Xolela Mangcu

Biko: A Biography


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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_14230b8f-59c0-56e7-a0a7-51302fc6a590">[34] It would seem, then, that Britain’s wrestling of the Cape from the Dutch in 1806 was motivated first and foremost by commercial interests. “In January 1806 Popham, Baird and Beresford landed at the Cape and forced Janssens to surrender”,[35] an event apparently witnessed by the Xhosa chief and missionary Dyani Tshatshu together with Read and Van der Kemp when they were all in Cape Town.[36] What mattered most to the British was control of the sea trade, including the Cape, which from 1806 they controlled. Their entry broke the stalemate between coloniser and colonised.

      From then onwards the colonial enterprise consisted of a double assault on the humanity and dignity of African people – military conquest in the 100-year wars of resistance, otherwise known as the frontier wars; and cultural indoctrination primarily through religion and education.

      This is not to underplay the role played by some missionaries in giving sustenance to the Xhosa warriors. (For instance, James Laing, who lived in Burnshill, looked after Maqoma’s children while the latter went out to fight the colonists.) On the whole the contrasting responses to colonialism at the end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century by Xhosa chiefs Ndlambe and Ngqika laid down the contours for African politics for the coming generations, all the way to the era of the Black Consciousness Movement in the 1970s. To trace this resistance to the Xhosa is not to deny the role of other groupings in South Africa – for they would also play just as crucial a role as the Xhosa. We may simply attribute the role of the Khoisan and the Xhosa to a historical and geographical coincidence – that is where these groups were when the colonialists landed. We also see the emergence of contrasting ideological responses by two prophet-intellectuals, Ntsikana and Nxele, advocating submission – and resistance.

      It was the amaRharhabe, and those chiefdoms which had preceded them across the Kei River, who would now take centre stage in the century-long sequence of anti-colonial wars, first against the Dutch trekboere and then against the British. Divisions arose, however, when Rharhabe’s eldest son, Mlawu, died before his father. The rightful heir was Mlawu’s Great Son, Ngqika (c. 1770-1829). However, Ngqika was too young to rule and Mlawu’s brother Ndlambe acted as regent. In 1795 the young Ngqika pushed his uncle aside and seized the throne. Ndlambe regrouped to avenge his humiliation by his nephew, aided by the house of Gcaleka in the Transkei. But Ngqika’s formidable army defeated the Gcalekas as well, following which Ngqika declared himself the paramount chief of all the Xhosa. This usurpation bred resentment in all Xhosaland for not even Ngqika’s grandfather, Rharhabe, had claimed such authority over the Gcaleka – choosing instead to leave and cross the Kei. Mqhayi describes Ngqika’s calumny as follows:

      Aligned to Ngqika and Ndlambe were two influential prophet-intellectuals – Ntsikana and Nxele (aka Makana) respectively. Ntsikana was one of the first African leaders to embrace the new Christian religion. He claimed to have had a vision in which the rays of the sun shone on his favourite ox’s horn. A whirlwind sprang up when he attended a traditional ceremony, whereupon he went to the river to cleanse himself of all that was impure, taken to mean the “heathen” traditions of his people. He authored one of the most popular hymns in isiXhosa, UloThixo Omkhulu, which urged his people to submit to the will of God. Ngqika himself was only stopped by his counsellors from formally converting to Christianity. We should be careful, however, not to assume that Ntsikana had no religious or spiritual anchor before the missionaries came. Mqhayi was sceptical that Ntsikana was converted by Christianity:

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