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Bushi (region)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bushi is mainly a traditional region and an African ethnic group in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaire); mainly located in the South Kivu province. It lies along the Mitumba Mountains and includes the administrative territories of Walungu, Kabare, Kalehe, Mwenga, Idjwi and Uvira surrounding Bukavu, which is its main city. There are about 7-12 million inhabitants in the region speaking the Mashi or Shi language. The Bushi is also a kingdom that is organized into many localities or sub-chiefdoms.

The Shi people, also known as Bashi, Banyabungo or Banyindu; are exactly close neighbours of Lega; Fuliiro, Bavira and Bembe people in the southern part of South Kivu; the Banyarwanda/Barundi people in the neighboring countries, and are close neighbours of Bahunde and Banyanga people who are located in the North Kivu province.

The inhabitants of Bushi are the Shi people (Shi: Bashi, singular: Mushi)[1] and their language is the Shi language (Mashi), a Central (Zone J) Bantu language. People are mainly farmers in this chiefdom; but there are more and more distinguished businessmen; politicians and other intellectuals from this important ethnic group of the South-Kivu region. The Mwami Désiré Kabare is the King of these people.

History

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Bushi Kingdom

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According to local tradition, the Bushi Kingdom, centered around the city of Kabare, was founded somewhere before the year 1388, and remained independant until the Belgian colonialisation of the Congo in the late 19th century.[2] Controlling a region of high interest, the Bushi Kingdom was often attacked, and its people's rich oral tradition tells of victories against, among others, invaders from the neighbouring Kingdom of Rwanda and the Belgian colonists.[3][4]

Kabare Chiefdom

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From the late 19th century onwards, Belgium colonised the area, and with the establishment of Bukavu in 1901, the local kingdoms, including Bushi, were reduced to chiefdoms. Local kings were usually exiled.[5] As of 2024, the Kabare Chiefdom, the main remnant of the kingdom, still exists as a part of the DRC, but doesn't hold much real power. Other successor chiefdoms also still exist.

Rulers of Kabare and other chiefdoms

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Notes and references

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  1. ^ See Mulago, Vincent (1955). Life Unity among the Bashi, Banyarwanda and Barundi. Thesis. Rome: Pontifical Urban University.
  2. ^ a b c africafederation.org: United Republic of Kivu - Brief History of the Traditional Authorities, Kabare, 2007
  3. ^ (in French) Paul Masson. Trois siècles chez les Bashi [Three centuries among the Bashi]. Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren. (Ethnographical Archives, 1), 1960
  4. ^ Antecedents to Modern Rwanda: The Nyiginya Kingdom. Karthala Editions, 2012.
  5. ^ Ntanda Nkere, Feudalism in the Bushi and the Modern State in Congo, American Literary Press, Incorporated, 2003, 192 p. ISBN 9781561678204
  6. ^ E. Mihigo, Bashi Tribe from South Kivu in DRC, Bashi Chiefdoms, 2015

  • Jean-Paul Biruru Rucinagiza, Lirangwe : chant héroïque des Bashi (Sud-Kivu, R.D.Congo) : iconographie, Presses universitaires de Lubumbashi, 2002, 252 p.
  • Louis Lwigulira Burume, Histoire et culture des Bashi au Zaïre : "six derniers règnes" antérieurs à 1980, Centre Protestant d'editions et diffusion, 1991, 216 p.
  • (en) Kusamba Chifundera, « Livestock diseases and the traditional medicine in the Bushi area, Kivu Province, Democratic Republic of Congo », in African study monographs (Kyoto), 19 (1) 1998, p. 13-34
  • Pierre Colle, Essai de monographie des Bashi, Centre d'Etude de Langues Africaines, Bukavu, 1971
  • W. d'Hondt, M. Magabe et G. Wehrmuller, La perception du rôle du père par les adolescents bashi de la ville de Bukavu, Les Cahiers du CEDAF (Bruxelles), n° 8, 1979, 19 p.
  • Paul Giroud et Jean Jadin, Le virus des Bashi, Bruxelles, 1955, 70 p.
  • Maw Liniger-Goumaz, « Les Bashi, République démocratique du Congo : bibliographie », in Journal de la Société des Africanistes (Paris), 1969, t. 39, fasc. 2, p. 233-244
  • Jean Hiernaux, Les caractères physiques des Bashi, Institut royal colonial belge, 1953, 47 p.

Cibasima Kangene et Murhagane Mburunge, « Poterie et boissellerie au Bushi », in Journal of Asian and African studies (Tokyo), 1991, n° 41, 1991, p. 163-166

  • Paul Masson, « Armes, outils et instruments de musique employés par les Shi », in Kongo-Overzee (Anvers), 24 (4-5) 1958, p. 239-255

Paul Masson, Trois siècles chez les Bashi, Musée royal de l’Afrique centrale, Tervuren, 1960, 126 p. (en) Alan P. Merriam, « Song texts of the Bashi », in African music in perspective, Garland, New York, 1982, p. 223-238 (d’abord publié dans Zaïre, 8 janvier 1954)

  • (en) Alan P. Merriam, « Musical instruments and techniques of performance among the Bashi », in African music in perspective, Garland, New York, 1982, p. 169-181 (d’abord publié dans Zaïre, 9 février 1955)
  • Baguma Mweze, Le Mariage chez les Bashi et ses transformations récentes, Université de Paris 5, 1987 (thèse)

Dominique Mweze et Chirhulwire Nkingi, Bibliographie sur les Bashi du Sud-Kivu (République Démocratique du Congo), Facultés catholiques de Kinshasa, 1999, 172 p.

  • Kagaragu Ntabaza, Emigani bali Bantu / Proverbes et maximes des Bashi, Libreza, Bukavu, 1984 (4e éd.), 410 p.
  • Mulopo Tshingeji, Savoirs quotidiens des paysans Bashi du Kivu (Zaïre), fondements d'un enseignement agricole approprié, Institut des hautes études internationales et du développement, Genève, 1993, 303 p. (thèse)