Tanzanian medium Kinjikitile Ngwale was hanged as a traitor to Germany on this date in 1905.
He emerged as a prophet of the Maji Maji Rebellion, a rising in German East Africa (modern-day Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi) — provoked by the strains imposed by the mother country’s exploitation of their possession, most particularly the tilt into growing cotton for export.
The rebellion takes its name from the magical maji — that’s just the Swahili word for “water” — supplied by Kinjikitile, a castor oil potion that he said would melt German bullets into water. Both the ointment and the cult* behind it provided an organizing principle for disparate peoples and grievances of what is now southeast Tanzania. The German bullets, however, did not melt.
Kinjikitile was arrested almost immediately with the onset of the revolt in July 1905 and hanged soon thereafter. The rising that he kindled raged on until 1907, and the German reply of imposing famine** laid tens of thousands of souls in the earth in the course of suppressing it. In the 1950s, a journalist would remark that “even today the Southern Province of Tanganyika, the ‘Cinderella Province,’ has not fully recovered from the German terror half a century ago. The economy of the region has never been successfully rebuilt.” But the rebellion’s spirit of fellow-feeling against the colonizer has been invoked many times since as one of the foundational stirrings of Tanzanian nationalism.
* We use the term entirely without pejorative intent.
** Not unlike what had been done immediately prior to the Herero in German South West Africa (present-day Namibia).
On this day..
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- 1743: Gen. Charles Emil Lewenhaupt, scapegoat
- 1899: Three in the Klondike Gold Rush
- 1347: Not the Six Burghers of Calais
- 1882: Ham Yeatts
- 1781: Isaac Hayne, paroled prisoner of war
- Themed Set: The Empire Strikes Back
- 1474: A cock and its eggs
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