Social Organization
Swazi’s are said to belong to the Nguni
people who lived in central Africa and
migrated to southern Africa. They
speak the Siswati language , a language
earlier spoken by the Nguni group of
the Bantu family. They seem to have settle
in Swaziland around five hundred
years ago. They were then ruled by the British
from the mid 19th century to
mid 20th century. Swaziland is a monarchy and is
ruled by King Mswati III.
Social Organization The social organization in the
Swazi’s is like any
other African tribe. The homestead is the economic and
domestic unit of the
family. It is headed by the Umnumza or headman who is in
charge of the family
which includes his wives and children. Sons will bring
there wives to the
homestead and setup home within it while the daughters move
to their in-laws.
The occupants who reside in the homestead can also be distant
relatives or
non dependents. Therefore the number of people for whom the headman
is
responsible economically ,legally and by ritual may vary according his
status
and wealth. A wealthy headman may have many wives therefore he has a
large
number of people he is responsible for. The headman usually would
subdivide the
large homestead in order to gain access to larger tracts of
cultivable land or
divide quarrelsome wives . The homestead is planned
according to the
relationships between its inhabitants . Usually in the
center of the homestead
is the cattle pen and grain storage units, which are
underground flask shaped
pits. Women are not allowed access to theses places.
The living quarters are
grouped in a semicircle with the indlunkuku ( great
hut) which is home to the
most important woman in the homestead , the mother
of the headman. If she is
dead then a substitute mother is appointed. On the
sides are the quarters of the
wives ,each with her own sleeping ,cooking and
storage huts and enclosed with a
reed fence for protection against `wind .
The ranking of wives is not rigid but
it depends on the headman and his
preference of wives. the clear demarkation of
the wives huts and the fact
that each of them own their own garden land and
cattle does not erase the
fact that the headman’s mother’s house is supreme.
The children sleep
with their mother’s until they are old enough to stay with
their paternal
grandmother . Then they are separated by sex . Growing girls stay
close to
their mother while boys and unmarried men stay at the edge of the
homestead.
Marriage is important to Swazi’s. Arranged marriages are common but
are
declining because of the growing independence of the women which is
supported
by western culture. After the bride has been selected the two families
start
formal negotiations concerning the bride price. The bride price is paid
in
order to get married. The king is an exception to this, he has the right
to take
by force any girl he likes (quoma). The bride price is usually cattle
.It
differs with the status of the women, commoners ask for 100 while
princesses ask
for 200 cattle or more . The Swazi marriage is an elaborate
affair. It consists
of many religious ceremonies . This too is declining
because most Swazi’s are
Christian converts and prefer to get married in
churches. The bride is sent from
home with blessing from her ancestors and
gifts fro her in-laws. Initially she
has to appear reluctant and decline the
welcome demonstrations held by her
future in-laws. she enters the cow pen
where she is pleading her brothers to
rescue her. In the end she accepts her
faith and her future mother in-law smears
red clays symbolizing loss of
virginity. She is given a baby which depicts her
role as a mother and wife.
As most African tribes polygamy is accepted and
encouraged in the Swazi
culture. Polygamy is only practiced among Swazi’s who
are wealthy and can
support their wives. In the Swazi culture the woman primary
role is to bear
children. The grooms group can claim any children the woman
bears
irrespective of the biological father. In case the woman does not bear
any
children provision is made for her sister to bear children for her. The
brides
family is not allowed to ask for any bride wealth in this case .
Although
divorces are recognized by the Swazi traditional law they are
uncommon. A woman
may leave her husband only for brutal behavior . The
families try to maintain
union among the bride and groom because the groom’s
family wants to keep the
children and the brides family wants to keep the
bride wealth (lobelia). The
return of the lobola depends on the number of
children by the woman. The less
the children then a smaller amount of the
bride wealth is returned . The
children usually stay with the father .
Swazi’s classify kin broad categories.
A boy may use the term father to
various people, his own father, his father ‘s
brothers and half brothers.
Similarly a girl may use the term mother to her own
mother co-wives and wives
of the fathers brothers. These terms may vary
according to seniority. On of
the con’s of polygamy is that the friction
created between the co-wives.
Therefore the man prefers to keep his wives in
different homes. There are
also conflicts between half brothers for the position
of the head of the
family when the fathers die and co-wives for the favors of a
single husband
and privileges for their sons. Swazi’s place an importance on
the continuity
of the clan. Power and prosperity is inherited from men but the
woman play a
major role in choosing the successor to the headman. The successor
is chosen
through a council which looks at the claims of the wives and their
sons.The
successor has to be a full son of the headman. If the main wife does
not have
a male child then her sister son’s is adopted.Once he is appointed
then he
can keep his position till his mother death after that a substitute
mother is
appointed. The first wife has many privileges during her husbands
lifetime .
Her son is entrusted with important duties by his father and advises
the heir
on various issues. Children are precious to the swazi. They are bought
up in
a disciplinarian environment, and are threatened of beating but seldom
are
beaten. As they grow older their punishment gets more physical. The girls
are
taught household work. In the Swazi society it is the males duty to look
after
the livestock as is in most African societies. The boys are taught to
look after
the cattle and their grazing. The women’s duties are limited to
doing
household work and working on the fields. Puberty is said to be a
private family
matter. It was required that boys be circumcised before
getting married. This
practice was stopped decades ago .After puberty boys
and girls are expected to
find lovers and indulge in sex play stopping short
of intercourse.