The Nyabingi Priestesses, Fighting to End Colonial Rule In East Africa

Nayabingi-PriestessNyabingi Priestesses Muhumusa (died 1945) and Kaigirwa (???)

  • Muhumusa and Kaigirwa were leaders of the feared East African Nyabingi priestesses group, which was influential in Rwanda and Uganda between 1850 and 1950.
  • Muhumusa vowed to drive out the Europeans, proclaiming that “the bullets of the Wazungu would turn to water against her.”
  • As a rebel priestess fighting colonial domination, Muhumusa helped to organize armed resistance against German settlers.
  • She was eventually jailed by the British in Kampala, Uganda, however, from 1913 until her death in 1945.
  • Britain’s 1912 Witchcraft Act was passed in direct response to the spiritually-based resistance movement.
  • Following in Muhumusa’s footsteps, the “Nyabinga” Kaigirwa fostered the Nyakishenyi revolt against the British.
  • The British managed to capture the tribe’s sacred white sheep, however, and burned it to ashes, unleashing a series of unfortunate events for the district commissioner. His own flocks were wiped out, his roof caved in and a fire broke out at his home.
  • The British also attacked Kaigirwa’s Congo camp in January 1919, killing most of the men there.
  • Kaigirwa attempted a second uprising years later and fled to the hills where she was never found. One official described the thwarted attack as “the narrow escape … from a serious native outbreak” and the danger of “this Nyabingi propaganda.”
  • The Nyabingi movement was ultimately quelled by the 1930’s but later inspired the Rastafarian movement in Jamaica.
  • Nyabingi Priestesses Muhumusa and Kaigirwa are part of our Black Rebel series for Black History Month. 

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