Location:
East central Tanzania
Population:
200,000
Language:
Kizaramo, Kiswahili
Neighboring
Peoples: Kwere, Luguru, Kami, Swahili
Types
of Art: Zaramo produce various wood
sculpture, best known of which are small doll-like figurines known as mwana
hiti.
BACKGROUND:
Zaramo
are an east central Bantu peoples whose ancestors most likely immigrated into
modern day Tanzania sometime during the first millennium A.D. Oral histories
suggest that the Zaramo moved eastward into their current location from the
mountainous Luguru and Kutu areas around the turn of the 18th century.
Linguistic evidence supports this history. Trade and slave caravans in the 18th
century passed through Zaramo territory on their way to Lake Tanganyika,
bringing Islam along with them. As Dar es Salaam, the capital of Tanzania, has
grown exponentially in the last 20 years many Zaramo settlements have been
incorporated into the city, and many more Zaramo people have immigrated into
the city in search of work.
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES:
Most
Zaramo cultivation is done by women using a hand-held hoe. They grow maize,
millet, and rice near the coast. Tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, casava,
cucumbers, and various other vegetables are grown. Tropical fruits, including
mango, bananas, and coconut are abundant. In the past fishing and hunting were
important, but have largely been replaced by raising domestic animals. Dried
fish, brought inland from the coast, are commonly eaten. The Zaramo supply much
of the fruit and vegetables that are sold in the markets of Dar es Salaam.
Sisal, which is used for making ropes, is grown on large plantations throughout
eastern Tanzania. Tanzania is the number one exporter of sisal.
POLITICAL SYSTEMS:
Zaramo
did not have centralized political systems. Their social organization was based
on small-scale matrilineal kin groups which were self governing. Lineage heads
were chosen by community leaders. These leaders held the land rights of the
lineage. Occasionally a powerful leader emerged in the area who had greater
influence. Land ownership was determined by the original members who inhabited
it. The leader was responsible for distributing the land and maintaining
lineage rituals. Most of the leaders in Zaramo communities were men, but on
occasion they could be women. They settled disputes between family members, and
were often attributed with spiritual powers, such as the ability to make rain,
or to communicate with the spirit world. Despite colonial reports indicating a
lack of political unity in the area, Zaramo peoples were able to assemble
between four and five thousand people to March on Bagamoyo in 1875 in protest
of the Sultan failing to pay tribute.
RELIGION:
Most
Zaramo believed in a supreme God, Mulungu, who was associated with rainfall.
Most prayers were directed to familial spirits. Religion among the Zaramo was a
household affair. Every family was responsible for appeasing its ancestral
spirits. Shrines were built to the spirits on the ancestral homeland, and
members of the family were expected to journey to these sites to make the
proper offerings. Zaramo believed that major disasters and illnesses were sent
by Mulungu, but appeals and prayers must be made to the ancestral spirits who
served as a liason between living men and God. In order to determine the proper
course of action necessary to appease an offended spirit, a spirit medium, or
mganga would be consulted. Through various divination techniques, the mganga
would communicate with the spirits and then prescribe treatment for an illness
or social imbalance.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:-
Asante
M.K (2007); THE HISTORY OF AFRICA; London, Routledge
G.
Deon, et al (1968); EAST AFRICA
THOUGHT THOUSAND YEARS; Evans brother limited
Finke
J. (2000) TRADITIONAL MUSIC AND
CULTURE OF KENYA AND TANZANIA NOTES AND RECORDSISSUES 1977;, Tanzania
society
I.N.Kimambo
and A.J Temu (1969) HISTORY OF TANZANIA; EAPH Nairobi
John
I.A A MODERN HISTORY OF TANGANYIKA 1900
Relt.
P (1971) BANTU CUSTOMS IN MAINLAND
TANZANIA, TABORA TANANIA; T.M.P Book Department
World
Bank (1995); WORLD DEVELOPMENT REPORT;
Oxford University Press New York ,
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