SONG OF LAWINO
By Okot P’Bitek.
INTRODUCTION
Ø Okot p'Bitek (7th
June, 1931 – 20th July 1982)
was a Ugandan poet, who achieved wide international recognition for Song of Lawino, a long poem dealing with the tribulations of a rural African wife whose husband has
taken up urban life and wishes everything to be westernised. Song of Lawino was originally
written in the Acholi language, (Wer pa Lawino) self-translated to
English, and published in 1966.
Ø It was a breakthrough work, creating an
audience among Anglophone Africans for
direct, topical poetry in English; and incorporating traditional attitudes and
thinking in an accessible yet faithful
literary vehicle. It was followed by the pendant Song of Ocol (1970),
the husband's reply. (Wikipedia)
Ø Both Song of Lawino and Song of Ocol are dramatic monologues. A dramatic monologue is like
a play in which there are no actions or movements and only one person speaks.
The poet pretends to be someone else and uses the voice of that person to tell
the story or express the ideas he is interested in.
Ø So in “Song of Lawino” we only hear what Lawino has to say, whilst in “Song of Ocol” we only hear Ocol’s voice.
Both of these poems express a set of ideas rather than telling a story. All of
the ideas that Lawino expresses are connected with her argument with Ocol which
she tells us briefly in the first few lines of section 1.
Section
One. My Husband’s Tongue Is Bitter.
After the first 33 lines of the poem
we know that Lawino and Ocol are married and are in the middle of a serious
disagreement because Ocol is educated and westernised while Lawino is not. We
know that Ocol is utterly contemptuous of Lawino’s lack of schooling and that
she is reacting to his contempt by mocking him. The rest of the section
summaries the kind of insults Ocol uses to attack Lawino, her family and clan
and all black people.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
ARROGANCE
AND PREJUDICE
Ocol treats Lawino with prejudice just
because she’s never been to school and is not westernised. That is not a reason
strong enough to make him despise her, who was once his beloved wife. This is
very common among the Africa educated elites who mistakenly think that the
western education they received elevated them higher and gave them the right to
look down upon those uneducated counterparts who did not have that privilege.
Lawino says;
He abuses me in English
And he is so arrogant.
He claims to be a modern, civilised
and progressive man who has read extensively and widely and can no longer live
with a thing like Lawino. His arrogance is not confined to his wife alone but
he extends it to the parents who are supposed to be his parents-in-law. She
laments;
My husband abuses me together
With my parents
He says terrible things about my
mother
And I am ashamed.
MENTAL
COLONISATION/CULTURAL ALIENATION
Ocol is mentally colonised and has a
slave mentality but he has no idea about it. He praises everything that is
western whether good or bad and despises everthing that is African whether good
or bad. Little does he realise that he cannot become a white man just by
falling in love with European culture.
He despises Lawino just because she
cannot play the guitar, she cannot read, cannot hear a single foreign word and
cannot count the coins. This proves that the kind of education Ocol received
was just education for alienation, subordination and creation of mental
confusion. Since his education has failed to transform him into a civilised man
nothing is expected out of that knowledge to transform his traditional society
into a modern one he wishes to see.
HYPOCRISY
Ocol professes to be a man of God but
his tongue proves the opposite. He cannot claim to be a God-fearing fellow and
all he has got to say about his people is that they are “all Kaffirs”. He says
that they do not know the ways of God and the Gospel. He portrays an open
hypocrisy because God loves the sinners and the lost but Ocol in Lawino’s
account she says.
He says we are all Kaffirs
We do not know the ways of God
We sit in deep darkness
And do not know the Gospel
He says that my mother hides the
charms
In her necklace
And that we are all sorcerers
With these words no one can see God whom Ocol claims to worship, as a
result people find it better remaining who they are, than becoming what Ocol
has become, thus no any transformation is required.
BETRAYAL
AND LOSS OF IDENTITY
Ocol has betrayed his African identity
and his fellow Black People. It is no wonder that Lawino compares him with “a hen that eats its own eggs”. He
despises the things that were and are still part of him and by so doing he loses
his identity and becomes a completely uncivilised man while he claims to be
one. Expressing this detrimental situation Lawino says:
He says Black People are Primitive
And their ways are utterly harmful
Their dances are mortal sins
They are ignorant poor and diseased.
Section
Two. The Woman With Whom I Share My Husband.
Lawino introduces us to Clementine and
to her rivalry with Clementine for Ocol’s love. She contrasts the way in which
Clementine tries to make herself attractive to Ocol by slimming and by wearing
cosmetics with a picture of traditional welcome home for a man with several
wives. They compete for his attention in the preparation of the meals and are
lively and open in front of him.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
POLYGAMY
Lawino being an African woman she knows
that it is impossible to stop men from wanting women and so she is familiar with
polygamy. So in this respect, she is not
completely jealous of Clementine in a narrow sense of desiring to have sole
possession of Ocol (though she partly claims to be a bit jealous) but she is
simply annoyed that Ocol prefers a woman who is no younger than her and can
match her in none of her womanly accomplishments.
Lawino is okay with this form of
marriage because she knows that a man’s heart is won through nice meals, a hot
bath and sour porridge when he returns home from the field or from the hunt. She
declares;
The competition for a man’s love
is fought at the cooking place
when he returns from the field
or from the hunt
you win him with a hot bath
and sour porridge.
This gives Lawino much confidence because
she sees herself better qualified in these womanly accomplishments that her
rival. A woman who would be jealous in such cases is the one who is slow, lazy,
shy, cold, weak and clumsy.
BETRAYAL
Ocol has betrayed his wife by falling
in love with another woman who has entered his marriage as a third party and has completely changed the family
atmosphere cutting loose all the strong strings that held the two together.
Ocol loves Clementine simply because she too has lost her identity and behaves
like White women. Lawino blames her husband because he has changed in the spur
of the moment and has crippled a healthy relationship they had, before the
invasion of Clementine. He claims that he is no longer in love with the old
type. Lawino laments;
But only recently
We would sit together
Holding each other
Only recently he promised
That he trusted me completely.
LOSS OF
IDENTITY
Another aspect that Okot addresses in
this section is the loss of African identity portrayed by Clementine a perfect
replica of Ocol. Like Ocol Clementine is suffering from mental colonisation and
cultural alienation. As Lawino says in the following lines;
Brother when you see
Clementine, the beautiful ones
aspires
To look like a white woman.
This is a problem that has affected most
African ladies who have come to think that European women appear more immaculate
than African women. So they struggle hard to paint their lips red, and use
other cosmetics to change their entire physical appearance to be that of a
white woman. Lawino uses strong similes to show how detrimental the problem is,
and how seriously Ocol has to reconsider his decision because what he thinks as
a beautiful woman is actually a fake and ugly creature. Consider the strong
comparison that Lawino makes here.
Her lips are red-hot
Like glowing charcoal
She resembles the wild cat
that has dipped its mouth in blood
Her mouth is like raw yaws
It looks like an open ulcer
Like the mouth of a field.
So Lawino goes out of her way to show
that the more she tries to beautify herself using the cosmetics the uglier she
looks. Lawino says;
Tina dusts powder on her face
And it looks so pale
She resembles a wizard
Getting ready for a night dance.
All these visual images create a
picture of a rather ugly than a beautiful woman.
SACRIFICIAL
RITES
In African setting Sacrifice is a
necessary rite when one wants to deal with any unpleasant situations. Lawino evokes
this point when she suggests that only sacrifice can restore her peace that has
been seriously damaged by Clementine’s sight. She says:
It is then necessary to fetch a
goat
From my mother’s brother,
The sacrifice over
The ghost-dance drum must sound
The ghost be laid
And my peace restored.
AWARENESS
AND IDENTITY
Lawino is surer of her identity and
wishes not to compete with Clementine by beautifying herself the way she does.
Being aware of her African identity she knows that there are ornaments suitable
for Black skins and ones for White skins. She says;
I do not like dusting myself with powder
The thing is good on pink skin
Because it is already pale
But when a black woman has used it
She looks as if she has dysentery.
This is one reason why Lawino would
rather remain a typical African woman than try to beautify herself to please
her husband.
SYMPATHY
AND JEALOUSY
While Lawino admits to be a bit
jealousy of Clementine, she goes a step ahead to claim that it is rather
sympathy and not jealousy that drives her to speak what she says about
Clementine. She sees Clementine as a person who deserves out pity and sympathy
because she has lost her identity unawares. Lawino says;
But when you see the beautiful woman
With whom I share my husband
You feel a little pity for her
AFRICAN TRADITION
VS EUROPEAN WAYS OF LIFE
Lawino concludes this section by a
sudden shift from her description of Clementine and shows the disparity between
Western ways and African ways of life. Lawino does not believe that the two
ways of life are equally valid for Africans. She thinks the customs of white
people are suitable for Whites. She doesn’t mind them following their own ways;
I do not understand
The ways of foreigners
But I do not despise their customs
Why should you despise yours?
For Lawino those Africans who insist on
following the ways of white people are foolish, because they misunderstand
their own ways and do not know themselves. If they try to destroy African
traditions they will fail.
The ways of your ancestors are
good
Their customs are solid and not
hollow
They are not thin not easily
breakable.
Section 3
Three. I Don’t Know The Dances Of White People.
In this section Lawino is involved
mainly in telling the white people that we too have a culture. It is concerned
with dances and is done mainly to defend African culture from the abuses heaped
on it by the Whites. Lawino mocks the old missionary idea about traditional
African dances being immoral because they are danced naked. Western dances are
immoral because they encourage people to embrace in public and to ignore the
rules of respect for relatives. They are dirty and silly because they are
danced in the smoky atmosphere of overcrowded halls where no one can be
comfortable and relaxed. Acoli dances are both more moral and more enjoyable,
since nothing is hidden and they are danced in the open air, where men and
women have rooms to let themselves go and express their pride in competition
with each other.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
AFRICAN
DANCES
Lawino defends African dances as
compared to European dances. The Whites condemned African dances because of
immorality of nakedness. Lawino doesn’t waste time in a reasoned and balanced
defence of dancing naked. She presents the openness, liveliness, and
healthiness of the Acoli dance positively without apology.
When the drums are throbbing
And the black youths
Have raised much dust
You dance with vigour and health
You dance naughtily with pride
You dance with spirit
You compete, you insult, you
provoke
You challenge all.
IMMORALITY
OF WESTERN DANCES
Lawino attacks western dances for
being immoral and disrespectful for relatives. Western dances are immoral
because people embrace in public and dance with anyone, including close
relatives. Lawino laments;
There is no respect for relatives
Girls hold their fathers
Boys hold their sisters close
They dance even with their
mothers.
Furthermore, Okot shows that Western
dances are full of immoral practices including but not limited to filthiness in
the dancing rooms, people piss, urinate, spit saliva, smoke cigar, tobacco and
cigarette not to mention the latrines that are full of human dungs of different
sizes and shapes to a point that the whole atmosphere turns out to be like a
cave and a hyena’s den.
EFFECTS OF
GLOBALIZATION
Additionally, in the poem Lawino
continues to pour attacks on white man’s dances but she adds some important
details to make her point. Not only are the dances immoral but the actions
accompanied with the dances sum up the immorality of the dances.
Nevertheless, these actions are done
by Africans who have been affected by globalization and they copy western mode
of life. Lawino pinpoints some of these practices.
ü They drink white men drinks.
ü Each man has a woman although she is not his wife.
ü They kiss each other on the cheek as white people do.
ü You kiss her open-sore lips as white people do.
ü You suck slimy saliva from each other’s mouth as white people
do.
ü They dress up as white men as if they are in white men
countries.
ü They wear dark glasses and neck-ties from Europe.
ü You smoke cigar like white men.
Section
Four. My Name Blew Like A Horn Among The Payira.
This section concentrates on ornaments
and games. Lawino remembers how beautiful and skilful she was when she was
younger and was admired by all the boys because of her singing and dancing. She
tells us angrily how Ocol now condemns her inability to dance in the western
way then turns and speaks with vigorous mockery about Ocol’s incompetence in
all Acoli games.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
BETRAYAL
Lawino expresses the sincere love that
Ocol had for her in the days of her youth. She was so famous as her name blew
like a horn among the Payira and this could be the reason why Ocol wanted to
have the most famous and attractive girl. Ocol was so bold when he was wooing
Lawino that he crawled on the floor and wept for her that he never missed a
night visiting her to her father’s homestead even after being beaten by her
brothers. Today Ocol has betrayed Lawino and all the efforts he employed to get
her. Lawino is now wondering;
My man what are you talking?
My clansmen, I ask you;
What has become of my husband?
Lawino shows that some of the reasons
that have made Ocol lose his love for her are very silly. She says;
Ocol says; he does not love me
anymore
Because I cannot play the guitar
And I do not like their stupid
dance
I despise their songs they play at
the ballroom dance
I do not follow the steps of
foreign songs
I cannot tune the radio
Then she asks “What is all these?” So
in Lawino’s thinking these are very poor and lame excuses for his claims of
loss of love for her.
PRIDE AND
IDENTITY
Lawino is aware of her African
identity and what constitutes the beauty of an African lady. She praises things
like tattoos on the breasts and below the belly button. Also the gap between
her teeth made her beauty and attractiveness complete. Although Ocol despises her
because of the same, she wonders how the woman that Ocol loves cannot even
compete with her.
My husband says
He no longer wants a woman
with a gap in her teeth
he is in love with a woman
whose teeth fill her mouth
completely
like the teeth of war-captives and
slaves
BRIDE PRICE
Bride price is another aspect of
African tradition that emerges in this section. Although Okot does not explain
in detail the expected bride price of cattle, he knows that this will not
present any difficulty to Africans to understand. In African context it is
common when one has a beautiful daughter to prepare the kraal in anticipation
of the bride price of cattle when men will come proposing to marry his daughter.
She says;
For my breasts shook
and beckoned the cattle
And they sang silently
Father prepare the kraal
Father prepare the kraal
The cattle are coming
CULTURAL
ALIENATION
Ocol has been alienated from his
culture and he is busy praising western ways and traditions. Lawino raises
another complaint against her husband in so far as the adornments, games and
musical instruments are concerned. She wonders why Ocol is abandoning his
culture and a culture of his ancestors and embracing a culture that is not his.
Look at the following attacks that she raises.
ü
Like
beggars you take up white men adornments
ü
Like slaves
or war captives you take up white men’s ways
ü
Didn’t the
Acoli have adornments?
ü
Didn’t
Black people have their ways?
ü
Like
drunken men you stagger to white men’s games and amusements
Then she continues to ask her husband
very sincere questions that need to be answered with a reasoned argument. Ocol
needs to answer why he is turning to White men’s dances and musical instruments
as if there are no such things among his own people.
Western education has made Ocol unable
to return to his own people but rather he naturally continues his slavish
imitation of the white man. The worst thing he learned from the missionaries
was despise and hatred for his own tradition which makes him seek to destroy
it.
What he doesn’t understand is that the
destruction of this will not only make the building of the new village
impossible, but also, in attempting to destroy them Ocol is destroying himself.
Section
Five. The Graceful Giraffe Cannot Become A Monkey.
This section makes fun of the pain and
efforts that African girls go through to straighten their hair. Lawino condemns
the hair straightening and the wearing of handkerchiefs as dirty and calls the
wearing of wigs as witchcraft. In the same section she describes traditional
hairstyles and adornments of the body and the way in which young men are
attracted by them.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
IDENTITY
AND AWARENESS
Africans need to be aware of their
identity. In this poem Lawino reacts to her husband’s complaint. She turns her
husband’s complaint into a praise-song for herself and her people. She does so
by showing that she is aware of her identity as a black African woman and proud
of it. Just like all other women of other races are proud of theirs Lawino sees
no need why she should abandon hers. She says;
Listen
My father comes from Payira,
My mother is a woman of Koc!
I am a true Acoli
I am not a half-caste
I am not a slave girl
AFRICAN
CULTURE vs EUROPEAN CULTURE
This small part of the poem centres
entirely on hairstyles alone. Lawino shows that all people were created
naturally beautiful and should be proud of how they are. For Lawino there are
no reasons for Africans to do their hair like white women because white women
never wish to do theirs like Africans. She uses the images ostrich plumes,
chicken feathers, crocodile skin, etc to show that every creature has a point
of departure from other creatures. No one creature should ever try to change
and become like any other. The same applies for people from different races.
TRADITIONAL
HEALING
Moreover, Lawino shows how Africans
used to deal with different social and natural phenomena. Although it might
seem as a kind of incantation, it helped to deal with unusual misfortunes. For
example she says if a ring-worm has eaten the little girl’s hair, all they do
is put hot porridge on the head, hold a dance, sing a song, and then the hair
grows again. This traditional ritual is still relevant to some societies today.
PROTEST
Lawino shows an open protest against
European culture that is invading African culture. She does all it takes to
educate African women to love and care for what they have, believe in who they
are, and what they want to do with their lives. She protests doing her hair
like white women. She says;
It is true
I cannot do my hair
As white women do
Lawino’s final words conclude her stand and protest against her husband’s
suggestions when she declares:
The long-necked and graceful giraffe
Cannot become a monkey
Let no one
Uproot the pumpkin.
DEATH RITUALS
It is common in African set up for people to do certain practices when
death has occurred, believing that it would help in purifying the homestead and
clearing the bad luck brought by the death. While in some societies they shave
their hair, in Acoli they leave their hair uncombed and remove all the beads
and necklaces as a sign of mourning. So a woman who adorns herself in the
middle of such a crisis is considered to be the killer and she just attends the
funeral to congratulate herself.
STIGMATISATION
Ocol stigmatises Lawino because of her traditional adornments. He claims
that Acoli’s adornments are Old-fashioned and unhealthy. Due to this social
stigma, Lawino wonders whether she is suffering from a “Don’t touch me disease”. She says
He says I soil his white shirt
If I touch him
My husband treats me
As if I am suffering from
The “Don’t touch me disease”
LOSS OF IDENTITY
In this part again, Lawino goes back to Clementine and discusses how she
does her hair as compared to the treatment befitting African hair. Tina likes
doing her hair as white women, even so, her efforts fail and she ends up
appearing like a strange creature. Describing her different looks, Lawino uses
strong similes picturing how awkward Tina looks.
ü
She resembles a chicken that has
fallen into a pond
ü
Her hair looks like the python’s
discarded skin
ü
It lies lifeless like sad and dying
banana leaves
ü
It remains untouched, yellowish, and
greyish like the hair of a grey monkey.
All these are images of loss of identity because Tina is no longer
identical as an African and she does not qualify to be a European. In fact she
is living in limbo and in a complete dilemma.
WITCHCRAFT/SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS
In African traditional setting, many happenings are linked to witchcraft or
superstitious beliefs. For example, the ghosts of the dead people are thought
to have interactions with the living beings and can cause some things to happen
in human life. Lawino for instance believes that the wigs that Tina puts on her
head are the hair of some dead white women who died long ago and that alone
qualifies her to be a wizard. As one
night the wig fell down, Lawino comments that it was the ghost of a dead woman
that did the pull. She says;
One night the ghost of the dead woman
Pulled away her hair
From the head of the wizard
The fact is that Lawino portrays her ignorance about the wigs technology
and overstates the matter as a way of showing her anger and discontent with
Tina’s rivalry in her marriage.
Section Six. The Mother Stone Has a Hollow Stomach
Lawino confesses her ignorance of
the various kinds of cooking and the tastelessness of tinned and frozen foods.
In the second half of the section she describes her mother’s house, the way in
which it is organised for the storing and preparation of food and the ways in
which food is eaten by her father’s family.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
LOCAL BELIEFS and IGNORANCE
Traditionally it is believed that
lightning and thunder are caused by a giant reddish-brown bird (Rain-Cock) that
is almost identical with the domestic fowl. When it opens its wings, lightning
flashes and thunder is caused when it strikes with its powerful bolt. The Acoli
have this belief and they attribute it to the actions of electricity.
The electric fire
kills people
They say
It is lightning
They say the Whiteman
has trapped
And caught the
Rain-Cock
And impresoned it
In a heavy steel
house.
This is a portrayal of Lawino and
the Acoli’s ignorance of the advancement in modern technology. Her description
of the electric stove by linking it to local beliefs on one side and her
ignorance of how to use it on the other side tell it all. She rejects the use
of the electric stove simply because she has no idea how to use it but she
attaches some empty and unfounded claims to justify her protest.
She gives complaints such as it is
not proper to cook while standing and the fact that she is afraid of touching
the deadly tongue of the Rain-Cock.
WESTERN LIFESTYLE VS AFRICAN LIFESTYLE
Lawino describes Ocol’s life as a
perfect replica of Whites lifestyle. In traditional communities food stuffs are
not refrigerated before they are cooked. Lawino asserts that White men stoves are good but
for cooking white men foods which she describes as tasteless and bloodless meat
killed years ago and left to rot, for boiling hairy chicken and for baking
bread. They can also be suitable for warming up tinned beef, fish, frogs,
snakes, peas, beans, etc.
In contrast Lawino describes the
traditional African life by showing the relevance of different aspects of
traditional life.
ü
Food storage methods. She shows different containers
suitable for storing African food stuffs for future use. They dry them up and
store them in different containers like; pots, jars, earthen dishes, grass
pocket etc.
ü
Grinding grains. This is done by using the mother
stone and her daughter.
ü
Different types of firewood. She describes the kinds
of firewood found in her mother’s kitchen and their suitability for use.
EATING ETIQUETTE/MANNERS
In traditional communities eating manners are strictly observed by all
members of the family in respect to gender and age and the Acoli are no
exception. Young boys have to sit cross-legged and the girls are required to
sit carefully on one leg and only the father sits on a stool. The eating
process itself is done by simply washing the hands and attacking the loaf from
all sides. It should also be noted that when eating only the right hand is used
even when someone is left handed.
Lawino wonders why she should sit on chairs - which she describes as trees
- like monkeys. (Which afterall itn’t bad).
She wonders why knives should be used in cutting the millet bread and eating
using the left hand is considered to be bad manners and the one who eats using
the left hand is considered to be rude.
CULTURAL CONFLICT
Lawino shows an open cultural clash between the culture of her people and
that of the Whites. She shows the differences that exist between Acoli’s
culture and European culture in almost all walks of life and she finalizes by
showing that the only way to end the supposed controversy is by retaining her
culture. She says
I do not enjoy
white men’s foods
and how they eat
how could I know?
And why should I know?
The fact that Ocol abuses African foods by calling them primitive and backward
does not move or shake her in any way. She continues to insist that African
foods have made her strong enough to dance all night long and thus she gives
her credit to it. To resolve this conflict she advises.
My husband
I do not complain
that you eat
White men’s foods
if you enjoy them
****
go ahead
shall we just
agree
to have freedom
to eat what one
likes?
This is to say Ocol should not
dictate his wills upon others but should leave the chance to exercise their own
freedom of choice.
Section Seven. There Is No Fixed Time For Breast Feeding.
This section is about time. Lawino
begins with the time of day and compares the western way of telling time by
counting the hours with the traditional way of looking at the sun and telling
from things that people usually do at that time of day. She confesses she
cannot tell the time of the day in western way.
In the middle of the section she says
that Ocol accuses her for wasting time but she shows how Ocol’s determination
not to waste time leads him into much more serious kinds of bad behaviour. He
treats his visitors, her and his own children extremely rudely because he
cannot spare time for them. She tells Ocol that it is the western way of
dividing time up mathematically into hours and minutes that has made him behave
in that way because he now thinks of time as something that can be used up and
finished. Because of his concern to be punctual, Ocol is always in a hurry and
is restless and unhappy.
At the end of the section she talks
about months, seasons and years. She compares the way in which Europeans divide
years into months and seasons with the traditional Acoli names for seasons
which come from the events which usually happen at that particular time of the
year. She says she cannot understand the western ways of numbering years from
the one event of the birth of Christ.
For the Acoli any important event
which affected the whole clan community, like a big famine, can be linked with
events that happened in the family at the same time. Every mother knows whether
her son was born before or after the famine or the outbreak of the smallpox.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
TIME TELLING
Another idea that Lawino evokes is
the difference in time telling between the Acoli and White men. The western way
of telling time is by splitting it into hours, minutes and seconds while the
Acoli look at the position of the sun, and the cockcrow and each activity is
associated with that time of the day as the sun gets hotter and hotter. Lawino
say;
I must first look
at the sun
The cock must
crow
To remind me
Towards the end of the section she
wonders why the Europeans divide time into months, seasons and years. She
compares the way in which Europeans divide years into months and seasons with
the traditional Acoli names for seasons which come from the events which
usually happen at that particular time of the year. She says she cannot
understand the western ways of numbering years from the one event of the birth
of Christ. For the Acoli any important event which affected the whole clan
community, like a big famine, can be linked with events that happened in the
family at the same time. She says;
In the wisdom of
the Acoli
Time is not
stupidly split up
Into seconds and
minutes
She goes on to ridicule western
way of telling time by saying;
It does not flow
Like beer in a
pot
That is sucked
Until it is
finished.
SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEFS
Lawino introduces another aspect
of African traditional beliefs which is witchcraft. There are cases of wizards
who perform their witchcraft at night while others are asleep. She says;
No one moves at
midnight
Except wizards
covered in ashes
Dancing stark
naked
Armed with
disembowelled frogs
And dead lizards
ECONOMY
Furthermore, Lawino explains the
economic activities done by her people which also relate to the time of the
day. She says for instance that when the sun has cooled off it is when
trapping, hunting, fishing, carving wooden dishes, weaving and repairing the
roofs of granaries take place. Other economic activities mentioned are farming
and pastoralism.
MORAL
CORRUPTION/IMMORALITY
Lawino raises another
controversial issue which this time is not against the Whites as she’s been
doing but she directs her attach towards some bad-mannered African ladies.
While some daughters who have good manners help their mothers with the domestic
chores and make their mothers proud, those who are bad-mannered are described
as morally corrupt and loose. These are the ones who sleep with men even in the
grass and never care about helping their mothers. Lawino points a finger at
them when she says;
But if your
daughter
Has no manners
If she is so
loose
That men sleep
with her
Even in the grass
Then if you are
ill
You must go to
the well
To draw water
FAMILY CONFLICT
The issue of punctuality and time
management has been a great cause of family conflict in Ocol’s family. Ocol
insists on punctuality and time management and prescribes the exact time he
should have particular services, but more often than not he gets disappointed
because Lawino does not know how to tell time in western ways using the modern
clock. For Ocol time is money and the fact that Lawino wastes time it causes
frequent family quarrels. She says
He quarrels
Because he says
I am not punctual
Another source of this family
conflict is the fact that Ocol is so inconsiderate to a point that when his
baby cries he terms it as a disturbance while to Lawino the cry of a baby is a
sweeter music.
CULTURAL ALIENATION
Ocol has alienated himself from
his people although he is living in their midst. Lawino shows how Ocol’s
determination not to waste time leads him into much more serious kinds of bad
behaviour. He treats his visitors, her and his own children extremely rudely
because he cannot spare time for them. She tells Ocol that it is the western
way of dividing time up mathematically into hours and minutes that has made him
behave in that way because he now thinks of time as something that can be used
up and finished. Because of his concern to be punctual, Ocol is always in a
hurry and is restless and unhappy. There is no wonder that Lawino describes
this situation by saying that time has become Ocol’s master and husband. Lawino
laments;
And when visitors
have arrived
My husband’s face
darkens
He never asks you
in
And for greeting
He says
What can I do for
you?
This is completely contrary to the
African philosophy of “Ubuntu” which makes them never mind wasting a few
minutes entertaining and chatting with visitors.
RELIGION
Lawino contrasts the two religious
beliefs showing the significance of the traditional religion and the
irrelevance of Western religion. She criticizes the Christians (Protestants and
Catholics) who have appointed special days they call Sabbaths on which they
shout meaninglessly as if they are suffering from headache. Then she shows how
relevant the traditional religion of the Acoli is especially when dealing with
misfortunes. She says;
When misfortune
hits the
Homestead
The clansmen
gather
And offer
sacrifice
To the ancestors
In this same way they deal with
other calamities like drought or lack of rain. Although it may seem like it
works for sometimes, it should be understood that these calamities are caused
by global climatic changes and the rains come with seasons. So their practices
cannot be scientifically proved to have helped them because they are just based
on gullibility and blind faith.
TABOOS
Lawino introduces one of the
serious taboos in their culture in as much as family planning is concerned. It
is a serious taboo for a woman to turn her back to her husband a sign that can
be translated as she is not ready to make love with him. This can only be
permitted when the baby is toothless for it is believed that if the couples
make love when the baby is still toothless, then it becomes sickly, thin, and
the stomach swells as that of a pregnant woman.
BRIDE PRICE.
Bride price though out-dated it
was used to instil the spirit of responsibility among the African youths. Those
who had their sisters became lazy since they took it for granted that when
their sisters got married they would also get the bride wealth to pay for their
future wives. Those who had no sisters on the other hand had to work hard and
struggle to raise the bride price required to pay for their future wives.
Lawino says;
Others go off to
Pajule
To look for bride
wealth
For if you have
no sister
Then kill an
elephant
You sell the
teeth
And marry a wife.
Section Eight. I Am Ignorant Of the Good Word in the Clean Book
It is concerned with the way
missionary teachers treated their African converts. Lawino uses the experience
of her sister Erina and herself to try to show that she thinks the missionaries
did wrong. She tells us that when the Protestants wanted to win converts they
made Africans work like servants for them whilst they themselves did none of
the work in their own houses and did not even share their food with the girls
they wanted to convert.
The description of the Catholic
Evening Speakers’ Class illustrates the mistake they did in the classroom. The
missionary teachers did not understand the big gap between their ideas and
traditional way of thinking. They tried to impose their ideas on the pupils’
minds by rote-learning: the repetition by the pupils of the words and phrases
they did not understand until they knew them by heart.
Lawino compares this kind of
missionary education with traditional Acoli education through the playing of
games and singing of songs which were “relevant and meaningful”. Lawino thinks
the Christian attitude to sexual desire is pointless and hypocritical. She
illustrates this hypocrisy by the tale of the teacher who followed her to the
dance and the padre who steals glances at girls’ breasts during confessions.
She insists that it is unhealthy to
separate young girls and young boys from one another. Her criticism of the
meaningless names that the missionaries made their converts assume is similar
to her criticism of the rote-learning in missionary teaching.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
HYPOCRISY
Ø
This seems to be a central theme in this section. Lawino describes the kind
of hypocrisy portrayed by the missionary teachers by telling us that when the
Protestants wanted to win converts they made Africans (especially young girls)
work like servants for them whilst they themselves did none of the work in
their own houses and did not even share their food with the girls they wanted
to convert. When it was the time for eating they sent them away to play games
and the young girls had to gather wild sweet potatoes and eat them.
Ø
Another form of hypocrisy is portrayed by the priests who come to conduct
the mass while drunk contrary to the Christian doctrine.
Ø
Lawino thinks the Christian attitude to sexual desire is pointless and
hypocritical. She illustrates this hypocrisy by the tale of the teacher who
followed her to the dance and the padres who are not allowed to marry but they
steal glances at girls’ breasts during confessions. She insists that it is
unhealthy to separate young girls and young boys from one another while the
same priests start hunting for the girls. She says;
The teacher, still drunk
He too is coming
To hunt for girls.
MENTAL COLONIZATION
Africans were mentally colonized
when they accepted that their names are sinful, primitive and did not sound
good. As a result they had to change their names and acquire Western names
which were thought to be holy. Lawino criticises the meaningless names that the
missionaries made their converts assume because the process of acquiring a new
name was by itself so laborious and cumbersome. At the end, one was colonized
both physically and mentally. Ocol himself was christened as Milchizedeck
Gregory and insists to be called by his Christian name. He condemns African
names saying;
Pagan names, he
says
Belong to sinners
Who will burn
In the
everlasting fires.
EXPLOITATION
The protestant teachers and
Catholic priests made the people work for them by telling them that it is the
only way to acquire a Christian name. They made their converts work for them
while they themselves did none of the works. The young girls had to draw water,
grind millet and simsim, hoe their field, split firewood, cut grass for
thatching and for starting fires. They had to smear their floors and harvest
their crops. This is the highest level of exploitation that was wrapped by the
trick of acquiring a Christian name.
Section Nine. From the mouth of which river?
Lawino continues with the
criticism of the missionary teachers by failing to answer the questions she
asks them. She also criticises the Christian doctrine of Creation and the
Virgin Birth. She uses a long image of a potter moulding things with clay and
asks a series of questions about the source of clay and how the potter can
begin moulding things before the clay has been created.
Through this image she asks a very
difficult question “who created the
creator?” At the end of the
section she also briefly asks how the Virgin Birth could happen. Neither her
teachers nor her husband Ocol even try to answer her questions and Lawino
wonders if they really know the answers.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
HYPNOTISM
One of the methods used to introduce colonial mentality in the
minds of Africans and soften their minds to accept colonialism without much
opposition was religion. This has succeeded even now as most religious leaders
tend to make their followers recite meaningless phrases they do not understand.
Lawino shows that the teachers in the evening classes hated people who
portrayed a picture of awareness and started questioning some of the church
practices and beliefs that seemed controversial. Lawino is one of the victims
who suffered from the hatred of the teachers because she asked questions that
seemed to have no answers from both her husband and his missionary teachers
(the padres and the nuns). She says;
But the teachers of religion
Hate questions
She wonders why these missionaries hate questions and thinks
that maybe they to have no answers. She laments;
Whether they do it purposely
Whether they themselves
Have no answers
I do not know
But I know
They hate questions.
EXPLOITATION
The religious leaders have become perfect replicas of their
colonial predecessors. They shout meaningless phrases that their followers
don’t even understand but they end up collecting gifts from the worshippers.
They use the bible and religion as tools to legalise their exploitation by
telling the worshippers,
Who sows a little
Will reap a little
Who sows much
Will reap much
Then to hide their really identity and their exploitative
mission they quickly add;
It is not by force
The Hunchback thanks those
Who give with soft hearts.
This has made most religious leaders of the modern religious
groups to get richer and richer while their followers get poorer and poorer.
CONFLICT
In Catholicism those who ask questions regarding certain
religious practices are termed as stubborn. For the same reason Lawino is in
conflict with her husband, the padres and the nuns because she asks them
questions they cannot answer. They just want her to follow and accept their
faith without questioning just as they did without asking themselves those
critical questions. Lawino suffers both intrapersonal conflicts and personal
conflicts. In the former she suffers sleepless nights because the people who
are supposed to answer the questions that trouble her mind have no answers and
are not even willing to try. They just end up quarrelling with her as she says;
The teachers of
The evening Speakers Class
Hate questions
If you go to the padre
You provoke a fight.
The same happens when you go to the nun who becomes fierce
like a wounded buffalo. They discourage her by saying that asking too many
questions befits only Martin Luther and the stupid stubborn Protestants.
HYPOCRISY AND
ARROGANCE
In this chapter we see another aspect of Ocol’s arrogance and
hypocrisy. Lawino asks questions in a genuine mood of enquiry. She does not ask
silly questions because the problem of who created the creator, the entire
theory of creation and the mysteries of the virgin birth of Christ are problems
which better educated people have found to be a barrier to Christian faith. So
an educated Christian like Ocol ought to have considered them. His casual
refusal to discuss them simply because Lawino is not educated is a lame excuse.
If he were really interested in knowledge he would be willing to discuss these
things but Lawino doesn’t think he is really interested in knowledge. She
wishes she had someone else to ask.
Someone who has genuinely
Read deeply and widely
And not someone like my husband
Whose preoccupation
Is to boast in the market place. (p.90)
So Ocol is using his arrogance to claim the qualities that he
actually doesn’t possess. He says that Acoli language is primitive and cannot
express his deep wisdom and that he cannot discuss anything with uneducated
person like Lawino but he needs another University educated man or woman. But
the fact is, his education is worthless if he cannot answer the questions from
uneducated person.
TRADITIONAL
MARRIAGE
In Acoli it is possible for a girl to visit the man whom she
is betrothed to in his bachelor’s hut so as to try his manhood before marriage.
Lawino makes this point to contrast what she was taught about the virgin birth,
that Mary did not know any man when she gave birth to Jesus while she was
betrothed to Joseph. It doesn’t make sense to her, how this virgin birth took
place. She says;
Among our people
When a girl has
Accepted a man’s proposal
She gives a token
And then she visits him
In his bachelor’s hut
To try his manhood (p.90)
Section Ten. The Last Safari to Pagak.
Lawino tells us that Ocol totally
condemns all Acoli medicines. She says that as with European medicines, some
Acoli medicines work and some do not. She reports with unbelieving horror
Ocol’s rudeness about her lack of hygiene in his house and the dirtiness of the
medicine man’s cure. She compares her belief in certain kinds of spirits and in
charms with Ocol’s belief in rosaries, angels and the power of prayer. Lawino
confesses her ignorance of white man’s medicine and then gives an account of
Acoli ways of dealing with disease and misfortunes in which she includes both
medicine and religious practices. She ends the section by insisting that no
medicine or religion has the power to save a man’s life when his time to die
has come.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
STIGMATIZATION
We are given further examples of
Ocol’s intolerance. Ocol despises his own relatives and wouldn’t let them into
his house because he says they will make it dirty or give diseases to his
children. (p.91) He portrays an open stigmatization and this is seen in the
following lines;
He says
These diseases
will be
Transmitted to
the children.
He has warned me
That my father’s
sister
Has lice in her
hair
And jiggers in
her feet
She should not
visit me.
SELFISHNESS
Ocol is partly haunted by the
spirit of selfishness, one must admit. Although he gives many excuses why both
his relatives and Lawino’s should not visit him, a careful examination reveals
that he has inherited the selfishness of his missionary teachers. Africans have
a long standing history of hospitality to both relatives and strangers. Ocol
has betrayed the “Ubuntu” philosophy and he does not welcome visitors even when
the weather does not permit them to leave. Lawino says;
And when the
storm is threatening
He says
There are no beds
In his house
For villagers.
He claims that they will soil his
bed sheets and ruin his nicely polished floor. He segregates his own mother and
locks the door for her. He needs one to write him a letter before they pay a
visit to his house. He even prohibits his children from visiting their
grandmother. Only a selfish person can justify these practices and find them
genuine.
TRADITIONAL RELIGION VS CHRISTIANITY
Lawino goes back
to her comparison and contrast between Christian faith as it is represented by
Ocol against the Acoli traditional religion. Ocol condemns all traditional
medicines although he admits that they are sometimes accidentally effective.
He condemns all
the traditional beliefs because he is an educated man and a Christian. To him
traditional religious beliefs are no more than foolish superstitions. (p.92) He
wants to wipe away all the traditional religious beliefs so he prohibits Lawino
never to visit the diviner priest.
For many years
now since independence there has been a great deal of reassessment of the
missionaries’ view of African traditional beliefs by African Christians. Many
African Christians now see much that is of value in these beliefs.
Ø
Lawino
does not understand why Ocol prohibits her to wear the charms while he, himself
wears the crucifix and his daughters wear rosaries.
Ø
Lawino
doesn’t understand why she should not pray to their ancestors while Ocol prays
to the ancestors of White men like Joseph, Petero and Luka.
Ø
She
wonders why Ocol wants to cut the sacred tree – Okango while he kneels before
the stone picture of Joseph.
All these claims make it difficult for Lawino to see the
difference between Western religious beliefs and that of Africans and sees no
reason whatsoever why Ocol should elevate the Western religion and treat it as
superior to African beliefs.
Additionally, in
traditional African setting when there are some sorts of misfortunes the
sacrifice is done to the ancestors who are believed to be angry because they
are hungry, thirsty and neglected. Meat, blood and beer are exchanged then the
living people pray to the dead to cleanse the homestead and they pray;
The troubles in
the homestead
Let the setting
sun
Go down with them
By so doing they
believe things resume to normal, but Ocol considers all these as paganism and
superstition and accuses Lawino of mixing up matters of health with
superstition.
AFRICAN INDEGENEOUS EDUCATION VS WESTERN EDUCATION
Lawino is proud
of African Indigenous education and what it has been able to do and contrasts
it with western education. Traditionally one doesn’t need to have formal
education to identify a sick child. It can easily be done by simply looking at
his watering nose, the hair of the body stands up, his lips are parched,
hearing the cry and the worms complaining from his stomach, if he has lost the
appetite and he is aggressive but tired and weak. When his body temperature is
high but he sits by the fire in the midday of the hot afternoon, all these must
help one to know that the child is sick. All that is done is to try various
Acoli herbs which cure different forms of diseases.
On the contrary
she says that the western educated doctors must use the thermometer (the White
man’s glass rod) and read the names of diseases in a book to determine the
malady.
SUPERSTITION AND WITCHCRAFT
There are some
cases of illness that in African context are believed to have been caused by
someone who has an ill-intention. Lawino says that when there is a persistent
fever and some diseases befalling her child frequently then it is not for
nothing there is someone working behind the scenes and causing the malady. All
that is done is to call the diviner priest who will divine and find out the
killer or the jealousy woman who was behind it.
Such beliefs are
very dangerous and ineffective as they may later lead to false speculations
thus causing unnecessary conflicts among close relatives. They believe that
even a close relative can visit a shadow
trapper and capture the child’s shadow. (p.97)
Another aspect of
superstition is described as death in the bundle. It is believed that when a
woman has brought death in a bundle with which to kill people and it finds that
the people it was supposed to kill are innocent it bounces back and destroys
the bringer. It refuses all types of sacrifices and goes to kill the children,
husband, relatives and finally the bringer herself. In this case no white man
medicine can stop it.
Lawino shows a
series of misfortunes which neither African medicine nor European medicine can
be able to stop. She admits that;
It’s true
White man’s
medicines are strong
But Acoli
medicines are
Also strong.
She also makes another point that
all these classes of medicine are only effective when someone’s time for dying
has not yet come.
CURSE AND FATE
Some misfortunes
are attributed either to fate or to curse. For example Lawino believes that
some things like; snake bite, spear of the enemy, lightning, blunt buffalo
horn, that may face one man when in a group of others all of them come by fate.
She describes them as “bitter fruits
grown on the tree of fate.” ( p.98)
On the other hand
she believes that curse can also work to cause misfortunes to human lives. The
following are examples of cases in which curse can perfectly be responsible;
Ø
If your uncle curses you, you piss in bed until you give him a white cock.
Ø
If your mother lifts her breasts towards you and asks, “Did you suck this?”
or if your father lifts his penis towards you, know that you are in deep
trouble.
Ø
It is a taboo to wrestle with your father or to look down on your mother.
Ø
It is a taboo to abuse your mother.
Ø
Even when your father mistreats you, you simply say, “Thank you” and never
answer back.
Ø
A mother’s anger is bitter and it is believed to cause one lose his manhood
and to recover it a got must be slaughtered then the mother and her brother
must spit blessings in your hand. That is the only way to regain the lost manhood. No medicine in the
hospital can cure a mother’s curse, uncle’s or father’s.
MORTALITY.
Lawino raises a
point worthy of consideration about the subject of death. She deals with the
ultimate finality of humanity and shows different scenarios in which people may
die regardless of whether there are European or African medicines. In some
extreme cases both the two kinds of medicine fail dramatically.
Ø
It can be a strike by a black mamba
Ø
It can be a battle arrow
Ø
It can be a lightning
Ø
It can be a wounded buffalo in a hunt
All these
misfortunes have a root cause but when someone’s day has come, no African
medicine, no European medicine, no crucifixes, no rosaries, no toes of edible
rats, no horns of the rhinoceros can block the path. In a way she is trying to
educate Ocol that he has nothing to brag about in European medicines and their
advanced hospitals because there is one limitation that both Blacks and Whites
face in common; - dealing with the ultimate finality of human beings. Both of
them die when the last safari to Pagak has come.
Section Eleven. The Buffalo Of Poverty Knock The People Down.
The section is about the effects of
the new kind of politics which came to African countries just before
independence. Ocol and his brother are local leaders of the two main political
parties in Uganda (CP and DP) and Lawino attacks both of them because whilst
they talk about peace and unity, they bring nothing but conflict and disunity
even within the family.
She begins by describing the strange
activities of Ocol, his brother and their followers. They are busy all day long, moving from one
meeting to another where they shout foreign words which Lawino does not
understand. They wear strange clothes to
show which political party they belong to and make violent and silly threats
against each other. She says they are greedy for the power and wealth which you
can get if you are willing to tell a lot of lies and the effect of this is to
destroy those who are reluctant to cheat people.
Next, she describes one of
Ocol’s political speeches. Everybody goes to it to show off to others and not
to listen to Ocol. She describes Ocol’s fawning behaviour in his attempt to
please the listeners of his party and uses this to show that even within the
parties the politicians are fighting each other.
The biggest division brought by
politicians is that between the new group of very rich and the rest of the
people who are as poor as they were under the colonial government. Although the
politicians say they are fighting poverty and ignorance they are making this gap
larger than smaller.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
UNITY AND DISUNITY
Ocol says in his
speeches that they want to bring national unity that will unite all the tribes
of Uganda; the Acoli, Lango, Madi, Lugbara, Alur, Iteso, Baganda, and Bunyoro.
They should be united together and live in peace. If you look very closely his
political movements don’t really seem to be geared at bringing about unity, be
it local or national. Most of his time as a politician is taken up with
condemning other people. He says that the Congress Party is against all the Catholics
and they want to steal people’s properties if elected (communism). He says
The congress
party
Will remove all
the Catholics
From their jobs
And they will
take away
All the land and schools
And will take
people’s wives
And goats and
chickens and
Bicycles
And all will
become the property
of the congress
people
Ocol’s brother
who belongs to the Congress Party also condemns the Democratic Party that it
belongs to the Padres, fools and block heads and they receive their orders from
the Italian Fathers. He claims that the DP will sell the land to the poor White
men who came to their country.
This political
division confuses Lawino completely when she comes to think that the people who
are talking about unity are the ones who are dividing the society further
apart. She doesn’t see how the idea of unity will be achieved while the two
parties have failed to join their parties with a common aim. Both are talking
about bringing unity and independence but they are fighting separately with
great enmity against each other as shown in these lines;
Ocol says
They want Uhuru
His brother says
They want uhuru
and peace
Both of them say
They fight ignorance
and disease (p.111)
It appears to
Lawino that it is poverty that drives them into power and not unity and
independence as they claim.
HYPOCRISY
It is very common
among politicians to say one thing and practice completely the opposite. Ocol’s
political activities have brought destructive results on his own family as he
hates his own brother who is in the Congress Party. Their former closeness and
brotherhood have been replaced by enmity and struggle for power and political
positions. He even accuses his brother that he wants to murder him. So Ocol and
his brother are showing an open hypocrisy when they say they will unite all the
tribes of Uganda while they have failed to unity their parties which seem to
have a common mission.
Moreover, Ocol
prohibits Lawino to talk to his brother whom according to their tradition, if
Ocol dies, he has the right to inherit her as his wife. His hypocrisy if
further shown by the way he condemns the white people and says that they should
return to their home countries because they have brought slave conditions in
the country and they usually tell lies.
Ocol forgets that
his constant quarrels with his wife are caused by the way he praises white men
ways of life and the way he despises his own. He is a hypocritical politician
who doesn’t understand what he says or does. He has been mentally enslaved by
the same white men, whom he praises and condemns at the same time. Like his
white men, he too tells lies.
WIDOW INHERITANCE
Lawino points out
that in their tradition if a brother dies, then, the young brother has the
right to inherit his brother’s properties including his wife and children.
Lawino wonders why Ocol insults and prohibits her to talk and joke with a man
who may one day become her husband when he dies. Lawino says;
But I know that
if Ocol dies
His mother’s son,
whom he now hates so much
Will inherit all
Ocol’s properties
The goats, the
chicken and the bicycles
And I will become
his wife
And my children
will become his children.
CONFLICTS
Intrapersonal conflict.
Lawino suffers from intrapersonal
conflict because of several reasons;
Ø
She wonders how Ocol and his brother will manage to bring unity and peace
out of the insults they heap on each other.
Ø
She doesn’t understand most of their political policies like Communism, and
how these people will take properties from the people. She wonders that Ocol
calls the white people poor and says they will buy the land from the Congress
Party. It seems to her like a contradiction since a poor person cannot afford
to buy the land.
Political
conflict
Ocol and his brother belong to two
different political parties Democratic Party and Congress Party respectively.
Politics has destroyed the unity of the home and has brought misery to every
member of it. Ocol’s political activities have only created new conflicts
without settling the old ones. The main source of this conflict is the material
benefit that might partially compensate for these new conflicts. In their
political activities you will never think of the fact that they slept in the
same womb. Ocol insults his brother in one meeting and his brother does the
same in the other. Lawino fails to see the point how these two will succeed to
unite the country while they themselves are not at peace. Their political
conflicts seem to hold much promise to only few, those who are strong; Lawino
says
If your chest
Is small, bony and weak
They push you off (p. 107)
Lawino believes it is the money
and competition for position that drives the political leaders to hate one
another and quarrel on the platforms.
Family conflicts.
Politics has
brought a serious gap in Ocol’s family and has become one of the major sources
of conflict in the family. Ocol and his brother are not in good terms as though
they did not share the womb.
Ø
Ocol does not enter his brother’s house.
Ø
He hates his brother and calls him a liar and a fool
Ø
He has sternly warned Lawino never to joke with him because the strong gum
of the joke will reconnect the snapped string of brotherhood.
Ø
He accuses his brother that he wants to kill him.
Ø
Ocol’s brother also insults Ocol and his followers that they are fools.
So Lawino wonders whether this is what the unity, peace and Uhuru mean.
This family quarrel confuses her so much that she says:
Others carry pieces of stones
On their necks
And call them heads.
CLASSES
This is one of the biggest divisions brought by the
political activities which followed uhuru. The newly attained independence has
ever since produced a class of rich people who got the political positions and
enjoyed the favours that came with it and a class of poor people whose life has
remained the same as in colonial time. Lawino shows this state of hopelessness
among the members of the poor class;
And those who have fallen into things
Throw themselves into soft beds
But the hip bones of the voters
Grow painful, sleeping on the same earth
They slept before Uhuru (p. 110)
So the politicians are not doing anything to help their
voters improve their standard of living but they are busy fighting one another.
DISILLUSION
Most of the political
movements and the new independence have not yet been able to fulfil the
independence promises. Instead of uniting the people together, the political
activities have divided the people into hostile social strata to a point that
one is treated in respect to the political party in which they belong to.
Lawino says that those who are inside eat thick honey and ghee and butter while
those in the countryside die with the smell. She says;
They re-eat the
bones
That were thrown
away
For the dogs
This further
disappointment is reflected in the stanza that follows where she says that the
class of those who have fallen into things throw themselves into comfortable
beds while the poor voters sleep on the same floor they slept before Uhuru.
What a great disappointment!
BETRAYAL
Lawino discusses another behaviour
common to politicians. They are professional traitors. When the
colonial governments realised that they could not stop East African Countries
from becoming independent, they began to give a small number of Africans an
opportunity for higher education in Britain. They wanted to train people to
understand the political system of the colonial government so that they would
be able to replace the white men in that system. In that way the change in the
time of independence would be very small because there would be no change in
the way the country was organised except the change of flag and the change from
white to black faces in the important political positions.
As soon as they
get their political positions and the supposed benefits, they become rare in
the public as she says “They hibernate
and stay away and eat” (p.110). They usually return to the countryside for
the next election. They are not concerned about solving the problems of their
citizens since people are suffering from poverty, diseases, and ignorance. The
leaders have betrayed the people because instead of fighting against these
enemies they are fighting against one another. Lawino says;
And while the
pythons of sickness
Swallow the
children
And the buffaloes
of poverty
Knock the people
down
And ignorance
stands there
Like an elephant
The war leaders
Are tightly
locked in bloody feuds
Eating each
other’s liver
Lawino sees that
if they had fought poverty, ignorance and disease the way they fight each
other, these enemies would have been greatly reduced by now.
In most African countries that is
what happened when independence came. The people who had been educated in
Britain (like Ocol) became owners of large farms or directors of marketing
boards or ministers in government. They kept the same colonial system that paid
them well while exploited the poor peasants and workers. That’s why the poet
says;
And those who have
Fallen into things
Throw themselves into soft beds
But the hip bones of the voters
Grow painful
Sleeping On the same earth
They slept
Before Uhuru.
The
buffalo of poverty continues to knock the people down; the python of sickness
continues to swallow the children and the elephant of ignorance stands there
just as it was before independence.
Section Twelve. My Husband’s House Is a Dark Forest of Books.
In this section Lawino finishes
her argument against Ocol by summarising what has happened to him to make him
behave so badly to her and to his own people. In all the books he has read he
has learnt only to blindly do what the Whiteman thinks is right like a dog
obeying his master. Because he is now like a dog or a woman trying to please
her husband and he has lost his own manly qualities and therefore at the same
time lost Lawino’s respect.
EFFECTS OF
WESTERN EDUCATION
In most cases the poem shows the
negative effects colonial education has had on its African recipients. This
idea is the most important in the whole of Song
of Lawino and in fact Song of Ocol.
Ocol was trained for the leadership of an African nation by the missionaries.
In fact they made him completely unfit to lead the nation. He has read many
books but the books have not helped him. Instead he has;
lost his head
in the forest of books (p.113)
They took him away from the Acoli
dances where he could have learned the African answers to the “fundamental
questions” to the classroom where he only learnt to repeat words and phrases he
didn’t understand. Ocol and other educated Africans were greatly affected by
the kind of education they received and alienated them from their people. Lawino
says:
For all our young men
Were finished in the forest
Their manhood was finished
In the class-rooms
Their testicles
Were smashed
With large books!
Here Lawino is
mocking all those Ocols who are carrying the habit of slavish imitation of the
white men that they learnt in the Mission School into every sphere of their
lives in the new nations of Africa.
LOSS OF IDENTITY.
The missionaries took Ocol away
from the ways of his own people into the foreign forest of books in which he
was lost. For the generation that will replace Ocol and his friends as leaders
of Africa Okot’s message is very clear: to keep their self-respect and the
respect of those they will lead. They must treat these people with the dignity (politely and
respectfully) traditionally due to them and try and learn from them the way in
which Africa should be rebuilt. Although Lawino uses a strong language when
addressing the situation of her husband, needless to say that is perfectly what
Ocol has become. He still has the roles
of a husband as the head of a household but he is no longer able to perform
them. Lawino says;
You may not feel so
But you behave like
a dog of the white man!
A good dog pleases its master!
Lawino sympathises with Ocol because
both his father and grandfather were respected members of the community but
they have left the ashes behind.
Lawino shows a sense of pity to
Ocol because the Whiteman is his ultimate master, acting on him through his
continuing cultural and economic influences. He obeys his master’s call and is
pleased only by things that belong to his master thus he has lost his identity
and he lives on borrowed things including his ideas because he owns nothing.
She says;
Aaa! A certain man
Has no millet field
He lives on borrowed foods
He borrows the clothes he wears
And the ideas in his head
And his actions and behaviour
Are to please somebody else!
Like a woman trying to please her
husband
My husband has become a
woman.(p.116)
Section Thirteen. Let Them Prepare
the Malakwang Dish
In this chapter
Lawino shows that there are still some hopes for Ocol. Ocol only needs
treatments to rid him of this disease. To win Ocol back he must first accept
traditional medicine for all his ailments. First Lawino recommends physical
remedies since Ocol’s throat is blocked by the shame that has been chocking him
for so long. It must be cleaned out by traditional foods and herbs. His ears
are blocked by the things he has heard from the priests and teachers. They must
be cleaned. His eyes behind his dark glasses are blind to the things of his
people. They must be opened. His tongue is dirty with the continuous flow of
insults he has been pouring on his people. It must be cleaned.
When he has done all
that, he must go humbly back to the elders and his mother to get the blessings
of his dead ancestors. When he has done that she is sure he will want her and
their relationship will come alive again.
THEMATIC
ANALYSIS
CONSCIETISATION
The worst thing Ocol learned from the missionaries was
despising and hatred for his own tradition which makes him seek to destroy it. What
he doesn’t understand is that the destruction of this will not only make the
building of the new village impossible, but also, in attempting to destroy them
Ocol is destroying himself.
Ocol’s biggest mistake is the way in which he failed to
realize how much he depended on his cultural roots. When he thought Acoli
culture was shallow he was wrong. Lawino tells us that its “roots reach deeper into the soil” in
trying to destroy that culture through his attack to Lawino, his own religious
tradition and his family, he nearly destroyed himself.
When you
took the axe
And threatened to cut the Okango
That grows on the ancestral shrine
You were threatening
To cut yourself loose
To be tossed by the winds
This way and that way
Lawino tries to conscietise Ocol
to come back to his senses an see how terribly European culture has affected
him.
HOMECOMING
AND RECONCILIATION
For the real cure, Ocol needs to
beg the forgiveness of all those he insulted but he must also seek the
blessings of the elders and beg forgiveness from the ancestors because Lawino
says;
When you insulted me
Saying
I was a mere village girl
You were insulting your grandfathers
And grandmothers. (p.119)
If he does all the things as
directed he will become a man again and the ancestors will help him recover.
Lawino’s final concern is her
family situation. She wants the life to go back to normal in the household
again so that they may live united. She is okay with Clementine to stay but she
suggests some adjustments that must be done to her as well,
Buy clothes for the woman
With whom I share you
Buy beads for her, and
Perfume
And shoes and necklaces and
Ear-rings! (p.120)
Lawino is sure that things will
come to normal if Ocol’s ears are unblocked and he will hear the beauty of her
singing. When his blindness is cured he will see and appreciate her dancing. Thus
she suggests;
Let me dance before you
My love
Let me show you
The wealth in your house. (p. 120)
LANGUAGE USE
The language used is very simple and inevitably easy to
understand. The poet has used a lot of literary devices translated from the
original Acoli language and they give the poem a sense of Africanness and
freshness. Throughout the poem Lawino seems to have the tone of nostalgia when
she remembers the good time they had before Ocol lost his head in the dark
forest of books. However, there is a considerable variation in tone across the
sections to address a specific issue in question. The following are some of the
literary devices used to colour the work and carry the poet’s message across;
FIGURES OF SPEECH
Similes
ü Some stand there tall and huge like the tido tree. (p.113)
ü You behave like a dog of the white man. (p.115)
ü His name still blows like a horn. (p.116)
ü Dancing silently like wizards. (p.47)
ü Your sick stomach that has swollen up like that of a
pregnant goat. (p.50)
ü A white woman’s hair is soft like silk. (p.51)
ü Lurking in the shades like the leopardess with cubs. (p.53)
ü He hisses like a wounded ororo snake. (p.54)
ü Hot and steaming like the urine of the elephant. (p.55)
ü The head of the beautiful one smells like rats. (p.55)
ü The thing roars like a male lion. (p.57)
ü It tastes like earth. (p.58)
ü The stoves are flat like the face of a drum. (p.59)
ü They are like pawpaw. (p.60)
ü They burn like paper. (p.60)
ü The smoke it produces is like a spear. (p.60)
ü Three mounds of clay shaped like youthful breasts full of
milk. (p.61)
ü Ocol storms like a buffalo. (p.67)
ü His eyes were like rotting tomatoes. (p.76)
ü His hair resembled the elephant grass. (p78)
ü And his cheeks were rough like the tongue of the ox. (p.78)
ü My name blew like a horn among the payira (p.48)
Personifications
ü The
reading has killed my man. (p.113)
ü The
stench from the latrine knocks you down, from afar. (p.46)
ü All
the tribes of human dung. (p.46)
ü And
the different smells wrestle with one another. (p.55)
ü (The
hair) it cries aloud in a sharp pan as it is pulled and stretched. (p.54)
ü My
stomach rebels and throws its contents out. (p.57)
ü The
winds go off to visit their mothers-in-law. (p.57)
ü And
the stove has many eyes. (p.58)
ü The
mother stone has a hollow stomach, a strange woman she never gets pregnant.
(p.59)
ü Even
if the world has boxed him. (p.99)
ü And
her daughter sitting in her belly. (p.59)
ü You
hear the song of stones.
You hear the song
of the grains. (p.60)
ü (The
clock) Its large single testicle dangles below. (p.63)
ü A
hunger begins to bite people’s tummies. (71)
ü (The
moon) it elopes, climbs the hill and falls down. (p.70)
ü The
heads of the young men reject the pillows and prefer the arms of their lovers.
(p.80)
ü When
all the diseases have fallen in love with him. (p.96)
ü When
mother death comes she whispers come. (p.102)
ü When
death comes to fetch you, she comes unannounced. (p.102)
ü Her
ripe breasts lift up their hands. (p.97)
Metaphors
ü My husband has become a woman. (p.116)
ü I am a mere dog, a puppy. (p.49)
ü The time has become my husband’s master. (p.68)
ü It is my husband’s husband. (p.68)
ü Buffaloes of poverty. (p.111)
ü The pythons of sickness. (p.111)
Exaggeration/hyperbole
ü My husband’s tongue is bitter like the roots of the lyonno
lily. (p.35)
ü It is hot like the penis of the bee. (p.35)
ü My head he says is as big as that of an elephant but it is
only bones there is no brain in it. (p.36)
Anaphora
ü A lazy youth is rebuked,
A lazy girl is slapped
A lazy wife is beaten
A lazy man is laughed at (p.69)
ü …even if your father is totally blind
Even if his ears are dead
Even if the world has boxed him
Even if his legs are dry like firewood (99)
ü You do not resist
You must not resist
You cannot resist (p.102)
Parallelism
ü I know their names and their leaves and seeds and barks.
(p.60)
ü Lunch-time, tea-time and supper time (p.64)
Alliteration
ü The wild white lilies. (p.53)
ü Women weeding or
harvesting.(p.64)
ü The sister stone (p. 60)
Onomatopoeia
ü It goes tock-tock-tock-tock. (p.63)
ü The cock must crow. (p.64)
ü It makes no crackling sound (p. 58)
Rhetorical
questions
ü Didn’t the Acoli have adornments?
Didn’t black people have their ways?
Is lawala not a game?
Is cooro not a game? (p.49)
ü Who ever cooked standing up? (p.58)
ü Where is the peace of uhuru? Where the unity of
independence?
ü Must it not begin at home? (p.107)
Oxymoron
ü The wild white lilies are shouting silently (p.53)
Irony
Ocol calls himself “A modern man, progressive and civilized”
but his life proves the opposite.
Euphemism
ü When a young girl has seen the moon for the first time
(p.70)
It is a sign
that the garden is
ready
for sowing
and when the gardener
comes
carrying two bags
of live seeds
and a good strong hoe
the rich soil
swells with a new
life.
(She describes the act of making love euphemistically)
And the spears
Of the lone hunters,
The trusted right-hand spears
Of young bulls
Rust in the dewy cold (p.80)
Reiteration
ü Slowly slowly (p.117)
Sayings and
proverbs
ü Let no one uproot the pumpkin. (p.56)
ü Who has ever prevented the cattle from the salt link? (p.79)
ü The last safari to Pagak. (p.91) Pagak is the place of no
return or death’s homestead.
ü He behaves like a hen that eats its own eggs. (p.35)
Consonance
ü You cannot wield the shield. (p.50)
ü Women weeding
or harvesting.(p.64)
ü Sowing, weeding, harvesting. (p.71)
Symbolism
The Pumpkin represents African (Acoli) culture which cannot be easily
destroyed by Ocoli and his fellow educated elites.
ü The graceful
giraffe = black people
ü The monkey = white people
ü When a young girl has seen the moon for the first time
(p.70)
It is a sign
that the garden is
ready
for sowing
and when the gardener
comes
carrying two bags
of live seeds
and a good strong hoe
the rich soil
swells with a new
life.
ü The garden represents the womb.
ü Sowing means conceiving.
ü Gardener represents a male partner.
ü Two bags of live seeds represent the testicles carrying
sperms.
ü A good strong hoe represents an erected and functioning
penis.
ü The rich soil means the womb.
ü Swells with a new life means becomes pregnant.
ü And the young men sleep alone cold like knives without
handles (p.80)
And the spears
Of the lone hunters, (p.80)
The
spears represent the penis of young boys.
Imagery;
The most important influence Acoli songs have had on Song of Lawino is in the imagery Okot
uses. Okot has completely avoided the stock of common images in English
literature through his familiarity with the stock of common images in Acoli
literature. This gives the poem a feeling of freshness for every reader and a sense
of Africanness for African readers. These images are found in the songs that
are set out as quotations in the poem. These are found in pages 60; 62; 66-67;
76-78; 98; 101; 115; and 120. For example;
Odure come out
From the kitchen
Fire from the stve
Will burn your
penis!
Odure
is a nickname for small boys who are fond of sitting in the house when his mother
is cooking. It is derived from a small boy of that name whose penis was burnt
by fire from the stove.
There are
various visual, audio, thermal, tactile, olfactory, gustatory, kinetic and
organic images used throughout the pome.
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