Hello

Your subscription is almost coming to an end. Don’t miss out on the great content on Nation.Africa

Ready to continue your informative journey with us?

Hello

Your premium access has ended, but the best of Nation.Africa is still within reach. Renew now to unlock exclusive stories and in-depth features.

Reclaim your full access. Click below to renew.

NYERERE LEGACY: Karibu to my Bongoland new tribes!

Danford Mpumilwa

 I do recall narrating this episode somewhere else. However, with the current political develop-ments in this part of Africa, I feel there is need to bring it to light for the benefit of us all. I vividly recall that it was in the early 80s when I landed in Germany. I had just completed a six month journalism diploma course in the then East Berlin of the then Ger-man Democratic Republic or East Germany as was popularly known. But then I was immediately invited to the then West Berlin of the then Federal Republic of Ger-many or West Germany for a similar course. Talk of the East-West Cold War divide! I was at the receiving end of that set-up. Notwithstanding these politi-cal acrobatics, one snowy evening I arrived at this international college in West Berlin, which had a number of other aspiring young journalists from several African, Asian and Latin American countries. I was allocated a room with another Bon-goland scribe.We soon hit it off and were insepa-rable whether at college or when exploring the beer pubs of Berlin. A few months later I received a letter – yes it was physical letters then - from one of my uncles in Njombe urging me to look for his son who had gone to study medi-cine in Hungary more than a decade earlier and was incommunicado. Fortunately, the letter included my cousin brother’s address in a small suburb of Budapest called Debre-cen. Out of respect to my uncle I wrote to my cousin with the mes-sage from home and that I was also in central Europe, in Berlin to be more precise. I had forgotten about the whole episode when one evening, a month or so later, the caretaker of our hos-tel called saying there was a guest of mine at the gate who claimed was my relative. It was a great reunion with my cousin, Dr Godfrey, whom I had not seen for more than a decade. I took him to my room and intro-duced him to my roommate. What a shock its was! They greeted each other in my mother tongue. Appar-ently my roommate was not only a fellow Bongolander, but also a tribe-mate. And, for the past four or so months that had never cropped up in our daily life together. It took my cousin’s visit – apparently they were together in primary school – to bring that to light. My cousin, Dr Godfrey, was by then already a gynaecologist in Debrecen. Naturally, he enjoyed certain special perks in that profes-sion including being gifted with bot-tles of vintage wines whenever he conducted a successful operation or birth to his patients. That evening as we savoured the wines and cheese with my co-stu-dents from Africa I introduced my cousin to them and added, “This is the relative who had travelled all the way from Hungary to join us this evening in happy re-union. But he has also brought to light how, we, Tanzanians, have discarded tribal affiliations and formed new non-ethnical tribes.” I then narrated what had happened earlier. My classmates, some from far as Ghana and Nigeria and as near as Kenya and Uganda, jointly com-mented that Bongolanders should thank Mwalimu Nyerere for this healthy transition. Seeing what is presently happening in other trib-alised African countries and the problems that they face in the name of that system, I have resolved to be an ardent advocate of new tribes – tribes formed by Bongolanders who either went to school or college together; Bongolanders who attend-ed National Service programme together; Bongolanders who pray or work together; and even Bongolan-ders who drink together in the many pubs and groceries scattered all over the country. Welcome to my Bon-goland New Tribes!