منتديات سودانيزاونلاين    مكتبة الفساد    ابحث    اخبار و بيانات    مواضيع توثيقية    منبر الشعبية    ارا� حرة و مقالات   
News and Press Releases    اتصل بنا    Articles and Views    English Forum    ناس الزقازيق   

Home Search

Board Laws

Articles

Refresh

المنبر العام
Sudanese Videos

Archives

News in English

News in Arabic

Welcome Guest [Login]
Your last visit: 05-22-2024, 11:13 AM Home

Discussion Board in English Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better….
Printable Version   Forward   Flat View « Previous Topic | Next Topic »
Jump to newest reply in thread »

Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better….

05-09-2005, 04:11 AM
Omar
<aOmar
Registered: 02-14-2003
Total Posts: 239





Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. (Re: Omar)

    The Shilluk Tribe


    The Name
    The people are known as Shilluk which is a corruption of Chollo.


    Demography and geography
    The Shilluk number about half a million living on the west bank of River Nile between Lake No in the south and Kosti in the north.]. Some Shilluk settlements are found on the east bank of the Nile and extend as far as Anakdier in the east.

    The capital of the Shilluk Kingdom is Pachodo. Other important Shilluk historical sites are in Papwojo, Nyilwal, Didigo, Wau and Akurwa. The major towns are Malakal [Makal], Kodhok [Kal Doro] Tonga [Tungu] and Wad Akon. The Shilluk Kingdom is divided into north [gar] and south [lwak]


    Environment, economy and natural resources
    The Shilluk country is flat lying plains surrounding the River Nile. It has moderate rainfall regime and its vegetation is made up of thick tall grass and few trees and shrubs. The Shilluk keep few cattle, goats and sheep; and engage in subsistence agriculture. The main crops are sorghum, maize, simsim, beans.

    The Shilluk are adroit fishermen and exploit with ease the fish resources of the Nile and the numerous tributaries and distributaries. Recent ecological changes in the Sudan have made the Shilluk Kingdom an important producer of gum arabica. Petroleum is produced not very far from the Shilluk Kingdom and there could be oil wells below its sub-soil.


    Mythology and history
    The Shilluk are a part of the Luo nation. Tradition has it that sometimes in the fifteenth Century, Nyikango, the founder of the Chollo nation, quarrelled with and separated from Dimo and the other Luo groups in wic pac somewhere in Bahr el Ghazal.

    Nyikango and his entourage of close relatives and friends chose to move northwards along the Nile in rafts and canoes searching for a suitable place to settle until he arrived in the land of Otango Dirim. Through war and diplomacy he conquered and in the course of time assimilated Otango Dirim, giving each and every tribe therein a name and a ritual to perform. Tradition has it that his Son Dak was the most influential in the establishment of the Kingdom.

    The Shilluk is a nation sensu stricto; a common territory, a common language, a central authority to which all citizens pay allegiance, an elaborate system of customs and traditions which inform the attitudes of the people, the exercise of power and all other social relations. This Shilluk Kingdom was occupied by the Turco-Egyptian regime in 1837 and since then it has not been free except for a brief period between 1881 and 1898 during the Mahdiya. It is recognised by the Sudanese state only as part of the so-called native administration.


    Language
    The Shilluk language [dhok Chollo] is spoken throughout the Kingdom. It is close and related to other Luo languages of Anyuak, Jo-Luo, Pari, Shatt and Belanda Buor. It is also related to Nuer and Dinka languages.


    Shilluk society, social events, attitudes, customs and tradition
    The Chollo nation comprises about one hundred different ethnic communities and clans: the indigenous people [otango dirim] and the Luo conquerors [kwa-Räth], who double up as the most politically and socially dominant. The other important clans include kwa-Jullo [the descendents of Ojullo - Nyikango’s cousin and fortune teller] kwa-Jwok (descendants of Ojwok - Nyikango’s cousin), kwa- Oboogo (Oboogo is said to have volunteered to be sacrificed in order to open up the weeds at the confluence of Nile and Bahr el Ghazal to enable the entourage precede with their journey).

    The descendents of assimilated Otango Dirim include: kwa-nyidwai, kwa-dway, kwa-nyidhiang, kwa-mal, kwa-man, kwa-nyudho, kwa-mang [originally Nuba], etc., latter additions to the Kingdom are kwa-mwoy [formerly Nuer], kwa-jango [formerly Dinka]. These serve as social identity as well as special functions at Pachodo. The clans intermarried among each other without distinction.

    However, tradition prohibits the Rath from taking as wife a girl from among the kwa-Räth or kwa-Jullo. Each clan reproduced its own self and there is no chance for one clan changing to the other in spite of the extensive mixing resulting from marriages. However, a recalcitrant kwa-Räth clan could have its royalty [rädho] removed in a special raid [tyek] overseen by the reigning sovereign. They then become ordinary Shilluk [Chōl].

    The Shilluk ascribe to an elaborate traditional system, orally transmitted from generation to the next, in which each and every Shilluk clan, except the royals, has defined role to play in the Kingdom. They participate in the building and repairs of shrines [kengi roor]; the installation of the Räth. Some Shilluk traditions and customs have lost their values or originality. Most archaic traditions have been dropped, while some have lingered on although are transforming under the pressure of modernity.


    Birth
    The ####### of the new born can be easily gleaned by the site of the bathing shade [bila] and where the umbilical cord [byero] had been buried; right or left of the doorway for male and female respectively. The mother eats special foods to assist quick and easy recuperation. A woman who has recently given birth [up to one month] carries stock of sorghum when she goes out of the house; wears a cross marked with ash on her forehead.

    A women still in early pregnancy [one-two months], her husband or somebody who had just buried a relative are believed to be ceremonially polluted [rigen da biy]. They are not allowed to within ten metres of the compound of the newly delivered baby.

    There is no myths about twins but some elaborate rites are performed which continue until they are grown up and marry. However, giving birth to triplets is considered abnormal and the fact of this is reported to Pachodo without delay. The Räth blesses them and offers each a milking cow.


    Naming
    Every Shilluk new born is given milk name [ñiŋ caak] the meaning of which may relate to the experience or circumstance the parents or close relative. The prefix nya- connotes usually a female but is sometimes shared by male. Okach or nyakach refers to famine; oyoo or nyayoo having been born on the road; Acwanyo refers to coinciding with the arrival of an important person or relative; Ronyo or Aban coinciding with death of somebody.

    A child could be named [ñiŋ kaalo] after some important person including a departed Räth. In this case the child is taken and offerings made on the on that person’s grave or shrine of Räth. A grown up person could adopt a dance name [ñiŋi bul] or may be given nick name [ñiŋ aŋol] by others. The Shilluk by tradition don’t name a child after a living person.


    Initiation into adulthood
    There is no elaborate ceremony to mark a girl’s initiation into adulthood. As soon as physiological transformation shows, she goes through elaborate cushioning by the mother as to protect herself from boys and men in general. She is ready for marriage [nyana-jur].

    The dance ceremony [choŋ ki bul] for initiating boys into adulthood doubles up as the formation of age-set [people who danced in the same year] is marked by wearing for the first time dance regalia consisting of a leopard skin [prince], wild-cat skin [ordinary]; beads made from shells of ostrich eggs [rek] and a necklace made from tail of giraffe [winni wir]. The boy graduant [nyela-woob] moves to literally bachelors quarters [wot ya-woob]; prepares for own sorghum field [pwodho] and prepares to marry.


    Marriage
    Marriage is the ultimate goal of every adult male and female. Courtship and intimacy that could last for up to a year or more. Once marriage has been decided on, the girl informs her mother who then informs the father or paternal uncle in case he father is diseased. The shy boy may inform his father through a friend, uncle or somebody he trusts.

    Marriage to blood relatives or in-laws is not permitted. Once the suit has been accepted and announced initial bride price [dyel dhok together with ŋyenyi kwaco] is paid. The Shilluk dowry is a minimum of ten cows and thirty sheep and goats. The marriage relationship [ooro] does not expire or rust.

    It tightly binds the two families making divorce difficult if not impossible unless there are spectacular reasons. In case of divorce, the dowry is returned. The Shilluk practice pawn-marriage [lwoko] even before the girl has been born. This is accepted in times of extreme stress and difficulties.


    Death
    As the ultimate end of every living mortal, the Shilluk accept and respect death. It is celebrated when it is the aged or an important person passing. The head is shaved and the body is dressed according to status in society. A child or uninitiated male is buried without much ceremony.

    An adult male is dressed in war regalia and the burial is accompanied by war dance and wailing by women, usually with mock war against the ‘jwok’ that is assumed to have ‘killed’ him. The chief is buried in a hut. The Räth is buried with much more paraphernalia. All in all, the body is lowered, lying on the right side with the head pointing to the east facing the open side of the grave, into a grove dug on the right side of the grave.

    The burial ceremony is followed after a few weeks by a ritual [pothi kodho] which literally signifies removal of the name from among the living. Three months later a funeral rite [ywok thinh] is performed followed years later, depending on the economic situation of the family, by the last funeral rites [ywong dwong] [last funeral rites] after which the person is considered to have joined the ancestors. The funeral ceremony [wowo] of the Räth is managed, performed and led within a few months by the anointed and succeeding Räth-elect.


    Shilluk political organisation, traditional authority
    The Chollo Kingdom is made up of two principal political divisions [states]: the north [Gar] and the south [Lwak]. It is divided into fifteen provinces [podh] each under the administration of a paramount chief [jangi-laago] directly responsible to the Räth, believed to be the incarnation of Nyikango and is sovereign combining political, administrative, judicial and spiritual power.

    The chiefs of Tungu [south] and Mwomo [north] are the most senior positions as they considered the fronts’ guards. The paramount chief has under his authority village or clan chiefs [jagi myer or, jagi-nyiräth].

    There are chiefs of special functions e.g. the chiefs of the hippo called [kwa-wang] situated in Tungu [south] and Mwomo [north]; the chief of Nile lechwe [jangi gyek] in Panyikango. In each province, a military commander [bany] emerges by virtue of military prowess and valour but has no administrative functions or authority.


    Coronation of the Räth
    The Chollo system does not tolerate a prolonged power vacuum [wangi-yomo] following the passing of the sovereign. He is the law and order and therefore must be immediately replaced. The process of installation of the new Rath begins immediately once the council of chiefs [jagiwipadiwad] have met and decided on a choice.

    To be chosen, the prince should have been born during the reign of his late father; should not have scars whatsoever on his body; should not be known to be a coward as he grew up under the supervision of the chief of the village in which he was brought up. The Räth elect [ororo] prepares for wowo [the last funeral rites] of the late Räth and embarks on his own installation process.

    Once all the ritual items [Jami kwer] have been procured [some are brought from as far a field as the Funj Kingdom and the Nuba Mountains] and Nyikango has accented to the choice of jagiwipadiwad, then the final stages of coronation [kwer rony] begin in earnest. It could take up to three months until the last day of the ceremony when all the chiefs pay their allegiance to the new Räth, assures the Shilluk nation, and then begin his reign throughout the Chollo Kingdom.

    The royal regalia include: throne [kwom], skin of Nile lechwe [pyen gyek], giraffe mane [yar wir], 2 silver bracelets [ateg], ostrich feathers [okwon wudo], royal spears, royal stick, beads made from ostrich shells [rek], and many others some of which remain in the special room [kaano]. Räth Kwongo Dak Padiet is the reigning sovereign. He was installed the thirty fourth Shilluk Rath in 1992.

    The Räth reigns for life from Pachodo, established in about [1690 – 1710] as the Kingdom’s headquarters and site for coronation of Kings by Tugo wad Dhakodh. However, the reigning sovereign is expected to found his own village; and comes to Pachodo only when major decisions affecting the Kingdom have to be taken. There was only one woman Räth in Shilluk history – Abudhok nya Bwoch [1660 – 1670] who reigned from Thworo village. She is said to have decreed that no woman should ever be installed Räth since women did not respect her court.


    The installation of Shilluk chiefs
    The Shilluk chiefs derive their authority [lawo] from Pachodo. They are responsible and must report to Räth on all royal animal and birds pertaining to their respective territories: human being if murdered [dhanho], Nile lechwe [gyek], crocodile [nyang], hippo [paar], giraffe [wir], elephant [liech], [yiel] leopard [kwach], ostrich [wudo], red mouth stock [owango].

    Chiefs can be removed from office, which is elective in the sense that it is open to competition is allowed and once the Rath realises the competition is stiff he orders elections with only male adults of that village or province [podho] allowed to cast their votes [lothigen]. As a rule one can become a chief only after the death of one’s father.


    Spirituality and beliefs
    The Shilluk recognise the existence of two spheres: the sphere of the spirits interacting with that of the living beings. There is the Supreme Being [jwok ayimo] with his home somewhere in the sky [pa-jwok] where people don’t do evil. There are also the spirits of the departed ancestors and relatives, whom one can address in times of distress and tribulations. The Shilluk believe that the ghost of somebody killed or murdered hunts the perpetrator.


    Shilluk culture: Arts, music, literature and handicraft
    The Shilluk society has evolved a material and political culture expressed in the institutions of the Kingdom and the daily life activities notwithstanding its oral nature. The kingdom rests on an elaborate system of traditions and practices that go back more than five hundred years. The royalty is addressed in a separate vocabulary.

    The Shilluk are very particular about body cleanliness; the hair is constructed into two structures that give the impression of plates of hair on the head. They wear beads, and other decoration which include cutting dots on forehead and tattooing on the body. The Shilluk have developed music instrument a kind of guitar [thom], flute made fom the horns of kudu [kang], [adalo], and drum [bul].

    The Shilluk control and defence of the Nile channel promoted the evolution of navy that used dug out canoes. They imported iron the Nuba Mountains and Funj Kingdom for making spears [tong], axes [doro], knives [paalo] and hoes [kwer] was imported from the Nuba Mountains and Funj Kingdom. The Shilluk have developed several and different types of dance: bul, thom, amagak, aya, etc., to meet different occasion. Their folklore is rich with fairy tales for children, quizzes, riddles, etc.


    Neighbours and foreigners relations and cooperation
    The Räth has had a moderating influence on the Shilluk and the cordial relations and mutual respect they have evolved with their neighbours: Salem Arabs in the north, Nuba in the west, Nuer in the south and Dinka and Funj in the east.


    Latest developments
    The situation of their kingdom on the Nile has exposed the Shilluk to every danger that came downwards with European and Arab incursions and aggression: slavery and slave trade and the so-called modernity [Christianisation and Islamisation]. Many have converted to Christianity [south] and Islam [north] nevertheless their allegiance remains with Pachodo. The war had displaced many Shilluk to north Sudan. This poses a serious threat to Shilluk traditions.


    Diaspora
    Small Shilluk communities have sprung up in US, Canada, Britain and Australia as a result of displacement by war. Many are still in contact with their families way back home.

    Further Reading

    Patricia Mercer. ‘Shilluk trade and politics from mid seventeenth century to 1861.’ Journal of Africa History, X11, 3 (1971), pp. 407- 416.

    John O Udal. ‘The Nile in Darkness – Conquests and exploration 1504 – 1862.’ Michael Russell. 1998.

    David Levering. ‘The Race to Fashoda.’ Bloomsbury.1987

    Richard Gray, ‘A history of the Southern Sudan, 1839 – 1889.’ Oxford, University Press, 1961

    E. E. Evans-Pritchard, ‘The Divine Kingship of the Shilluk of the Nilotic Sudan.’ Cambridge, University Press, 1948

    Source: www.gurtong.org

    (Edited by Omar on 05-09-2005, 04:12 AM)

                  

Arabic Forum

Title Author Date
Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar03-08-05, 11:06 PM
  Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar03-09-05, 03:00 AM
    Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar03-14-05, 00:10 AM
  Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Munzoul Assal03-20-05, 02:51 AM
    Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Anwar Elhaj03-24-05, 02:36 PM
      Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar03-24-05, 11:29 PM
    Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar03-24-05, 11:23 PM
  Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar03-29-05, 08:56 AM
    Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar04-19-05, 10:03 AM
  Re: Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better…. Omar05-09-05, 04:11 AM

[Post A Reply] Page 1 of 1:   <<  1  >>

Comments of SudaneseOnline.com readers on that topic:

Crossing the barriers….. Got to know them better….
at FaceBook
Report any abusive and or inappropriate material



Articles and Views
ارا� حرة و مقالات
News and Press Releases
اخبار و بيانات
اخر المواضيع فى المنبر العام
Latest Posts in English Forum



فيس بوك جوجل بلس تويتر انستقرام يوتيوب بنتيريست Google News
الرسائل والمقالات و الآرا� المنشورة في المنتدى بأسما� أصحابها أو بأسما� مستعارة لا تمثل بالضرورة الرأي الرسمي لصاحب الموقع أو سودانيز اون لاين بل تمثل وجهة نظر كاتبها
لا يمكنك نقل أو اقتباس اى مواد أعلامية من هذا الموقع الا بعد الحصول على اذن من الادارة
About Us
Contact Us
About Sudanese Online
اخبار و بيانات
ارا� حرة و مقالات
صور سودانيزاونلاين
فيديوهات سودانيزاونلاين
ويكيبيديا سودانيز اون لاين
منتديات سودانيزاونلاين
News and Press Releases
Articles and Views
SudaneseOnline Images
Sudanese Online Videos
Sudanese Online Wikipedia
Sudanese Online Forums
If you're looking to submit News,Video,a Press Release or or Article please feel free to send it to [email protected]

© 2014 SudaneseOnline.com


Software Version 1.3.0 © 2N-com.de