It belonged solely to the lady who used it – it was not handed all the way down to her daughters. As an alternative, it was positioned on her grave as a tombstone out of respect for the contribution the lady had made to the group’s meals safety.

“What may seem like only a grinding stone is the truth is an emblem of ladies’s energy,” Yonga says.

The Ladies’s Historical past Museum of Zambia was arrange in 2016 to doc and archive girls’s histories and indigenous information.

It’s conducting analysis in communities and creating a web based archive of things which were taken out of Zambia.

“We’re attempting to place collectively a jigsaw with out even having all of the items but – we’re on a treasure hunt.”

A treasure hunt that has modified Yonga’s life – in a approach that she hopes the Body social media venture will even do for different folks.

“Having a way of my group and understanding the context of who I’m traditionally, politically, socially, emotionally – that has modified the best way I work together on the planet.”

Penny Dale is a contract journalist, podcast and documentary-maker based mostly in London

Extra BBC tales on Zambia:

Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Photographs/BBC

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