Posts Tagged ‘African Proverb’

Anansi and Nyamé By Laura Ann Phillips

Anansi and Nyamé By Laura Ann Phillips

http://www.fairiesworld.com/pixs/anansi3.jpg

IN THE African tradition, stories were meant to instil values in children. Now, laments Theodora Ulerie, a story-teller for over 15 years, the story has lost much of its integrity.

“When each people came (to T&T), they brought their culture,” said Ulerie. “When the slaves came, they brought their stories.”

Stories were a way of communicating with the gods, she said, but in T&T, are used only for entertainment.

Artist and storyteller Makemba Kunlé explained that the storyteller is the descendant of the West African griot.

Essentially a travelling historian, the griot travelled from village to village, telling of the achievements of peoples and kings, often covering thousands of years of history.

“Traditional African society is an oral one,” said Kunlé. “The griot would be trained from young to perform the task—he wasn’t an entertainer, although he did entertain.

“It was a respected, revered position.”

Kunlé believes that the attraction of motion pictures and video games may account for the reduced interest in traditional folklore characters.

“But if we were to put some douens and characters from folklore into film and video games,” mused Kunlé, “they would become popular.”

The character Anansi is derived from Giza, the trickster spider-man of the Hausa of northern Nigeria. Like Anansi, Giza could be hero or villain.

Ulerie tells an old West African Anansi tale of how all the stories in the world came to be. Notice the tendency to repeat expressions.

“Back when the world was young, all the stories in the world belonged to Nyamé, the sky god. They lived in a golden box beside his royal stool.

Now, Anansi, the spider-man, wanted the golden box of stories, so he spun a web up to heaven and entered Nyamé’s court.

“Oh Nyamé, Nyamé,” said Anansi, and bowed low. “I have come to ask for your stories. What is your price?”

“A-kyee, kyee, kyee,” laughed the sky god. “My price, Anansi?

“You must bring me Osébo, the leopard of the terrible teeth; Umbolo, the hornets who sting like fire and Mwatiya, the fairy who men have never seen.

“Very well, Nyamé,” said Anansi, bowing his head. “I am ready to pay your price.”

The sky god laughed aloud.

“How can you, Anansi—so small, so small, so small —pay my price?”

For every man who had tried to pay his price had been eaten by Osébo, stung to death by Umbolo and turned into a frog by Mwatiya.

Anansi did not reply, only bowed low and returned to earth.

He pulled down a thick creeper vine from a stout tree and went in search of Osébo, the leopard of the terrible teeth.

“Aha, Anansi!” said Osébo, baring his teeth. “You are just in time to be my lunch!”

“As for that, whatever happens will happen,” said Anansi, quietly. “But, first, Osébo, perhaps we can play the binding, binding game.”

Osébo was very fond of games.

“The binding, binding game?” he said excitedly. “Quick, how do you play it?”

“I will bind you up with this vine,” said Anansi, “and then, I will untie you and you can tie me up.”

“Okay,” said Osébo, planning to eat Anansi as soon as his turn came to do the binding.

So, Anansi took his vine and tied Osébo by his foot, by his foot, by his foot, by his foot and hoisted him up into a tree.

“Now, Osébo,” said Anansi, dancing around the tree, “you are ready to meet the sky god.

Then, Anansi took a frond from a banana tree and filled an empty calabash with water. He crept up to the nest of Mbolo, the hornets who sting like fire.

He poured some of the water onto the banana leaf and emptied the rest over the Mbolo’s nest.

“It is raining, raining, raining!” called Anansi to the Mbolo. “Will you not fly into my calabash so the rain does not tatter your wings?”

“Thank you, thank you,” hummed the Mboro, and flew into the calabash.

When the last hornet entered, Anansi stuffed the opening fast—kaff!

“Now, Mbolo,” said Anansi, “you are ready to meet the sky god.”

Next, Anansi took some wood from the gum tree and carved a small gum baby. He tied one end of a long string round the gum baby’s neck and then covered it with sticky latex glue.

He placed the gum baby under the flamboyant tree, where fairies love to dance, and put a bowl of pounded yams beside it.

Then, Anansi took the loose end of the string in his hand, and hid among some bushes.

At last, along came Mwatiya, dancing, dancing. She stopped when she saw the gum baby and the bowl of pounded yams.

She loved yams.

“Gum baby, may I have some of your yams?” she asked.

Anansi, from the bushes, pulled the string and made the gum baby nod.

Mwatiya took the bowl and ate up all off the pounded yams.

The gum baby said nothing.

Mwatiya became irritated, for she was an ill-tempered fairy.

“Do you not speak to me when I thank you?” she demanded.

The gum baby was still.

“If you do not speak to me, gum baby, I’ll slap your crying place!” she shouted. (The “crying place” is the cheek.)

Still, the gum baby was silent.

Pow!

Mwatiya slapped the gum baby hard in the face, then found her hand wouldn’t come away!

“Let me go, or I’ll slap you again!” she bellowed.

Pow! She slapped the gum baby with her other hand, and it also stuck fast. She pushed against it with her foot, then with her other foot, until she was completely stuck to the gum baby.

Then, Anansi came out of the bushes and stood over the angry fairy.

“Now, Mwatiya, you are ready to meet the sky god.”

Anansi spun a web around Osébo, Mbolo and Mwatiya, then spun a web up to heaven, and took them to the court of Nyamé.

“Oh, Nyamé, Nyamé,” said Anansi, and bowed low. “See, I have brought your price: Osébo, the leopard of the terrible teeth; Mbolo, the hornets who sting like fire; Mwatiya, the fairy who men never see.”

“Anansi, the spider man, has paid my price for my stories,” Nyamé announced to his assembly of elders. “Sing his praises.”

The assemby of elders obeyed.

“Let the golden box of stories be given to him,” he proclaimed, “and, from now on, let these stories be called “spider stories”.

Anansi bowed low and took the golden box of stories down to his village.

There, he opened the box, and every kind of story, of every shape and size and colour, flew out of the box and to every part of the world. And that is how this story came to be.”

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African Proverb of the Month May 2010



African Proverb of The Month
May 2010

Peanuts

Peanuts

Ntondo ikatondolaga. (Sukuma)
Kesho hufanya ijulikane mambo yake. (Swahili)
Demain se fait connaître demain. (French)
Tomorrow makes known to us what tomorrow will bring. (English)

Sukuma (Tanzania) Proverb



Background, Explanation and Everyday Use

This Sukuma proverb in Tanzania has a play on words. Ntondo means “tomorrow.” Kutondola means “to reveal” and also “to shell peanuts.” The Sukuma people use this proverb in relation to shelling peanuts. When you break the shell you do not know what is inside – a ripe peanut or a rotten peanut. So to shell peanuts is to reveal something that is unknown or hidden. The meaning is that we can’t know today what will happen tomorrow. What is hidden today will be revealed tomorrow.

Biblical Parallels

Peanuts

Peanuts

Matthew 6:25-34: “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing? Look at the birds of the air; they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? And can any of you by worrying add a single hour to your span of life? And why do you worry about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not clothed like one of these. But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? Therefore do not worry, saying, ‘What will we eat?’ or ‘What will we drink?’ or ‘What will we wear?’ For it is the Gentiles who strive for all these things; and indeed your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. But strive first for the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. “So do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will bring worries of its own. Today’s trouble is enough for today.”

1 John 4:18: “There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear; for fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not reached perfection in love.”

Contemporary Use and Religious Application

Our attitude in life should be to trust in God’s love. Don’t worry. This is the sacrament of the present moment. Worrying about tomorrow takes you away from living in the present moment of God’s love. Those who hope in the Lord renew their strength. Wings come to them like eagles. They run without weariness. They walk without fatigue. In the book Story of a Soul St. Therese of Lisieux says: “I find that we who run along the way of love must not think of anything painful that can happen to us in the future for this is lacking in trust and is like meddling in creation.”

In African cultures we are often paralyzed by fear (witchcraft, superstition, etc.) that enslaves us and prevents us from loving God perfectly.

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QOTD

“one who is looking for knowledge is like an arrow thrown towards the sun. if that arrow ever touches the sun, it will not come back; but if it touches the sun and comes back to earth, it will no longer be an arrow.” ~ Gourmantche Proverb

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