| Mandume ya Ndemufayo | |
|---|---|
| Final King of the Oukwanyama Kingdom | |
Mandume ya Ndemufayo (~1915) | |
| Reign | 1911-1917 |
| Successor | None |
| Born | 1894 (1894) Oukwanyama Kingdom |
| Died | 6 February 1917 (aged 22–23) Namibia |
Mandume ya Ndemufayo (1894 – 6 February 1917) was the last king of theOukwanyama, a subset of theOvambo people of southernAngola and northernNamibia. Ya Ndemufayo took over the kingdom in 1911 and his reign lasted until 1917 when he died of either suicide or machine gun fire while he was under attack fromSouth African colonizers.[1] Ya Ndemufayo is honoured as a national hero in both Angola and Namibia.[2]
The Oukwanyama kingdom was split by the1884 Berlin Conference into the areas ofPortuguese West Africa andGerman South West Africa.
Ya Ndemufayo grew up during a time of significant upheaval in the Oukwanyama kingdom due to the presence of European merchants and missionaries. Third in line for succession to theKwanyama throne, the prince lived in fear of assassination from an early age.
Ya Ndemufayo took the throne peacefully by Kwanyama standards and immediately moved the royal residence toOndjiva (now in Angola). Ya Ndemufayo expelledPortuguese traders from Kwanyama territory to denounce price inflation. Internally, he issued decrees prohibiting the picking of unripened fruit to protect against droughts and the unneeded use of firearms, an important commodity obtained from European traders. Significantly, he also issued harsh penalties for the crime of rape and allowed women to own cattle, which was previously illegal. Overall, King Mandume sought to restore previous Kwanyama wealth and prosperity against a decaying system of local leadership.[1]
Ya Ndemufayo had a reputation for expellingChristians within the Oukwanyama kingdom. Numerous Christian families fled to theOndonga kingdom of the Ovambos. Ya Ndemufayo did not favor PortugueseCatholic missionaries as well as GermanRhenish Missionary Society Protestants within his kingdom.[1]
No European colonizer challenged the well-organized and well-armed Ovambo kingdoms until 1915 and the beginning ofWorld War I which coincided with a massive local drought. During the Battle of Omongwa, ya Ndemufayo and the Kwanyamas resisted aPortuguese attack for three days. Simultaneously, the South African forces conquered the portion of the Oukwanyama kingdom formerly located in German South West Africa. Due to heavy losses, ya Ndemufayo was forced to relocate the Kwanyama capital to the area of South West Africa. In February 1917, after ya Ndemufayo refused to submit to South African control, he died in battle against the South Africans. The cause of his death is disputed; South African records show his death frommachine-gun fire, while oral and popular history described his death assuicide.[1]
The Oukwanyama kingship was abolished following his death in 1917 until February 1998 whenCornelius Mwetupunga Shelungu was named chief.
"It is better to die fighting than to become a slave of the colonial forces." -- These were the defiant words of one of Namibia's foremost anti-colonialist fighters. He said these words in defiance when the combined [European] colonial forces insisted he should surrender. [...] To his revolutionary spirit and his visionary memory we humbly offer our honor and respect.[3]