
BY
PREFACE
UMTIMBA(A ZULU WEDDING)
HOW TWINS WERE TREATED
“UKUGODUSA”(SENDING HOME)
ANOTHER INSTANCE IN WHICH THE “UKUGODUSA” CUSTOM WAS CARRIED OUT.
DEPARTED SPIRITS
UKUHLABIS’ AMADHLOZI(SACRIFICING TO SPIRITS)
CUSTOMS AND USAGES AT THE DEATH OF A ZULU CHIEF OR HEAD OF A KRAAL
INKATA
This compact collection presents a series of vivid sketches that bring the inner life of the Zulu people into clear focus. Written in plain, accessible language, the stories convey everyday customs, beliefs, and the emotional currents that shape community life. Listeners will hear how rituals, ancestral reverence, and the unseen spirit world are woven into the fabric of daily existence.
The narratives explore familiar human themes—spirit worship, protective wizards, and sacrificial rites—showing surprising parallels with traditions from ancient Greece to Chinese ancestor veneration. By comparing these practices to those found elsewhere, the work highlights the universal search for forces beyond the visible world. The result is a gentle yet insightful portrait that invites empathy rather than judgment.
Beyond its literary charm, the book serves as a practical guide for anyone who will meet the Zulu, from missionaries to administrators. It offers a roadmap to understanding motivations that are rooted in deeply held superstitions and communal values. In listening, one gains both cultural appreciation and useful perspective for respectful interaction.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (106K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive (http://archive.org).
Release date
2014-08-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A little-known writer whose surviving work opens a window onto Zulu traditions, folklore, and social life as it was recorded in the early 1900s. The books linked to this name have kept a niche place among readers interested in African history, oral tradition, and colonial-era ethnography.
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