Lenje people (also known as Bene Mukuni, Balenje, Balenge, Benimukuni, Ciina mukuna, Lenge, Lengi[1][2]) is an ethnic group in Zambia. They are loosely bound with its spatial and cultural boundaries shifting, depending on whom you talk to.[3] They live mainly in the Central province but also in Lusaka and Copperbelt province. It is not clear when they arrived to the area where they live today[2] but they are believed to be among the first people to come to Zambia from the Cameroon region.[citation needed] It has been claimed that they have been in the area at least since the 17th century.[4] The Lenje chiefdom comprises one senior chief and seven subordinate chiefs and chiefdoms.[5] They are about 240 000[citation needed] - 310 000[6] and are considered to be part of the Bantu, Central-South people cluster within the Sub-Saharan African affinity bloc.[6] They are related to the neighboring Tonga people[7][8] and have also been said to be related to the Twa (or Batwa, Awatwa) of the Lukanga Swamps.[9][10]

Lenje
Lenje chief smokes pipe. Photo by Eric von Rosen 1911-1912.
Total population
310 000 in  Zambia
Languages
Lenje, English
Related ethnic groups
Lukanga Twa, Tonga people

Subsistence edit

Travellers who visited Lenje in the beginning of the 20th century writes that they were mainly farmers but hunting and fishing was also important.[11] Present day Lenje are generally subsistence farmers growing maize during the rainy season and vegetables during the dry season, They burn charcoal as well as keep a few cattle, goats, chickens etc. Some, especially those closer to the edge of the Lukanga swamp, fish or are involved in fish trade.[2]


References edit

  1. ^ "Lenje - Collections Online | British Museum". www.britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  2. ^ a b c Kachali, Rhoda Nthena (2007). Stakeholder interactions in Wetlands: Implications for Social Ecological System Sustainability - A Case of Lukanga Swamps, Zambia (PDF). Lund University.
  3. ^ Rosén, L. (2020). Territory, property and state making in Lenje Chiefdom (PDF). p. 71.
  4. ^ Sicard, H.; Vogel, J. (1969). On the Peoples of the Zambezi, Current Anthropology, Volume. 10, No. 4, Part 2. pp. 465–466.
  5. ^ Shamutuku, Rackson (2010). "Zambia: Kulamba Kubwalo Ceremony - Uniting Lenje People".
  6. ^ a b PeopleGroups.org. "PeopleGroups.org - Lenje of Zambia". peoplegroups.org. Retrieved 2021-10-20.
  7. ^ "Lenje". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 2021-11-04.
  8. ^ Siwila, Lilian Cheelo (2015). "An Encroachment of Ecological Sacred Sites and its Threat to the Interconnectedness of Sacred Rituals: A Case Study of the Tonga People in the Gwembe Valley". Journal for the Study of Religion. 28 (2): 138–153. ISSN 1011-7601. JSTOR 24805695.
  9. ^ Macrae, F.B (1934). The Lukanga Swamps, The Geographical Journal, Vol. 83, No. 3. pp. 223–227.
  10. ^ Rosen, Eric von (1916). Träskfolket; Svenska Rhodesia-Kongo-expeditionenes etnografiska. Smithsonian Libraries. Stockholm, A. Bonniers förlag. p. 395.
  11. ^ Rosen, Eric von (1913). Från kap till Alexandria: reseminnen från svenska Rhodesia-Kongo-expeditionen (in Swedish). A. Bonniers. p. 30.