Touwa and the Dusty Road Travelled

A family story through a generation followed during the life of Touwa

by Dr. P V Mroso


Formats

Softcover
$19.76
E-Book
$4.99
Softcover
$19.76

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 10/24/2012

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 286
ISBN : 9781477237670
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 286
ISBN : 9781477237687

About the Book

The slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro offer a fertile land, a cool climate, and an abundance of water that over many years wars were fought in attempts to conquer and settle. The people living on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro are the Chagga. Historically, there were many alliances that led to security, but also there were betrayals that led to division into small kingdoms ruled by chiefs locally known as mangi. At the end of the wars, the slopes were divided into three major areas named Rombo, Vunjo, and Hai, each ruled by a number of mangi. The seniority of each mangi was measured by his wealth. The population increased rapidly as peace was established. The people on the slopes of the mountain live very closely, packed with water and road facilities comparable to a large metropolitan city, but only with trees and foliage, not concrete. First, Hai was highly populated, followed by Vunjo, but Rombo was sparsely populated as it was the leeward side of the mountain. Before the time of Touwa schooldays, the Nanjara village, which is in Rombo, was a prime area for land ownership such that Europeans were in pursuit to grab some of that land. It was in that state of competition that the local mangi sent vanguards like Touwa’s grandfather and many others to occupy the land to prevent European settlement. That was how the Nanjara village came to existence. The Chagga people have basically one culture, one language with area-based differences of accents, and Nanjara village life could reflect life for all Chagga people.


About the Author

The author, Paul Vincent Mroso, is a resident in Birmingham in the United Kingdom. It was the reflections of life in Nanjara, the village of his birth, that prompted the writing of the book, having seen the drastic differences of culture, which include outlook in life, ambitions, and beliefs.