Covid-19 and Post-burial Rituals of the Sotho People in Gwanda South Province in Zimbabwe

V. Matiza, Nokuthula Sebata
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Abstract

The Sotho cultural group of the Gwanda South area in Zimbabwe is a traditional, close-knitted speech community that significantly relies on Indigenous knowledge systems to sustain communal alliances that aid their day-to-day lifestyles. The advent of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) in 2019 ushered in a significant re-shuffle on how pre-burial, during burial and post-burial rituals—necessary for social cohesion and harmony—are conducted among this ethnic group. The pandemic was a threat to the socio-cultural norms and values that are at the centre of African societies. Both the preventive and reactive measures, whether self or government imposed, had an impact on most of the Sotho burial practices or rituals that were mainly defined by collectivism. Stringent requirements on social distancing, avoidance of social gatherings, a ban on intra and inter-city travel, burying within the province where one would have died, and a ban on body viewing (among other laws) saw the hindrance of most burial rituals. This Afrocentric investigation of the post-burial practices of the Basotho people in Zimbabwe does not only strive to generate knowledge that adds to the existing scholarship, but also documents information about the significance of the burial philosophies of this previously marginalised Sotho community in Zimbabwe. The study establishes how this sudden shift, necessitated by the pandemic, negatively impacted the human dignity of the Sotho community and their mandate to protect the most vulnerable groups, including orphans, widows and the elderly. Phone call interviews were used to interview purposively sampled elderly members of the Basotho group and cultural activists in the Gwanda South region.
2019冠状病毒病与津巴布韦南瓜达省索托人的葬礼
津巴布韦Gwanda South地区的Sotho文化群体是一个传统的、紧密联系的语言社区,他们严重依赖土著知识体系来维持社区联盟,帮助他们的日常生活方式。2019年冠状病毒病(Covid-19)的出现,对该民族如何进行社会凝聚力与和谐所必需的葬前、葬中和葬后仪式进行了重大调整。这一流行病对处于非洲社会中心的社会文化规范和价值观构成威胁。无论是自我还是政府实施的预防和反应措施,都对大多数主要由集体主义定义的索托埋葬习俗或仪式产生了影响。严格要求保持社交距离,避免社交聚会,禁止市内和城际旅行,在可能死亡的省份内埋葬,以及禁止查看尸体(以及其他法律),这些都阻碍了大多数葬礼仪式。这项以非洲为中心的对津巴布韦巴索托人埋葬后习俗的调查,不仅力求为现有的学术成果增添知识,而且还记录了有关这个曾经被边缘化的津巴布韦索托社区埋葬哲学意义的信息。这项研究确定了这种因大流行病而必须发生的突然转变如何对索托社区的人的尊严及其保护包括孤儿、寡妇和老人在内的最脆弱群体的任务产生负面影响。电话访谈被用来有目的地采访南甘旺地区巴索托族的老年成员和文化活动人士。
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