IT'S TIME! PLEASE COOK AND EAT!
My great-grandchild will probably wonder who a mail runner was. Unless we excavate and thoughtfully unearth hidden layers of civilization to see where this indispensable service provider then belonged.
While mail runners in other parts
of the world were in the ancient or mediaeval times, we had ours in colonial and modern
times. Yes, as late as the fifties. For us born frees, we are accustomed to
current courier services, including today’s bus driver/conductor arrangement.
Everything looks so simple and automatic. You can send your parcel or documents
from the Mwami border to Kasumbalesa within a day and almost effortlessly track
its movement. It was not that easy a few decades back.
In Ng’ungwa lived a speed walker nicknamed Nkana.
Why Nkana?
“Nkana is a section of the city
of Kitwe, Copperbelt Province, Zambia which started in the early part of the
20th century as a railway station to support the growing complexity of copper
mining operations. It was named after Chief Nkana, the local traditional
ruler,” says my consultant, Mr Wikipedia. People in my village named their mail
runner after this place because, as you may guess, he delivered mail to and
from Nkana on foot, covering a distance of about 1040 kilometres within a week.
History shows that he did this as often as there was mail from other villagers,
daring dangerous wild beasts such as lions. At times, he carried heavy loads,
parcels he was asked to deliver on behalf of relatives who lived this far
apart. Usually, he travelled alone.
Nkana provided this service free
but for little aliments for sustenance along the way. I cannot tell whether he
did this voluntarily or if they hired him without pay.
When I was a boy, he had stopped
offering this service. Communication had improved. The postal services were
available, though it took a long time to receive mail in remote villages like
Muwele.
Nkana had two peculiar habits he never
abandoned.
He never stopped speed walking
around villages. He was such a fast man that you had difficulties walking with
him.
Secondly, he moved with a Germany-type Calura police whistle, named locally as Chinjoni. There was something special about this whistle. He only blew it whenever he was hungry. He could walk to someone’s house, blow the whistle and announce, “It’s time. Please eat!” He would sit and wait until the host gave him something to eat. Whether this was his way of demanding repayment for services rendered to the community in the past or he had just lost his senses, I do not know.
Calura Police Whistle |
There was a man who selflessly
sacrificed everything to serve his community. Chiefs and commons enjoyed his
services. The only thing he earned is the moniker, Nkana. He will never appear
even in the footnote of the history of Muwele/ Ng’ungwa, just like some of the
political firebrands of the Salimu Fumpa fame. What a world we live in!
Comments
Read the following free book:
https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/guardians-of-eden-manual