Columbus Kamba Simango | |
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Born | 1890 Machanga District, Mozambique |
Died | 1966 (aged 75–76) |
Occupations |
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Columbus Kamba Simango (1890-1966), often known as Kamba Simango, was an ethnographer, missionary, musician, performer and activist of Vandau ethnicity. [1]
Simango was born in 1890 in Machanga District, Mozambique of Vandau ethnicity. He attended a Congregational Mission school in Beira, followed by studies at Mount Selinda and Lovedale. [2]
In 1914, he went to the United States to study at the Hampton Institute, under the auspices of the American Board of Missions. After this he went to the Teachers College at Columbia University, graduating in 1923. [2] During this time, in April 1922, he participated as a dancer in the play Taboo , presented at the Sam H. Harris Theater in Harlem. The lead in Taboo was Paul Robeson (1898–1976), who became a friend of Simango. While in New York he met the anthropologist Franz Boas who encouraged him to become a native ethnographer. They corresponded for years. While in New York at the time of the Harlem Renaissance, he also became friends with Pan-Africanist W. E. B. Du Bois. As a Vandau intellectual, he collaborated with many anthropologists and Africanists, such as Melville Herskovits, Henri-Philippe Junod and Dora Earthy. [3] He also worked with Natalie Curtis. [4]
He was married first to missionary poet Kathleen Mary Easmon Simango on 1 June 1922. They had met in New York. [5] After she died unexpectedly from appendicitis in 1924, he married Kathleen's cousin, Christine Cousey (in September 1925), with whom he had three children.
The couple worked as missionaries in Angola and Mozambique from 1926 to 1936; [6] they then moved to Ghana where they opened a hotel and later ran a Portuguese language radio station. Simango died in a hit and run accident in 1966. [1] [7]
In November 1923, Simango participated in the Third Pan-African Congress, organized in London. [8]
In 1934–1935 he helped found the Mozambican organization Grémio Negrófilo de Manica e Sofala; [9] the Grémio lasted until 1956 (under the name of Núcleo Negrófilo) when it was outlawed for connections to an anticolonial uprising in the Machanga and Mambone regions.
Mozambique, officially the Republic of Mozambique, is a country located in southeast Africa bordered by the Indian Ocean to the east, Tanzania to the north, Malawi and Zambia to the northwest, Zimbabwe to the west, and Eswatini and South Africa to the southwest. The sovereign state is separated from the Comoros, Mayotte and Madagascar by the Mozambique Channel to the east. The capital and largest city is Maputo.
Zulu, or IsiZulu as an endonym, is a Southern Bantu language of the Nguni branch spoken and indigenous to Southern Africa. It is the language of the Zulu people, with about 13.56 million native speakers, who primarily inhabit the province of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa. Zulu is the most widely spoken home language in South Africa, and it is understood by over 50% of its population. It became one of South Africa's 12 official languages in 1994.
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Ndau is a Bantu language spoken by 1,400,000 people.
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Mozambique is a Christian majority country, with Islam being a minority faith practiced by around 17.5% of the population as of 2020. The faith was introduced by merchants visiting the Swahili coast, as the region was part of the trade network that spanned the Indian Ocean. This later led to the formation of several officially Muslim political entities in the region.
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The Gaza Empire (1824–1895) was an African empire established by general Soshangane and was located in southeastern Africa in the area of southern Mozambique and southeastern Zimbabwe. The Gaza Empire, at its height in the 1860s, covered all of Mozambique between the Zambezi and Limpopo rivers, known as Gazaland.
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