Human Remains and Violence (Oct 2020)

Songea Mbano and the ‘halfway dead’ of the Majimaji War (1905–7) in memory and theatre

  • Yann LeGall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7227/HRV.6.2.2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 4 – 22

Abstract

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Debates on the relevance of repatriation of indigenous human remains are water under the bridge today. Yet, a genuine will for dialogue to work through colonial violence is found lacking in the European public sphere. Looking at local remembrance of the Majimaji War (1905–7) in the south of Tanzania and a German–Tanzanian theatre production, it seems that the spectre of colonial headhunting stands at the heart of claims for repatriation and acknowledgement of this anti-colonial movement. The missing head of Ngoni leader Songea Mbano haunts the future of German–Tanzanian relations in heritage and culture. By staging the act of post-mortem dismemberment and foregrounding the perspective of descendants, the theatre production Maji Maji Flava offers an honest proposal for dealing with stories of sheer colonial violence in transnational memory.

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