Kwi Lamba Ekwesu

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Kwi Lamba Ekwesu Lambaland should have a paramount chief to protect it's interest.......

11/05/2023

Lamba land has been Bembanised in the Copper belt and am afraid Lunda is next to be Bembanised in North western, I don't want to sound tribal but I believe in and respect language and cultural preservation.

Mwape Malcom

11/05/2023

Lambaland as being bembanised and exists no more - barotseland watchdog

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29/03/2023
Her royal highness chief MALEMBEKA
29/03/2023

Her royal highness chief MALEMBEKA

My people where are we going as Lamba when our leaders are involved in such scandals .Imagine chiefs are respected and r...
28/03/2023

My people where are we going as Lamba when our leaders are involved in such scandals .
Imagine chiefs are respected and regarded to as fathers, which means it rare to investigate a chief..
But I think chief Nkana want far for him to be audited by the Anti Corruption Commission...
These people are regarded to as abene ilamba but it seems they're is no passion in leaders..
Chief Nkana now is involved in dealing with dollars and white man at the expense of is chiefdom and subjects.
This is the way justification and control was lost in area such as kitwe and Mufulira (under Nkana) in the early 19's.
People that's go to our villages and buy land to avoid it being given to foreigners of the lamba land.
They will be no aba Lamba and Lima without land ...
Lamba people that's get organized please and fight for preservation of culture...

Chief’s dollars blocked

The Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) has revealed that it restricted over US$200,000 that was wired to Chief Nkana of the Lamba in Lufwanyama, Copperbelt, and further intercepted and seized close to US$400,000 from two Turkish businessmen.

ACC head of corporate communications Timothy Moono disclosed this during a media briefing on the corruption watchdog’s activities in the third quarter of the year.

“The commission also intercepted and seized US$399,500 from two Turkish businessmen, Hakki Sahutoglu, director of Deniz Company Limited, and Sezer Sahutoglu.

“Further, the commission restricted US$216,000 that was wired to Chief Nkana and also restricted US$3,474,150 belonging to Savenda https://enews.daily-mail.co.zm/welcome/home

13/03/2023

When last of the kwilimuna and chabalankata ceremony held in MALEMBEKA and MUSHILI.......

12/03/2023

Some chiefs of Lamba and Lima chiefs
HRH MUSHILI
HRH NKANA
HRH CHIWALA
HRH MALEMBEKA
HRH NDUBENE
HRH MACHIYA
HRH LESA
HRH KALILELE
HRH MUKUTUMA
HRH MUKAMBO (Congo)

12/03/2023

Masaiti,Mpongww,lufwanyama,luanshya,Ndola
Bonse kwi Lamba Ekwesu

History
02/02/2023

History

The Lamba, Slave Raiding and the Advent of Colonial Rule

According to 1969 and 1970 census figures, there are approximately 190,000 Lamba and related peoples living in Ilamba (Lambaland)—one half in Zaire's Shaba Province (formerly Katanga), and the rest in Zambia's Copperbelt and the northeastern tip of the Northwestern Province. The 125,000 Lamba are the largest of these groups, but they are culturally so like their Seba, Temba, Lemba and Lima neighbours that, in Doke's words, 'they scarcely constitute a separate tribe'.

These groups are all matrilineal in descent, use slash-and-burn cultivation methods, and dwell in small, dispersed villages. They share common myths of origin and ancestral legends, a common pattern of social organization, similar witchcraft and religious beliefs, virtually indistinguishable languages, and a common Lamba Bible. And it seems that all, for at least the past three hundred years, have lived, married, visited and traded with one another across the Zambezi-Zaire rivers' watershed which comprises the contemporary international frontier. Thus they regard each other as common, closely related peoples living under separate chiefs and having separate political administrations.
Of these peoples, however, only the 125,000 Lamba (and 13,000 Seba) acknowledge the chiefs of the Mishishi ('Human Hair') clan—six of these in Zaire and six in Zambia—as customary 'owners' or stewards (abeae ciald ) over much of these Copperbelt lands. It is their chiefly clan and its lore, its perpetual kinship relations, and these chieftaincies' own local histories which serve as the distinctive markers of Lamba identity. It is to these histories that we now turn.
Little is known of Ilamba's pre-colonial history before the cumulative disasters of the late nineteenth century. The first direct mention of the Lamba appears in the Portuguese explorer Lacerda's journal entry for 21 September 1798, by which time the Lamba and their neighbours were apparently trading copper and ivory to Chief Kazembe's Lunda, and to the middlemen of Nsenga country near Zumbo, the Portuguese trading post on the Zambezi.
When Silva Porto and his pombeiros passed through Katanga fifty years later, itinerant Mbundu, Luvale, Bisa and Swahili traders were exchanging calicos, flintlocks and powder for Lamba slaves. Soon thereafter the Sumbwa-Nyamwezi established their Yeke trade empire in northern Katanga. They, along with Chikunda and Swahili slave and ivory traders, began the disastrous cycle of depopulating wars, famines and pestilence which mark the final phase of Ilamba's pre-colonial history.
Slave raiding here was only ended after Cecil Rhodes decided to challenge Portuguese and Belgian claims to Katangan Ilamba and its reputed mineral

wealth. In 1890 he sent three treaty-signing expeditions to bring Chief Mwenda Msiri's Yeke empire into the sphere of influence of the British South Africa Company (BSAC). And while only one actually reached Msiri, Rhodes's challenge forced the Belgians to take over the unravelling Yeke empire in 1891 and to wrest remaining Katangan territory from the control of well armed bands of Swahili traders. Thus a Belgian punitive expedition, armed with cannon, finally drove Chiwala's band of 200 Swahili traders from their stockade on the Luapula River and into Rhodesian Ilamba in 1897.

Chiwala was a Chikunda group of slave traders who conquered the lamba kingdom Under paramount cheif mushili. It is believed he was offered Mushili's sister due to his "hardwork" and was offered land that he would later oversee.

By this time, mineral prospecting parties were already at work in the Kafue Hook and along the Katangan border north of Mkushi; within two years, they were operating in both Katangan and Rhodesian Ilamba.
These were desperate times throughout Ilamba. In 1884–85 Capello and Ivens found northern Ilamba deserted, as the villagers had fled into the bush or to isolated stockades (amaliaga ) from the threat of Yeke, Mbundu and Swahili slave raiders. Later, still others fled to Lenje or Ushi country further south or east. Sorghum gardens were abandoned during the warfare following Mwenda Msiri's murder, and consecutive plagues of locusts caused such severe food shortages that Delcommune's and Bia's expeditions, in 1891, ate locusts and boiled grasses. Thomson's expedition triggered a smallpox epidemic in 1890, while rinderpest, in 1892–94, killed off the large game animals. It is little wonder, then, that the Lamba do not romanticize their pre-colonial past. Depopulation is not the stuff of which Golden Pasts are made.
Rhodes's treaty expeditions, however, had two long-term consequences for the peoples of Ilamba, both of which figure prominently in forming the internalresentful dimension of contemporary Lamba identity. First, in the south, the Belgian occupation of Katanga forced Chiwala's Swahili traders to resume their operations from the centre of Lamba chief Mushili's territory, near modern Ndola's railway depot. Slave raiding ended only around 1910, and the Lamba still resent the special favouritism that was shown to Chiwala and His fearsome Swahili 'strangers' (abensu ) by the BSAC administration.
Second, and even more fundamentally, the peoples of Ilamba on both sides of the border still resent their removal to Native Reserves when their lands were appropriated for projected mining and farming developments. While the advent of colonial rule and industrial capitalism probably saved the residents of Ilamba from near extinction at the hands of intrusive slave and ivory raiders, the overall injustices of the early colonial period, including the loss of lands and chiefly authority, remain central focuses in the internal-resentful dimension of Lamba ethnic self-identity. In similar fashion, the stigmatizing, ascriptive stereotypes of the 'backward', 'wild' and 'lazy' Lamba are also rooted in history.

Scource: university of carlifornia press
:publishing.cidlib.org

02/02/2023

Kwi Lamba Ekwesu media

01/02/2023

We the great people of the lambaland claim a recognition of a paramount chief of the great kwi Lamba by the Zambian government.
Our land and language as suffered greatly by mining and other investments without proper consent from our chiefs.
We request from G.R.Z to put into consideration the rich history of the lamba and go back to history and recognize a paramount chief to reign over our land.

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