The Religious Nile

The Religious Nile
Author: Terje Oestigaard
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 480
Release: 2018-07-30
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1838609644

The Nile is arguably the most famous river in the world. For millennia, the search for its source defeated emperors and explorers. Yet the search for its source also contained a religious quest - a search for the origin of its divine and life-giving waters. Terje Oestigaard reveals how the beliefs associated with the river have played a key role in the cultural development and make-up of the societies and civilizations associated with it. Drawing upon his personal experience and fieldwork in Africa, including details of rites and ceremonies now fast disappearing, the author brings out in rich detail the religious and spiritual meanings attached to the life-giving waters by those whose lives are so bound to the river. Part religious quest, part exploration narrative, the author shows how this mighty river is a powerful source for a greater understanding of human nature, society and religion.

"I Am Just a Sukuma"

Author: Frans Jozef Servaas Wijsen
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 250
Release: 2002
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789042015883

Contents: 1. Culture and identity among the Sukuma. - 2. Origin and growth of Sukuma identity. - 3. The intrusions of colonialism. - 4. The hopes and frustrations of socialist ideology. - 5. The Sukuma and the ideology of a free market. - 6. Sukuma identity and modernization.

Claiming Civic Virtue

Claiming Civic Virtue
Author: Jan Bender Shetler
Publisher: Women in Africa and the Diaspo
Total Pages: 353
Release: 2019
Genre: History
ISBN: 0299322904

An original and wide-ranging investigation of the gendered nature of historical memory among communities in the Mara region of Tanzania and its influence on the development of East Africa over the past 150 years. Exploring these oral histories opens exciting new vistas for understanding how women and men in this culture tell their stories and assert their roles as public intellectuals.

Report

Report
Author: Illinois Farmers' Institute
Publisher:
Total Pages: 458
Release: 1914
Genre:
ISBN:

Religion at Work in Globalised Traditions

Religion at Work in Globalised Traditions
Author: Anders Kaliff
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2014-03-26
Genre: History
ISBN: 1443858765

Why do traditions disappear? How is the disappearance of tradition also a vehicle for social change and re-inventions of practices and new traditions? Using case studies from one Sukuma area along the southern shores of Lake Victoria in Tanzania, global processes of how religions work in practice are analysed by focusing on rainmaking, witchcraft and Christianity. Traditionally, Sukuma society was culturally and cosmologically structured around the chief, the ancestors and rainmaking. Everything was dependent upon the rain. Rainmaking as a ritual practice has disappeared and ancestral propitiations are declining, while, at the same time, Christianity is spreading and witchcraft and witch killings are increasing. Although Christianity as a religion may provide answers and hopes for life after death, the religion provides few solutions in the here and now when it comes to poverty and suffering; problems and challenges that have to be solved. Witchcraft, on the other hand, does, or is believed to do so – and the increase in witchcraft is analysed in relation to the impacts of more than a century of globalisation from the missionaries and colonizers onwards. With the declining ancestral tradition, witchcraft and Christianity as religious practices supplement each other in the ways they are believed to work in providing answers, solutions or divine interferences in different realms; this world and the Otherworld. Offering an approach going beyond structural functionalism on different premises, the book’s focus on religion at work will facilitate new understandings of how to study religion as it is perceived and believed in practice.

Telling Our Own Stories

Telling Our Own Stories
Author: Shetler
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 349
Release: 2021-10-11
Genre: History
ISBN: 9004492348

In this collection of ethnic group histories, written by authors from the Mara Region of Tanzania, local people tell their stories as a way to inspire development that builds on the strengths of the past. It combines histories from the small, but closely related, ethnic groups of Ikizu, Sizaki, Ikoma, Ngoreme, Nata, Ishenyi and Tatoga in South Mara, east of Lake Victoria and west of Serengeti National Park. Many of the authors compiled their stories by meeting with groups of elders. They were concerned to preserve history for the next generation who had not taken the time to learn the stories orally. The stories were written in Swahili and translated into English with annotations and an introduction so that readers not familiar with this region might also share in the experience. It also includes transcriptions of oral interviews with some of the same stories to get a sense of the ongoing conversions about the past. This collection makes local history told in a local idiom accessible to students of African history interested in social memory and the creation of ethnicity.

Annual Report

Annual Report
Author: Illinois Farmers' Institute
Publisher:
Total Pages: 456
Release: 1914
Genre: Farmers' institutes
ISBN:

Contains "Proceedings of the 24th-36th annual meeting ..., together with reports of Institute work ..."

Community Policing

Community Policing
Author: Dominique Wisler
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 344
Release: 2009-06-10
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1420093592

Community-oriented policing (COP) is the ideology and policy model espoused in the mission statements of nearly all policing forces throughout the world. However, the COP philosophy is interpreted differently by different countries and police forces, resulting in practices that may in fact run far afield of the community-based themes of partnership