Zambia derived
its name from the Zambezi River, which rises in the northwest
and forms the country’s southern boundary. The landlocked
country is home to just over 10 million people of whom 20% live
in the capital city, Lusaka, while another 20% live in the Copperbelt
region (north), leaving huge tracts of uninhabited land and resulting
in one of the smallest land to person ratios in Africa.
Zambia is
a country of tremendous diversity- ethnically, racially, linguistically
and religiously. Such diversity provides a rich blend of values,
norms, and cultural and spiritual traditions. Zambia's people
belong to over 70 tribes including: Lozi, Bemba, Ngoni, Lunda,
Luvale and Kaonde. Notably, Zambians have co-existed peacefully
under the national moto "One Zambia, One Nation" since
independence.
Zambia’s
considerable mineral wealth includes: emerald, amethyst, garnet,
tourmaline, citrine, malachite, agate, aquamarine, and others.
The country holds 6% of the world's copper reserves. The wide
range of cultivated crops includes: maize, tobacco, cotton, groundnuts,
wheat, and rice. In addition, a variety of vegetables and citrus
fruits, bananas, pineapples, mangoes, avocados, and grapes are
also found. Coffee, tea, and sugarcane are also grown.
Land of the
legendary African walking safari, earth's biggest waterfall, the
wild Zambezi River, breath-taking lakes and wetlands, a profusion
of birds, abundant wildlife, and raw, pulsating wilderness, .......all
in one friendly country. Acknowledged as one of the safest countries
in the world to visit, Zambia's people live in peace and harmony.
The Wildlife
is superb and some of the finest Safaris on offer are available
from our fine lodges and safari companies. Blessed with 17 waterfalls
including the spectacular Victoria Falls, Zambia offers holidays
filled with adventure and scenic beauty.
Apart from the most spectacular views of the magnificent Victoria
Falls, Zambia has some of Africa's finest Game Reserves in the
world.
There's extensive information on the main Cities and towns with
easy to find information on what to do and where to stay.
Zambia has an incredible natural heritage with many unique species
found only here. The Wildlife section reveals all. Bird lovers,
print the Bird checklist of Zambia, there's over 740 and the Birdlife
section will tell you what birds are found where.
Culture
Zambia’s
contemporary culture is a blend of values, norms, material and
spiritual traditions of more than 70 ethnically diverse people.
Most of the tribes of Zambia moved into the area in a series of
migratory waves a few centuries ago. They grew in numbers and
many travelled in search of establishing new kingdoms, farming
land and pastures.
Before the
colonial period, the region now known as Zambia was the home of
a number of free states. Each having comprehensive economic links
with each other and the outside world along trade routes to the
east and west coast of Africa. The main exports were copper, ivory
and slaves in exchange for textiles, jewellery, salt and hardware.
During the
colonial period, the process of industrialisation and urbanisation
saw ethnically different people brought together by economic interests.
This, as well as the very definite influence of western standards,
generated a new culture without conscious effort of politically
determined guidelines.
Many of the
rural inhabitants however, have retained their indigenous and
traditional customs and values. After Independence in 1964, the
government recognised the role culture was to play in the overall
development of a new nation and began to explore the question
of a National identity.
Institutions
to protect and promote Zambia’s culture were created, including
the National Heritage Conservation Commission. Private museums
were also founded and cultural villages were established to promote
the expression of artistic talents.
Music and Dance
Quiet beauty,
bustle, bounding life or brimming joy characterise many aspects
of music and dance in Zambia. Emphasis varies from breathless
acrobatic spectacle amid propulsive drumming to fine subtleties
of sound and movement.
Many traditional instruments are still played throughout the country,
although the desire for western instruments increases. The more
common ones are the hand piano, a small instrument with iron keys
mounted on a rectangular box and plucked by both thumbs. Or the
silimba, a xylophone type instrument with a range of flat wooden
keys mounted over gourds. The most common of course is the drum
and drumming plays an important part of rituals, ceremonies, celebrations
and community communication.
Dance is an important part of musical expression among Africans
and along with the ideas they express, serve as reflectors of
life and thought over the centuries - of times of turmoil and
peace, tension and confidence, retreat and advance, conquest and
defeat.
The influence of the west and the rest of Africa is well entrenched
in music tastes of the current generation in Zambia. In the big
towns, night clubs and shebeens belt the sounds of Kwela and rumba
and many local bands play to the increasingly westernised youth.
Arts
& Crafts
Zambia’s
diverse cultures bring with them a wide variety of traditional
skills. Crafts can be found in great variety if not in abundance
and among them is some of the finest basketry in Africa.
The economy of most of the crafts people is based on fishing,
cattle or the cultivation of crops. Craftwork is often done seasonally
to supplement the incomes of many families. It was originally
intended for barter and made according to the needs of other villagers.
To many, especially the subsistence farmers, craftwork is their
only means of earning cash.
Traditionally made pots and baskets in the more populated areas
however, are being replaced by commercially manufactured utility
items made of plastic or tin. A large part of the new generation
are losing these traditional skills because of a lessening demand
and others have begun to make more modern items like lampshades,
shopping and laundry baskets and furniture.
Fortunately there are organisations such as Zintu Handicrafts
in Lusaka, the Nayuma Museum in Mongu, the Tonga Museum in Choma
and the Moto Moto Museum in Mbala, which aim to stimulate the
production of quality craftwork both in traditional forms and
where craftwork is a contemporary expression of art.
Basketry,
practised by both the men and the women is widespread. The many
forms and raw materials used reflect the environment in which
they are made: bamboo, liana vines, roots, reeds, grasses, rushes,
papyrus palm leaves, bark and sisal. They are decorated with symbolic
designs using traditional dyes made from different coloured soils,
roots, bark and leaves. The variety of uses for basketry is wide;
carrying and storage, fishing traps, beer strainers, flour sieves,
sleeping and eating mats and a variety of tableware. The Lozi
and Mbunda people in the Western Province are particularly skilled
in this field.
It is the men that usually do the woodwork and carving and produce
canoes, furniture, walking sticks, utensils and food bowls as
well as masks, drums and a variety of animal forms. The potters
are usually, though not always women who work the clay and then
fire them on open fires or pits.
Urban
Life
The principle
urban centres, Lusaka, Livingstone and the towns on the Copperbelt
are where most of the rural people head when they make the decision
to leave their villages. The transition may not be an easy one,
especially as the motivation is to find work and very often they
are disappointed. The impact on the cities has been immense. A
ring of shanty towns around the peripheries, with no electricity
or adequate sanitation increases both disease and crime. But the
shanties are filled with a people who have made a fine art out
of surviving with very little. Home industries spring up everywhere
from tailors, cobblers, vegetable sellers, money exchangers, to
hundreds of walking salesmen selling anything from frying pans,
electric plugs and batteries to fruit, vegetables and nuts. The
unemployment figure is currently about 60%.
But despite the dirt and discomfort of the city, the allure is
still powerful. The countryside may be healthier, more open and
free, but to many of the rural young, it is monotonous compared
with the action and energy of the big city. The massive markets
that have developed are a world within a world in the cities.
Thousands of little wooden stalls crammed together selling a wide
variety of goods in an endless shanty shopping mall. The mood
in the markets is very lively, serving as a social meeting place
as well.
The impact on rural villages will have long term detrimental effects
as it is mostly young men under 25 that leave, leaving the women
folk to raise children, tend to the fields and eke out a living
by themselves, since little money is made in the cities so little
is ever sent back. Fewer traditional farmers are making a living
by agriculture and crop output for the nation is reducing as a
consequence.
Zambia faces an enormous challenge to cope with this trend, not
only to lure people back to the country to cultivate the land,
but to ensure the people who won’t leave the cities, are
gainfully employed.
There is also a burgeoning well educated middle and wealthy class,
white collar workers and entrepreneurs. Many women are in management
positions or have their own companies and several are in government.
Rural
Life
Africa’s
economy, before Europeans arrived was essentially a rural one.
Fishing, hunting and agriculture were the means of survival and
because numbers were small, these activities were viable. With
the increase in community sizes and the lure of the cities, rural
life has undergone fundamental changes. Most villages are dominated
by women who now have to depend on their own ingenuity to generate
cash to support their many children and very often their elders.
Adulthood comes at an early age to rural children, especially
the girls. Few manage to start school before ten and only five
years later they are considered adults with all the attendant
responsibilities of marriage, child rearing and tending to crops.
Only a small percentage of children finish primary school due
to the high cost of uniforms, books and various school funds which
parents must contribute. Usually a woman will have between 6 and
12 children and the cost of schooling for all of them is usually
out of their reach. The desire to have many children still remains,
even with the attendant hardships. The idea of long term insurance
overwhelms the sacrifices.
Traditional healers play an important role in health care and
almost every village will have a knowledgeable person who takes
care of the ill with herbal and plant remedies.
Different tribes have differing village styles, some build their
houses from mud and thatch, others burn bricks and build square
houses which they paint with individual patterns. Usually long
distances must be walked to fetch water and wood for fuel.
But although life is hard in these remote villages, they are by
no means unhappy. Pleasure is taken in simple things and problems
are shared. Daily chores are done in groups and often become social
occasions. Everyone contributes to weddings and funerals otherwise
they would not be affordable. There are no invitations and anybody
in the village is welcome to join in.
Customs
Many of the
tribal customs are only still practised in the rural areas as
the urbanised youth aspire to Western behaviour.
A greeting is always exchanged before any conversation. If a person
approaches you, you should always offer the first greeting. A
man should withhold his hand in greeting until the woman offers
hers. Gifts are often offered to a visitor as a sign of honour,
friendship or gratitude. One should never refuse a gift and accept
it with both hands at the same time expressing thanks.
‘Lobola’ the bride price is still widely practised
and is a token of appreciation to the parents of the girl. In
most tribes, the bride is taken to the man’s village the
evening before the wedding. Large quantities of food are prepared
and home made beer is brewed to celebrate the marriage. The whole
village attends and much singing dancing and drumming takes place,
usually over two or three days. Afterwards, the elders council
the bride and groom on the preservation of marriage. The bride
is not supposed to cook until after the in-laws introduce her
to the pots and fire.
Funerals are also big occasions in the villages. Everyone clubs
together to help pay the expenses. Grief is shown through wailing
singing and dancing and becomes quite an emotional affair. During
the mourning period women and men separate, the men staying outside
and the women in the house of the deceased. After long speeches
about the departed friend and thanks for the donations, the whole
village walks to the place of burial to pay their last respects.
Health
and Education
The government
has a policy of universal free primary education and health care.
Health facilities however are grossly inadequate with only half
the required doctors needed to service the population.
Some 95% of primary school age children are enrolled at schools
with 20% continuing to secondary level and 2% of the 20 - 24 age
group in tertiary level. Illiteracy is only 27% but the drop out
rate at schools is very high. In rural areas, the standard of
education is hampered by lack of facilities, transport and teachers.
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