Murundu ndi ngoma i no tshinwa nga vha mbehu ya tshinnani. Ngoma iyi i na madzina o fhambananaho zwi tshi ya nga u fhambana ha vhupo. Kha manwe masia ngoma iyi i vhidzwa murundu, hunwe hogo kana mula. Fhedzi u fhambana ha madzina a zwi iti uri hu fhambane maitele a ngomani iyi. Musi murundu usa athu u ima u vhigwa musanda. Shuvhuru la u thoma u wela mulani ndi nwana a bvaho mutani wa Maine wa mula uyo. Ngoma iyi a i dzhenelwi nga Vhakololo sa izwi Lushaka lwa Vhavenda lu tshi dzhia ngoma iyi sa i sili. Heyi ngoma hu pfala uri yo da na Vhalemba kana Vhashavhi u bva ngei kha la Isiraele. Vhavenda vhone vho edza Vhashavhi musi vha tshi di dzhenisa kha u ruba sa izwi vho vhona zwi vhuya zwa ngoma iyi. Murundu hu tendwa upfi u lugisela vhathannga u vha vhanna vha re na vhudifhinduleli na hone i dovha ya thivhela malwadze a diswaho nga zwa vhudzekani.
Ngoma iyi i ima vhuria na hone dakani kule na hune ha dzula vhathu. Murundu u ima vhuria hu tshi itelwa uri mashuvhuru a tavhanye a luge sa izwi mulani hu sa dzheni mushonga. Murangaphanda wa murundu ndi maine. Maine ndi ene a no imisa na u dzivhela (mula) murundu nga phamba uri hu si vhe na zwi dinaho u swikela murundu u tshi swa. Mashuvhuru vha no tshina ngoma iyi ndi vhatukana vha u bva kha minwaha ya sumbe na u fhira. Minwahani ya kale nga tshifhinga tsha vho makhulukuku, ngoma iyi yo vha itshi ima lwa minwedzi ya rathi. Tshifhingani itsho vhadabe vho vha vha tshi zwima phukha uri huliwe. Nama yo vha itshi liwa nga mashuvhuru musi mula wo no fhindulela.
Nga mulandu wa tshanduko dzo daho na pfunzo, mula u vho ima nwedzi muthihi wa fulwi musi zwikolo zwo vala. Zwiliwa zwi no liwa mulani zwi pfi Tshivhonelo. Tshivhonelo tsha zwihotola na vhalidi, vhadabe na mashuvhuru zwi bikwa mankhoni nga dzikhomba. Mashuvhuru vha ne vha vha vho shavhela mulani kana vha ne vha si vhe na mudabe vha la gavhelo. Tshivhonelo tshi hwalwa nga vhasidzana vha ne vha vha vho tiwa mutani ho sedzwa uri a vha athu u thoma zwa vhudzekani. Tshivhonelo tshi tanganedzwa dzikhareni nga vhadabe vhane vha da vha tshi khou imba hogo.
Hogo i sinwa hu tshi khou fhindulwa vhasidzana musi vha tshivhidzelela nga luimbo lune lwa ri “Ri ala, ri ala”. Musi vhasidzana vha tshivhonelo vha tshi pfa hogo yo tangana, vha a khotha nga murahu ha dzikhare. Dzindilo dza tshivhonelo dzi a bviswa mifaroni dza vhewa phanda ha dzikhare u livhana na muthu onoyo o disaho tshivhonelo. Vhadabe vha swika vha hwala dzindilo dza tshivhonelo u bva fhala phanda ha muthu o disaho. Vhasidzana vha khotha u swikela tshivhonelo tshothe tsho no dzhiwa. Musi hogo yo no rembuluwa u humela mishashani hune ya bva, vhasidzana vha a vuwa vha doba mifaro yavho vha humela murahu mankhoni.
Musi mula wo no fhindulela, vhasidzana vha tshivhonelo vha tshi swika dzikhareni, vha divhadza vhadabe nga u vhidzelela daganana (daganana, daganana i da u dzhie tshivhonelo tshau). Daganana li a fhindula la ranga hogo phanda uya u dzhia tshivhonelo ngei dzikhareni.
Mula u pfi wo fhindulela musi dzikhare dzo ambadzwaho kha thanda dzo no dadza. U fhindulela u hu ndi muvhigo kha vhabebi wa uri vha di lugise sa izwi murundu u tsini na u swa. Ndi mulaedza wa u tsivhudza vha ne vha nga vha vha tshi kha di tama u wedza vhana uri mula u tsini na uswa. Hafhu, shuvhuru line la nga wela nga murahu ha u fhindulela li pfi lo dubunya. U dubunya zwi a ambelwa na kha muthu o thomaho a ya sibadela a tou uya mulani u wana mulayo. Fhedzi ha u dubunya zwi tshi amba u bva kha vhutukana u tshi dzhena vhannani.
Duvha line murundu ha pfi wo fhindulela, hu vha na vhutambo ho fhambananaho sa madaganana, mipengo na zwinwevho. Nga duvha ili vhasidzana vho disaho tshivhonelo, vho shavhedzaho nga mashedo, vha a khotha musi daganana na mipengo zwi tshi khou pembela. A fha kha vhutambo uhu na vhafumakadzi vhahulwane vha a da u vhona daganana.
Mipengo yone i a rwa arali kha gogo lo daho u talela vhutambo uhu ha vha na munwe o imaho ndilani ya hune mupengo a khou gidima. Vhasidzana vha tshivhonelo vhone a vha tendelwi u vusa thoho musi vhutambo uhu vhu tshi khou bvela phanda. Ane a pfuka ndaela iyi u a rwiwa nga mugwabere. Heli duvha li tendela vho na mashuvhuru vho no lugaho u ya dzikhareni u dzhia tshivhonelo. Nga u ralo, vho mme vhane vha vha hone vhutamboni uhu vha a kona u vhona vhana vha vho vha ne vha khou ruba.
Ngomu mulani nga vhusiku ha musi u tshi fhindulela, hu imiswa mulagalu wo vhoxwa tshikumba tshitshena tsha mbudzi ntha thodzini. Mulagalu uyu hu vha hu danda la muri mulapfu une wa renwa nga fhasi tsindeni. Muri uyu u a bviswa makwati wa sala u mutshena. Hoyu mulagalu u imiswa vhusiku musi mashuvhuru vhothe vhono edela. Musi vhahulwane vha mula vho fhedza u gwela mulagalu, mashuvhuru o the a a vusiwa ha pfi a de a vhone makhulu vha ndebvu dza tshikumba.
Mashuvhuru vha tsivhudzwa uri vha humbele tshine vha toda kha makhulu nga murahu ha u luvha kana u losha. Musi u luvha na u losha zwi tshi khou bvela phanda, muthu o nangwaho u a kwambatela mulagalu a ya ntha thodzini a fara tshikumba tshila tsho itwaho ndebvu. U luvha na u losha zwo no fhela hu a imbelwa ho takalelwa uri makhulu vho da.
Musi ngoma iyi i tshi swa, hu vha na mitambo i ngaho, madaganana, mipengo na zwinwevho. Vhathu vhane vha vha vha tshi khou fumba ngomani iyi vha vhidzwa mashuvhuru huno vhalidi kana vhathu vhane vha vha thogomela vha tshi vhidzwa vhadabe. Kha vha vha vhoni vha vhalidi, hu na Tshihotola, Mudabe muhulwane na vhanwe vhadabe. Tshihotola hu nga vha mukalaha a ne a vhona zwothe zwine zwa vha zwi tshi khou itea zwi tshikwama vhalidi na vhadabe vhavho. Hu dovha hafhu ha vha na mudabe muhulwane. Mudabe muhulwane u shuma sa tshanda tsha tshihotola. Tshihotola na mulidi vhone a vha tsha bvula kana u laya mulani. Vhathu avha a vha tsha vuwa nga matsheloni vha ya u tamba kana u dzhia tshivhonelo.
Thalutshedzo dza maipfi
• Maine – Mune wa mula
• Shuvhuru – Muthu a songo yaho mulani kana muthu a songo fumbaho
• Mulidi na Tshihotola – ndi vhathu vhahulwane mulani vhane vha sedza zwothe zwi kwamaho zwiilaila na maitele a mulani.
• Mudabe – Mudabe ndi muthu a ne a vhona vhalidi na u vhona uri thaidzo dzavho dzothe dzo tandululwa. Muthu uyu u shuma sa tshanda tsha tshihotola.
• Tshivhonelo – Ndi zwiliwa zwi liwaho mulani
• Dzikhareni – A fha ndi hune tshivhonelo tsha dzhiwa hone nga vhadabe u bva kha vhasidzana vha thungamamu
• Mufarambudzi – Ndi shuvhuru lo welaho mulani u thoma. Shuvhuru i li li langula mashuvhuru dangani uri vha si ite zwine zwa nga vha khombo kha vho.
• Danga – Hune mashuvhuru vha dzula hone vha tshi khou guda milayo.
• Mulagalu – muri wo renwaho nga fhasi kha tsinde wa bviswa makwati wa bwelwa khoroni ya mula. Mashuvhuru vha a gonya mulagalu u sumbedza uri
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Monday, January 23, 2012
Di divheni Vhavenda!
Photography - A. M. Duggan-Cronin
Paramount chiefs (title Khosikhulu)
maKhwinde dynasty -
Vele-Lambeho Dimbanyika
Phophi Thoho-ya-Ndou wa
Dimbanyika = Masindi
Split into three ruling lines:
(1)
Tshikalanga Rampofu wa
Thoho-ya-Ndou
Ramavhoya wa Rampofu
1864 Tshigebeti Ramapulana wa Rampofu
= Ravhele
1864 Davhana wa Ramapulana
1864 - 1895 Makhado wa Ramavhoya (b. ... - d. 1895)
1895 - 1896 Maemu Malise wa Makhado
1896 - 1898 Mphephu Ahlilali Tshilamulele
wa Makhado
1898 - ... Senthumule wa Makhado
Split into three ruling lines:
(1-1)
1924 Mphephu Ahlilali Tshilamulele
wa Makhado (b. ... - d. 1924)
1924 - 1949 Mbulaheni wa Mphephu (b. ... - d. 1949)
Photography - Peter Jurgens - Barbara Tyrrell
1949 - 17 Apr 1988 Patrick Mphephu (b. 1926 - d. 1988)
1988 - 25 Dec 1997 Tshimangadzo Mphephu (b. 1967 - d. 1997)
1998 - Toni Mphephu Ramabulana
(1-2)
*1931* Senthumule wa Makhado
(1-3)
*1931* Khuthama wa Makhado
(2)
Thisevhe wa Dimbanyika
+ Bele wa Dimbanyika
(3)
Raluswyelo Tshivhase wa Dimbanyika
Split into two ruling lines:
(3-1)
Mukesi wa Tshivhase
Legegisa Tshivhase wa Mukesi
*1931* Ramaremisa Tshivhase wa Legegisa
Ratshimpi Tshivhase wa Ramaremisa
(3-2)
Phophi Rambuda wa Tshivhase
Vele wa Rambuda
Tshikose Rambuda wa Vele
Split into two ruling lines:
(3-2-1)
... - 1924 Tshikose Rambuda wa Vele
1924 - ... Ratsibvumo Rambuda wa Tshikose
(3-2-2)
1923 Khaku Rambuda wa Vele
1923 -Tshitongani Rambuda wa Khaku
haMphaphuli
Paramount chiefs (title Khosikhulu)
- haMphaphuli dynasty -
Shamboko Mphaphuli
Ratsibi Mphaphuli
Tshikalanga Mphaphuli wa Ratsiba
1927 Makwarela Mphaphuli wa Tshikalanga
1927 - ... Phaswane Mphaphuli wa Makwarela
18 Dec 2001 - Thovhele Musiiwa Mphaphuli
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lemba people (Vhashavhi or Vhalemba)
The Lemba or 'wa-Remba' are a southern African ethnic group to be found in Zimbabwe and South Africa with some little known branches in Mozambique and Malawi. According to Parfitt they are thought to number 70,000.[1] Many of them claim a common descent to the Jewish people.In south Africa the Lemba people are incorporated in Vhavenda tribe and they are also reffered to as 'Vhashavhi'..
Although they are speakers of Bantu languages related to those spoken by their geographic neighbours, they have specific religious practices and beliefs similar to those in Judaism, which some[who?] suggest were transmitted orally. Today, many Lemba are Christians (including Messianic Jews) or Muslim, and maintain several Jewish practices. Recent genetic analyses have established a partially Semitic (Middle-Eastern) origin for a significant portion of the Lemba population.[3][4]
The name "Lemba" may originate in chilemba, a Swahili word for turbans worn by East Africans or lembi a Bantu word meaning "non-African" or "respected foreigner".[5]
Judaic or Arab links
Many Lemba beliefs and practices can be linked to Judaism. According to Rudo Mathivha,[2] this includes the following:
They call God Nwali.
They observe Shabbat.
They praise Nwali for looking after the Lemba, considering themselves part of the chosen people.
They teach their children to honor their mothers and fathers.
They refrain from eating pork and other foods forbidden by the Torah, and forbid combinations of permitted foods.
Their form of animal slaughter, which makes meats fit for their consumption, is a form of shechita.
They practise male circumcision; (furthermore, according to Junod,[6] surrounding tribes regarded them as the masters and originators of that art).
They place a Star of David on their tombstones.
Lembas are discouraged from marrying non-Lembas, as other Jews are discouraged from marrying other non-Jews.
Circumcision, not marrying non-Lembas, their dietary practices and a suggested relationship between many Lemba clan-names and known Semitic words; e.g., Sadiki, Hasane, Hamisi, Haji, Bakeri, Sharifo and Saidi led W. D. Hammond-Tooke to the conclusion that they were Arabs.[7]
Lemba traditions and culture
According to some Lemba, they had male ancestors who were Jews who left Judea about 2,500 years ago and settled in a place called Senna, later migrating into East Africa.[8] According to the findings of British researcher Tudor Parfitt, the location of Senna was more than likely in Yemen, specifically, in the village of Sanāw within the easternmost portion of the Wadi Hadhramaut.[9] The city had a vibrant Jewish population since ancient times, but it dwindled to a few hundred people since the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948.[10]
According to their oral tradition, the male ancestors of the Lemba came to southeast Africa to obtain gold[7][11]
After entering Africa, the tribe is said[who?] to have split off into two groups, with one staying in Ethiopia, and the other traveling farther south, along the east coast. The Lemba claim this second group settled in Tanzania and Kenya, and built what was referred to as "Sena II". Others were said to have settled in Malawi, where descendants reside today. Some settled in Mozambique, and eventually migrated to South Africa and Zimbabwe, where they claim to have constructed or helped construct the great enclosure[8] (see below). Most academics agree, though, that for the most part, the construction of the enclosure at Great Zimbabwe is attributable to the ancestors of the Shona.[12]
The Lemba prefer their children to marry other Lembas, with marriage to non-Lembas being discouraged. The restrictions on intermarriage with non-Lemba make it particularly difficult for a male non-Lemba to become a member. A woman who marries a Lemba male must learn the Lemba religion, dietary rules and other customs. She may not bring any cooking equipment from her previous home, as it may have been tainted by inappropriate use (see Kashrut). Initially, she may have to shave her head. Her children must also be brought up as Lembas. Lemba men who marry non-Lemba women are expelled from the community unless the women agree to live according to Lemba traditions. Normative Judaism only recognizes matrilineal descent; however, patrilineal descent was the norm among the Israelites who lived prior to its adoption.
Lemba tradition tells of a sacred object, the ngoma lungundu or "drum that thunders", that was brought with them from Sena, Yemen. Tudor Parfitt, Professor of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, has theorised that it was the Ark of the Covenant, lost from Jerusalem after the destruction by Nebuchadnezzar in 587 BC.[13] In a Channel 4 programme, Parfitt claimed he had traced a missing copy of the artefact to a museum in Harare, Zimbabwe. Radiocarbon dating showed it to be over 600 years old, and Parfitt suggested that it was a replica made while the Lemba were in Yemen, after the original Ark had been destroyed.[14] In February 2010 the Lemba ngoma lungundu rediscovered a few years before, believed by some Lemba to be a nearly 700-year-old replica of the Ark of the Covenant, went on display in a museum in Harare, Zimbabwe.[15]
In the Zoutpansberg region in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the Lemba were so highly esteemed for their mining and metalwork skills that surrounding tribes regarded them as an almost alien (but very welcome) community.[7][11] In the 1920s their medical knowledge earned them great respect.[16][17]
DNA testing
The Lemba have become world famous because of genetic testing that has demonstrated the authenticity of some of their oral traditions. [18]A genetic study in 1996 suggested that more than 50% of the Lemba Y-chromosomes are Semitic in origin.[3] A subsequent study in 2000 reported more specifically that a substantial number of Lemba men carry a particular haplotype of the Y-chromosome known as the Cohen modal haplotype (CMH), as well as, a haplogrup of Y-DNA Haplogroup J found amongst some Jews and in other populations across the Middle East.[19][20] Studies have also suggested that there is no Semitic female contribution to the Lemba gene pool.[21]
One particular sub-clan within the Lemba, the Buba clan, is considered by the Lemba to be their priestly clan, while among Jews, the Kohanim are the priestly clan. The Buba clan carried most of the CMH found in the Lemba. This is the element in the Y chromosome that appears to be a signature element, if you like, for the Cohanim or Jewish priesthood. The fact that we found this marker in such high concentrations in one of the Lemba subclans, the Buba—much higher, incidentally, than the general Jewish population—seemed finally to provide a real, useable link between the Lemba and Jews.[10]
Among Jews the marker is also most prevalent among Jewish Kohanim, or priests. As recounted in Lemba oral tradition, the Buba clan "had a leadership role in bringing the Lemba out of Israel" and into Southern Africa.[22]
More recently, Mendez et al. (2011) observed that a moderately high frequency of the studied Lemba samples carried Y-DNA Haplogroup T, which is considered to be of Near Eastern origin. The Lemba T carriers belonged exclusively to T1b*, which is rare and was not sampled in Jews of Near East or Africa, but shares a similar estimate expansion time with the T1* Somalis. T1b* has been observed at low frequencies in the Bulgarian and Ashkenazi Jews as well as in a few Levantine populations.[23]
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Although they are speakers of Bantu languages related to those spoken by their geographic neighbours, they have specific religious practices and beliefs similar to those in Judaism, which some[who?] suggest were transmitted orally. Today, many Lemba are Christians (including Messianic Jews) or Muslim, and maintain several Jewish practices. Recent genetic analyses have established a partially Semitic (Middle-Eastern) origin for a significant portion of the Lemba population.[3][4]
The name "Lemba" may originate in chilemba, a Swahili word for turbans worn by East Africans or lembi a Bantu word meaning "non-African" or "respected foreigner".[5]
Judaic or Arab links
Many Lemba beliefs and practices can be linked to Judaism. According to Rudo Mathivha,[2] this includes the following:
They call God Nwali.
They observe Shabbat.
They praise Nwali for looking after the Lemba, considering themselves part of the chosen people.
They teach their children to honor their mothers and fathers.
They refrain from eating pork and other foods forbidden by the Torah, and forbid combinations of permitted foods.
Their form of animal slaughter, which makes meats fit for their consumption, is a form of shechita.
They practise male circumcision; (furthermore, according to Junod,[6] surrounding tribes regarded them as the masters and originators of that art).
They place a Star of David on their tombstones.
Lembas are discouraged from marrying non-Lembas, as other Jews are discouraged from marrying other non-Jews.
Circumcision, not marrying non-Lembas, their dietary practices and a suggested relationship between many Lemba clan-names and known Semitic words; e.g., Sadiki, Hasane, Hamisi, Haji, Bakeri, Sharifo and Saidi led W. D. Hammond-Tooke to the conclusion that they were Arabs.[7]
Lemba traditions and culture
According to some Lemba, they had male ancestors who were Jews who left Judea about 2,500 years ago and settled in a place called Senna, later migrating into East Africa.[8] According to the findings of British researcher Tudor Parfitt, the location of Senna was more than likely in Yemen, specifically, in the village of Sanāw within the easternmost portion of the Wadi Hadhramaut.[9] The city had a vibrant Jewish population since ancient times, but it dwindled to a few hundred people since the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948.[10]
According to their oral tradition, the male ancestors of the Lemba came to southeast Africa to obtain gold[7][11]
After entering Africa, the tribe is said[who?] to have split off into two groups, with one staying in Ethiopia, and the other traveling farther south, along the east coast. The Lemba claim this second group settled in Tanzania and Kenya, and built what was referred to as "Sena II". Others were said to have settled in Malawi, where descendants reside today. Some settled in Mozambique, and eventually migrated to South Africa and Zimbabwe, where they claim to have constructed or helped construct the great enclosure[8] (see below). Most academics agree, though, that for the most part, the construction of the enclosure at Great Zimbabwe is attributable to the ancestors of the Shona.[12]
The Lemba prefer their children to marry other Lembas, with marriage to non-Lembas being discouraged. The restrictions on intermarriage with non-Lemba make it particularly difficult for a male non-Lemba to become a member. A woman who marries a Lemba male must learn the Lemba religion, dietary rules and other customs. She may not bring any cooking equipment from her previous home, as it may have been tainted by inappropriate use (see Kashrut). Initially, she may have to shave her head. Her children must also be brought up as Lembas. Lemba men who marry non-Lemba women are expelled from the community unless the women agree to live according to Lemba traditions. Normative Judaism only recognizes matrilineal descent; however, patrilineal descent was the norm among the Israelites who lived prior to its adoption.
Lemba tradition tells of a sacred object, the ngoma lungundu or "drum that thunders", that was brought with them from Sena, Yemen. Tudor Parfitt, Professor of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, has theorised that it was the Ark of the Covenant, lost from Jerusalem after the destruction by Nebuchadnezzar in 587 BC.[13] In a Channel 4 programme, Parfitt claimed he had traced a missing copy of the artefact to a museum in Harare, Zimbabwe. Radiocarbon dating showed it to be over 600 years old, and Parfitt suggested that it was a replica made while the Lemba were in Yemen, after the original Ark had been destroyed.[14] In February 2010 the Lemba ngoma lungundu rediscovered a few years before, believed by some Lemba to be a nearly 700-year-old replica of the Ark of the Covenant, went on display in a museum in Harare, Zimbabwe.[15]
In the Zoutpansberg region in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the Lemba were so highly esteemed for their mining and metalwork skills that surrounding tribes regarded them as an almost alien (but very welcome) community.[7][11] In the 1920s their medical knowledge earned them great respect.[16][17]
DNA testing
The Lemba have become world famous because of genetic testing that has demonstrated the authenticity of some of their oral traditions. [18]A genetic study in 1996 suggested that more than 50% of the Lemba Y-chromosomes are Semitic in origin.[3] A subsequent study in 2000 reported more specifically that a substantial number of Lemba men carry a particular haplotype of the Y-chromosome known as the Cohen modal haplotype (CMH), as well as, a haplogrup of Y-DNA Haplogroup J found amongst some Jews and in other populations across the Middle East.[19][20] Studies have also suggested that there is no Semitic female contribution to the Lemba gene pool.[21]
One particular sub-clan within the Lemba, the Buba clan, is considered by the Lemba to be their priestly clan, while among Jews, the Kohanim are the priestly clan. The Buba clan carried most of the CMH found in the Lemba. This is the element in the Y chromosome that appears to be a signature element, if you like, for the Cohanim or Jewish priesthood. The fact that we found this marker in such high concentrations in one of the Lemba subclans, the Buba—much higher, incidentally, than the general Jewish population—seemed finally to provide a real, useable link between the Lemba and Jews.[10]
Among Jews the marker is also most prevalent among Jewish Kohanim, or priests. As recounted in Lemba oral tradition, the Buba clan "had a leadership role in bringing the Lemba out of Israel" and into Southern Africa.[22]
More recently, Mendez et al. (2011) observed that a moderately high frequency of the studied Lemba samples carried Y-DNA Haplogroup T, which is considered to be of Near Eastern origin. The Lemba T carriers belonged exclusively to T1b*, which is rare and was not sampled in Jews of Near East or Africa, but shares a similar estimate expansion time with the T1* Somalis. T1b* has been observed at low frequencies in the Bulgarian and Ashkenazi Jews as well as in a few Levantine populations.[23]
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