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John Chilembwe and the New Jerusalem

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Jane
Affiliation:
University of Malawi
Ian Linden
Affiliation:
University of Malawi

Extract

The Nyasaland rising of 1915 has been dealt with previously within the perspective of proto-nationalism, and a hiatus has been emphasized between prophetae like Kamwana and the Baptist orthodoxy of Chilembwe. An analysis of the beliefs of many of the lesser lights in the rising, however, shows that millennial expectations were rife at the outbreak of the rising. Kamwana's prophecies of the advent of the millennium in October 1914 were provided with support by the outbreak of the First World War. The rising is analysed within the context of millennial belief in an attempt to show how a development from passivism to activism from October 1914 to January 1915 was the proximate cause of open revolt. The failure of the rising is discussed in terms of the religious ideology used to legitimize it, and the role of Watchtower beliefs is clarified. Evidence of millennial hopes is taken from trial reports of rebels and from correspondence confiscated after the rising at Ncheu and Chiradzulu.

Type
Other Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1971

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References

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36 Oral Testimony. Fr. Auguste Basle S.M.M. A Montfort missionary at Nankunda in 1914—arrived in Nyasaland 1908. Interviewed at Pirimiti mission, Zomba, Oct. 1970.

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38 By early Nov. more than twenty letters in and out of the P.I.M. had been censored without any incriminating material being found. Moggridge to Zomba secretariat, 3 Nov. 1914. Sio/1/6.

39 The fields of evangelization of Nguludi and the P.I.M. overlapped. Further, since the arrival of the Catholics in 1901, the government had been faced with repeated squabbles between Catholics and the rest over spheres of influence. This was especially acute in the Central Region where Dutch Reformed Afrikaaners faced French, Canadian and Dutch White Fathers.

40 Blantyre Mission Diary. Preamble to foundation 20 Aug. 1913. Diary kept at Blantyre Mission.

41 Moggridge to Hetherwick, 14 Nov. 1914. Sio/I/6.

42 Moggridge to Zomba secretariat, 11 Dec. 1914. Sio/I/6.

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44 Limbe railway station was their mailing address. The group was led by J. R. Aphiri of Ndirande. NCN 4/I/I, NCN 4/I/2.

45 Affidavit of Silberrand, H., Ncheu DC, 17 06 1915. S2/68/19.Google Scholar

46 NC I/23/2. A government report on Watchtower compiled after the rising stated that Watchtower literature was circulated to Seventh Day Baptists, Church of Christ, Native Church of Christ and other ‘independent native religious teachers’. S2/68/19.

47 See Eliot, Yohan Achirwa to Lot Collection Chiwembe, 6 10. 1914. NCN 4/I/I.Google Scholar

48 Utale Convent Diary 7 Aug. 1914. A witchfinder from Mbalaze village had considerable success. We are indebted to Sister Marie-Terese, Providence Teachers' Training College, Mlanje, for allowing us to read this diary.

49 Sio/I/8/3.

50 Chilembwe, to Peters, 20 10 1908. The first meeting of the Union was on 24 Apr. 1909 and the last scheduled meeting in December that year. Sio/I/8/3.Google Scholar

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54 Extract of a letter read at Mataka's trial. Sio/I/3.

55 Sio/I/1.

56 Achirwa, E. Y. to John, Chilembwe 26 07 1914, c/o Richard Zuze, Limbe. NCN 4/I/I.Google Scholar

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58 Moggridge, to secretariat 11 12. 1914.Google Scholar

59 Mitchell, to Moggridge, 18 08. 1914. Sio/1/6.Google Scholar

60 Milthorp, to Moggridge, 19 10. 1914. The testimony of Lupiya Zalela, alias kettleo, was that Johnson Zilongola rallied his group in the attack on Ferguson and Robertson by telling them that the Europeans would attack the Africans on 25 Jan. 19 Feb. 1915. S10/1/6, S10/1/3.Google Scholar

61 Milthorp, to Moggridge, , 19 10. 1914. S10/1/6.Google Scholar

62 Revelation 20: 7–10 ‘Satan will be released from prison and … deceive all the nations in the four quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, and mobilise them for war…. They will come swarming over the entire country and beseige the camp of the saints which is the city that God loves.’ Cf. a ChiTonga Watchtower tract found at Ncheu: ‘The Europeans are Magog because they are of the tribe of Japhet and the people of Ham, the natives, are crying because the people of Magog are stealing all their possessions.’ S2/68/19.

63 Turnbull, to Moggridge, , 23 02. 1915:Google Scholar ‘Wilson Daniel Kusita, Ngoni, resided for about ten years at John Chilembwe's village. Closely identified with Chilembwe's Church. Recently a preacher of the Watchtower Society at Maganga's village, Mphezi, Liwonde sub-division and in Ncheu division.’ S10/I/6. Cardew and Turnbull, unlike Moggridge, were far more aware of differences between the churches. Kusita appears in a photograph taken c. 1912 of P.I.M. members, see Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 294.Google ScholarTurnbull, to Moggridge, , 15 02. 1915, describes Boloweza as ‘nominally’ a teacher of the Watchtower Society at the same villages as Kusita. He appears with Kusita on the 1912 photograph. S10/I/6.Google Scholar

64 Oral Testimony. Pio Ntwere, Catholic catechist at Nguludi 1910–71. Interviewed at Nguludi mission, Mar. 1971. S2/18/22.

65 Evidence given by Betty, , wife of Gordon, , Mataka in Blantyre 1 02. 1915: ‘One such occasion was Saturday January 16th 1915.’ It is not improbable that she could recall something said by Njilima only two weeks earlier. S10/I/5.Google Scholar

66 Statement made by Moffat Kuchandika, cattle kapitao at Ferguson's for eighteen years. Not a suspect. S10/1/5.

67 Moggridge, to Secretariat 24 10. 1914. ‘Chilembwe by the way, although he apparently holds the belief in a and advent due this month has nothing to do with the Church of Christ.’ Moggridge invariably confused Church of Christ with Watchtower, some measure of the penetration of the smaller Protestant sects by Watchtower literature. S10/I/6.Google Scholar

68 Statement of P.I.M. mamber, Amon, Mankaule 24 03. 1915. S10/I/3.Google Scholar

69 An open letter to his ‘Dear Brothers and Co-Labourers in the harvest’ was sent by Kamwana from Chinde as soon as he heard about the war. He informed them that Germany, Austria, Hungary and Turkey were fighting against France and England. 9 08. 1914. S10/1/8/2.

70 Daniel, chapters 10, 11 and 12.

71 Turnball, to Moggridge, 14 02. 1915:Google Scholar ‘I shall send you and Miltorp a copy of the Mission, P. I. “Christians' Roll Book during the war” written on 01 25th 1915. It contains 175 names.' It ‘was not completed as a number of important rebels are not entered’. S10/1/6.Google Scholar

72 Exodus 32: 32–3; Psalms 69: 28 and 139:16; Isaiah 4:3; Luke 10:20; Revelation 20:12.

73 Daniel 12:1–2.

74 For example Isaiah 4:3 has a very similar passage: ‘Those who are left of Zion and remain of Jerusalem shall be called holy and those left in Jerusalem noted down for survival.’

75 See appendix for details of Njirayaffa.

76 A treasury clerk wrote to Stephen Mkulichi, Chilembwe's brother-in-law, on 11 Nov. to tell him that it would be safer to send letters by runners. On 17 Nov. Milthorp wrote to Moggridge that Chilembwe was no longer sending for his letters at the Boma. S10/1/6.

77 Chilembwe was not an over-cautions personality, and surprised a number of the Ncheu pastors by his letter to the Nyasaland Times, ‘in behalf of my countrymen’. Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 234–5.Google Scholar

78 Chilembwe, to Kusita, , 22 12. 1914. NCN 4/2/I. Italics ours, but the same passage was underlined by a government source when the letter was later found at Ncheu.Google Scholar

79 The Watchtower doctrines of Pastor Taze Russell contained in a series Studies in the Scriptures, no. 4, The Battle of Armageddon (Brooklyn, 1897)Google Scholar being the most important in this context. See Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 458.Google Scholar

80 The Watchtower, 09. 1914.Google Scholar Quoted in Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 230.Google Scholar

81 Matthew, Jadali to Bennet, Gospel Siyasiya, 14 11. 1914. Trans. ChiChewa. NCN 4/3/I.Google Scholar

82 Kuista, to Achirwa, E. Y., 16 12. 1914. NCN 4/I/I.Google Scholar

83 Oral Testimony. Pio Ntwere and Ben Mononga, Alomwe, Plantation worker from Mkanga's village. Employed on Bruce estates at time of rising. He described Kaduya as ‘in charge of school affairs’. Interviewed Mar. 1969 at Chiradzulu Boma. Ntwere's and Mononga's information was confirmed by Kosamu Mpotola, Mpotola's village, Chiradzulu, in an interview at P.I.M. in Aug. 1969. Mpotola fought in the defence of the P.I.M. under Kaduya's command.

84 Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 406.Google Scholar

85 Evidence of George Massangano taken by Costley-White, E. on 26 01. 1915. S10/I/2.Google Scholar

87 Chilembwe, to Peters, , 26 03. 1914: ‘Believe I will square before I leave this country for Europe or America.’ Chilembwe was referring to his debts. S10/II8/3.Google Scholar

88 Turnbufl to Resident, Port Herald 19/2/15. The four askaris were Corporal Chidawale, Lance-Corporal Chikoko, Private Achille and Private Marekebu Njala, alias Joseph, bugler. Chidawale and Achille were Muslim Yao. NSP 1/2/2.

89 Chilembwe was certainly interested in Islam and had several books on the topic in his library–Turnbull to Moggridge, Feb. 1915. S10/I/6. Similarly two out of the three headmen detained after the rising, Majawa and Fundi, were Muslim Yao— Turnbull, to Moggridge, , 22 02. 1915. S10/1/19. and S1/46/19. Auneau, in some notes prepared for an article on the rising, recorded that several of the rebels when caught were wearing amulets as war-medicine, a typical Yao practice from the nineteenth century. L. Auneau, Brouillons Montfort Archives, Rome. These must have been Kaduya's recruits.Google Scholar

90 Blantyre Mission Diary, 25 01. 1915. The priest was Fr. Guimard.Google Scholar

91 Statement of Mrs Roach confirmed by Mrs Stanton and Mrs Livingstone. S10//2. It is interesting that in the Final Battle of Isaiah 4:1 there is the same selectivity. ‘Your men will fall by the sword, your heroes in the fight. … And seven women will fight over a single man that day.’

92 Claud Ambrose Cardew was born at Sandhurst in 1870, the third son of Sir Frederick Cardew, former governor of Sierra Leone. He joined the British South Africa Police and guarded the Limpopo drifts against Boer incursions. He arrived in Nyasaland with a letter of introduction from Rhodes for Johnston. Hickman, A. S., Men who made Rhodesia, B.S.A. Co., S. Rhodesia, 1960.Google Scholar

93 Nzama Mission Diary, 4 02. 1915: ‘Kamwamba has been given a £4 reward.’ In 01. 1915 James Kamwamba wrote to Chinyama: ‘You mean about the war, but I cannot try to do so… I cannot try to speak this to which I have heard.’ Nonetheless, Chinyama wrote again on 18 Jan. 1915 pleading with him to keep quiet, obviously too late. NCN 4/1/2.Google Scholar

94 The timing of the visit can be guessed from a number of letters. On 14 Dec. 1914 Chinyama wrote from his own village to Njirajaffa with ‘Rev. Chilembwe’ as a forwarding address. On 8 Jan. 1915 James Poya Malangui wrote to Chinyama from Ncheu district: ‘Glad to hear that you have come back all right.’ Chilembwe, to Kusita, 22 12. 1914 indicates that ‘Brother Chinyama’ is at the P.I.M. It was then approximately from 17 12. 19141917 01. 1915 that the Ncheu side of the rising was planned. NCN 4/2/I and 2.Google Scholar

95 NCN 4/2/I.

96 Jordan Njirajaffa. See Appendix.

97 David Shirt Chikakude. See Appendix.

98 Chinyama, to Brother, W. B. Cockerill, 23 01. 1915.Google Scholar Letter forwarded by Cockerill, to Moggridge, , 31 01. 1915. S10//6.Google Scholar

99 Oral Testimony. Griven Chinkasi, teacher at Nthinda at the time, and Tom KabangaNdau, chief nduna to present chief Makwangwala. Interviewed at Malondo village, Dzunje, , 06 1915. Makwangwala ‘beat them with a stick to stop them going’. These oral testimonies are confirmed in case 91 of Philpo Chinyama in the Ncheu District Magistrate's Book, National Archives, Zomba.Google Scholar

100 Makwangwala was a product of the Baptist Industrial Mission at Gowa and went to Blantyre c. 1905 for further schooling. He was known at Chiradzulu by P.I.M. members and Pio Ntwere, who had no difficulty in distinguishing him from Barton Makwangwala, a Zomba headman, involved in the rising. According to Kabanga-Ndau, Makwangwala went to Durban in 1903, hoping to go on to the coronation of Edward, but never left SouthAfrica. His trip to South Africa would coincide with that of Kamwana and provides an interesting parallel with other important politico-religious figures in the pre-war period. A Ngoni chief, he belonged to the same war division, Mvimbo, as Chinyama, whose father had been an nduna of Makwangwala's father, Kabanga-Ndau. Personal Communication, Inkosi Willard Gomani III. Makwangwala was described in a handbook for DCs produced c. 1972 as ‘of some education and requires watching’. Chiefs and Headmen of Nyasaland, Society of Malawi Library, Blantyre.

101 Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 293.Google Scholar

102 Governor Smith, G. to Governor of Mauritius, 14 08. 1976: ‘I regret I did not follow up the telegraphic communication which passed with Sir John Chancellor at the beginning of 1975 with a fuller statement of the situation. There was at the time grave reasons for believing that under the cloak of a missionary movement certain natives were preaching a seditious propaganda and I had in view the deportation of the leaders of the movement.’ Before action could be taken, the matter culminated in the rising of 23 01. 1915, led by John Chilembwe. S2/68/19.Google Scholar

103 For example, Moses Chikwanje, the government clerk who warned Mkulichi, later tried and convicted of unlawful assembly. S10/1/3. B. Pachai also records an oral testimony that Chilembwe was warned of deportation—see ‘The Nyasaland rising of 1915; an assessment of events leading to it’, unpublished paper. Chancellor College Library, University of Malawi.

104 All accounts given in interviews were strongly Biblicized, e.g. Chilembwe was for ever disappearing for periods of three days and then appearing suddenly to his followers as they prayed. ‘Major’ Kaduya, on the other hand, could be traced from his direction of the defence of the P.I.M. to his death as his machila carriers left him to flee. Interviews at P.I.M., 08. 1969 and a collection of interviews with old P.I.M. members, kindly lent to us by a Peace Corps worker, Lee Higdin, teacher at Chiradzulu Secondary School.Google Scholar

105 Rotberg, , The Rise, 87. Possibly also a Biblicization.Google Scholar

106 Moggridge, to Turnbull, , 6 08. 1915. He was with Morris Chilembwe and Stephen Mkulichi, S10/15.Google Scholar

107 Oral testimonies: Ntwere, Monoga, Mpotola.

108 Njobvualema, who had accepted a Montfort mission in 1901, was by 1914 thoroughly opposed to the Catholic missionaries. See I. Linden and J. Linden, Ekiesia Katholika, chapters II and III.

109 Njobvualema had left Kaloga on 27 Jan. The letter was taken to Ncheu by a catechist, Montfort, and read by the head catechist as the chief was illiterate. Nzama Mission Diary, 27 01. 1915 and 21 06 1915 and Oral Testimony of Maurillo Karvalo, Ngoni, Catholic catechist, interviewed at Nzama Mission, June 1969.Google Scholar

110 Nzama Mission Diary, 30 01. 1915.Google Scholar Makwangwala then put a rifle to his throat and committed suicide. Oral Testimony: Griven Chinkasi. According to Karvalo, Njobvualema was known to have been jealous of Makwangwala's education and the machila he used to travel in. An enormous brick monument to Makwangwala is to be found at Malondo village, an obvious act of defiance to the colonial authorities. See also Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 295.Google Scholar

111 Oral Testimony: Valentino Mwasika. Eye-witness and mission cook at the time, interviewed at Nguludi mission, Mar. 1970.

112 Auneau, L., ‘Report on the burning of Nguludi Mission’, handwritten MS. and a letter of 5 Feb. 1915 to La Règne de jesuspar Marie, 02. 1915, 111–15, Montfort Archives, Rome.Google Scholar

113 Oral Testimony. Mwasika and Augusto Liboti, house servant at the mission, George village, Chiradzulu. Higdin interviews. Feb. 1969.

114 Auneau, Brouillons. The machila belonged to Auneau and was later returned.

115 Rotberg, , The Rise, 90.Google Scholar

116 Shepperson, and Price, , Independent African, 300–1. The authors proffer a number of suggestions as to why the attack was made.Google Scholar

117 Fr., Brung in a letter to Message,- de Marie-Reine des Coeurs, 02. 1915.Google Scholar The Montfort magazine for their Canadian province. ‘Ce fameux John Cilembur (sic) fier, orgueilleux et quelque peu illuminé’, and Auneau, L., ‘Christenvervolging in Shire’, Onze Missionarissen (our missionaries), 05 1915. In a letter sent before the rising to the Montfort magazine of the Dutch province he wrote: ‘Under the pretext of driving out the Europeans his main aim seems to be to attack the Catholic Religion and deal it a mortal blow’, trans. Dutch.Google Scholar

118 Brung and Auneau, Ibid.

119 Ekes, P. W., Een Afrikaansch Oproermaker (An African Rebel), Meersen (c. 1925), 14, 15. This book is in the possession of Rev. Dr J. M. Schoffeleers, Likulesi Catachetical Institute, Phalombe. We are very grateful for his directing us to, and helping to obtain, Dutch material on the rising.Google Scholar

120 In an affidavit of Silberrand, H., DC, Ncheu, 29 06 1915, Government Trans. S2/68/19.Google Scholar

121 Pio Ntwere: Hostility grew up because Chilembwe thought Bruce was allowing Catholic schools on the estates. Ben Mononga: Chilembwe was annoyed at the collusion of Catholics in the burning down of P.I.M. prayer houses on the estates. Ntwere confirmed that on one occasion Chilembwe had warned Swelsen about one such incident.

122 Siyasiya, B. G. to Chikakude, D. S., 27 12. 1913. A letter sent by Siyasiya from the North Rand. NCN 4/3/I.Google Scholar

123 Mwenda, to Governor of Nyasaland, 19 02. 1926.Google Scholar S2/8/26, quoted in Rotberg, , The Rise, 69.Google Scholar Auneau gave a first date as a Nov., when an attack was due. ‘The hostilities were due to begin on the night of November 2nd 1914. We do not know what the future holds in store for us.’ Onze Missionarissen, 05 1915. This would fit Kamwana's earlier prophecies of the parousia at the end of Oct. well.Google Scholar

124 Kusita, to Achirwa, , 16 12. 1914. NCN 4/1/I.Google Scholar

125 Letter ‘E’ (Letter D was 9 jan. 1915). Kusita to Achirwa Trans. Chichewa NCN 4/1/1. Siyasiya then wrote to Zuze, 15 01. 1915, ‘Wilson Kusita has left the truth because he wants to be as those people in that place (P.I.M.)’. NCN 4/3/1.Google Scholar

126 For example, a typical Watchtower response was that of Achirwa to Kusita's defection: ‘Although we are suffering in the flesh we are rich in spirit and in hope and our true treasure is in heaven.’ Trans. ChiChewa. NCN 4/I/I.

127 Shepperson, G., ‘Nyasaland and the Millennium’ in Millennial Dreams in Action, ed. Thrupp, S. (The Hague, 1962), 144–59.Google Scholar

128 Report of the Commission of Enquiry into the Nyasaland Native Rising, Nyasaland Government Gazette, Supplement, 31 01. 1956. Zomba, paragraph 14.Google Scholar

129 ‘God alone’ and ‘About the Saviour’.

130 Report on Hollis and Churches of Christ. Undated. S1/486/19.

131 Moggridge, to Milthorp, , 14 02. 1915: ‘I think many of them were sitting on the fence’—in reference to Yao chiefs and headmen. S10/19/.Google Scholar

132 Worsley, P., The Trumpet shall sound (London, 1957), 236.Google Scholar

133 Another example comes from the Middle Ages. A mystic, Melchior Hoffman predicted that the end of the world would come in Strasbourg in 1533. He was imprisoned for life but his followers in Muntzer awaited the millennium with calm and confidence. By the beginning of 1534 a Dutch anabaptist, Jan Matthys, was able to direct their frustration at the failure of the millennium to dawn into active preparation for its inauguration by the sword. On 27 Feb. 1534 sri armed uprising expelled Lutherans and Catholics from the town of Muntazer. Cohn, , Pursuit of the Millennium, 279–86.Google Scholar