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FU Sundjata The Lion King Questions

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FU Sundjata The Lion King Questions – Description

SUNDJATA,  THE LION KING1 The following is a condensed oral history told by a  legendary Mandingo griot named Djeli Mamadou Kouyate.2 This version  recounts the origin and rise of the great Emperor Sundjata Keita, a  Mandingo prince who founded the Mali Empire in the 13th century. Once  upon a time, there lived a king in Niani, a kingdom in ancient Mali. The  king’s name was Maghan Kon Fatta although he was also known as Nare  Maghan. One day, an itinerant oracle, one of the leading hunters in the  region, came to King Maghan Kon Fatta’s palace, and informed the king  that the time would soon come when the king would produce a son who  would grow to become a great ruler who would unite all the kingdoms of  Mali into one great empire and rule over it. The oracle went on to  inform the king that the yet to be born future emperor would have to be  the son of an ugly woman who the king would have to marry. Shortly after  this revelation by the oracle, two hunters came through town  accompanied by a very ugly woman with a hunchback whose name was  Sogolon. Her ugliness caused a stir and the news of her presence in the  city reached the king’s ear. The two hunters gained an audience with the  king and explained to him how they came to be in possession of such an  ugly woman. The hunters told the king that they had been working in Do, a  neighboring kingdom that was being devastated by attacks on farmers and  their crops by vicious buffaloes. The two hunters had gone there in  response to a call for help by the King of Do who was offering a big  prize to any hunter who could kill the menacing buffaloes. While there,  the two hunters came across an old woman who the hunters treated with  much kindness and respect. She then told them the secret to killing the  buffalo but she made them promise her that when the King of Do offered  them the pick of all the maidens of his kingdom, they would choose the  ugliest. The hunters killed the buffaloes and kept their promise to the  old woman and that was how Sogolon came into their possession. King  Maghan Kon Fatta interpreted the hunters’ story and their presence in  Niani as the fulfillment of the oracle’s prophesy and therefore he made  Sogolon one of his wives. 1 Sundjata was a member of the Keita royal  family dynasty. The Keita clan’s totemic emblem is the lion. 2 The story  was published in 1960 by the Guinean scholar and playwright Djibril  Tamsir Niane, who recorded Mamadou Kouyate in his ancestral village of  Djeliba Koro. According to Niane, “one can still find the griot almost  in his ancient setting, far from the city, in the old villages of  Mali…which can boast of still preserving the customs of the times of  their ancestors.” He goes on to inform us that “generally, in every  village of old Mali, there is a griot family which conserves historical  tradition and teaches it…unfortunately, the West has taught us to  scorn oral sources in matters of history, all that is not written in  black and white being considered without foundation.” Sogolon initially  resisted the king’s advances and after much tribulation, Sundjata was  conceived. Sundjata had a very difficult childhood although he grew up  in his father’s palace. The first problem both Sundjata and Sogolon  faced throughout Sundjata’s childhood was the relentless hostility of  Sassouma Berete, the king’s first wife or ‘Queen Mother.’ Sassouma was  aware of the prophecy and wanted her own son, Prince Dankaran Touman, to  succeed to the throne. She therefore made Sogolon’s and Sundjata’s  lives a living hell, always spreading vicious gossip and rumors about  them which people believed. The second obstacle young Sundjata faced was  the fact that he was born crippled and did not walk until he was seven  years old. Therefore he was a sensitive child and did not speak much.  However, Sundjata’s father saw the greatness and innate wisdom in the  little boy and decided to give him Balla Fasseke to serve as Sundjata’s  griot. Balla Fasseke was the son of King Maghan Kon Fatta’s own griot.  When the king died shortly afterwards, the Royal Council decided to  support Prince Dankaran Touman’s claim to the throne. They saw no future  in Sundjata who was seen by the Council as a useless cripple. One day,  the Queen Mother, Sassouma, went on one of her usual tirades against  Sogolon and embarrassed and humiliated Sogolon in a very public manner,  in front of her son. Suddenly, Sundjata, to the shock and surprise of  everyone, pulled himself up on his rod and stood up on his two legs to  defend his mother. From that day forward, his strength was unmistakable.  Sassouma became frightened of Sundjata and the threat he represented to  her and her son, the new King Dankara Touman. Fearing that they could  lose power, Sassouma and the new king hatched a plot to send Sogolon and  Sundjata into exile far away from Niani. For a period of seven years,  Sogolon and Sundjata wandered from kingdom to kingdom seeking asylum.  Some of their hosts were hospitable while others mistreated them. This  experience also gave Sundjata an opportunity to learn first-hand about  the kingdoms and peoples of Mali, their customs and their systems of  government. While in exile, Sundjata impressed most everyone he met with  his wisdom and brilliance. During that period, he spent a considerable  amount of time with King Moussa Tounkara of Mena kingdom in old Ghana.  King Moussa Tounkara took Sundjata under his wing like a son and  schooled Sundjata in the ways of war and statecraft. When the evil  Soumaoru Kante, King of the Sousous, brought his war of conquest to  Niani, a delegation from Niani fled to Ghana to find Sundjata and bring  him back to claim his throne and lead the fight against Soumaoru, who  had by this time successfully employed a series of cruel tactics in  conquering a wide swath of smaller Mande kingdoms. Initially, King  Moussa Tounkara was not happy to hear that Sundjata was leaving Mena and  going back to Mali but he was ultimately convinced that Sundjata was  doing the right thing in fulfilling his destiny and he gave Sundjata his  blessing and the services of several battalions of his army. On his way  back to Niani, Sundjata passed through many of the cities and kingdoms  he had visited during his period of exile. Now, as he travelled home,  going back through those places, he kept recruiting soldiers for his  army, building it up into a powerful force. Once in Mali, Sundjata’s  armies finally confronted the armies of Soumaoro in several battles.  Soumaoro’s armies were defeated but Soumaoro himself escaped. It was  believed that the reason Soumaoro was able to avoid capture was because  he was protected by magic. Sundjata therefore made the decision that he  too would have to turn to magic for help in finally capturing Soumaoro.  Sundjata consulted his wizards who advised him to perform an animal  sacrifice and have a magical arrow made specifically for Soumaoro, who  had by then regrouped and raised another army. In the Battle of Kirina,  the last and largest battle of the war, Sundjata is able to come up  close to Soumaoro and nicks him with the tip of the magical arrow.  Soumaoro loses the battle but escaped again. This time however, Sundjata  has at his side Prince Fakoli, Soumaoro’s nephew, who defected with his  troops to Sundjata after his uncle betrayed him. Together, they pursued  Soumaoro for several days, finally trapping him in a cave and killing  him. Sundjata then turned his attention to quickly defeating the other  Mandingo kings who had remained allies of the defeated Soumaoro. After  his final victory, Sundjata returned to Niani triumphant, and proceeded  to establish the Mali Empire. There he was crowned the Mansa of Mali.  The first thing he did was to divide the empire into 12 new kingdoms,  appointing as kings his supporters from the various regions of Mali. He  held an annual assembly with the kings to review the administration of  the empire. He also served as the final court of appeal in judicial  cases. After peace returned to Mali, vast fields of sorghum, rice,  millet, cotton, and indigo sprang up and surrounded the towns and  villages, and Mali knew prosperity again while the taxes filled the  king’s warehouses. Niani became a center of the gold and salt trade for  the trans-Sahara caravans. New cities grew alongside silk-cotton and  baobab trees and people could travel from town to town without fearing  bandits. Sundjata, remembered as a man of action, and for his  compassion, his charisma and his sense of justice, rests in Balandougou,  near Niani, where he met his death in the waters of the Sankarani. But  his spirit lives on and today the Keitas still come and bow before the  stone under which lies the father of Mali. Please answer the following:  1. Who is Sundjata Keita? What was the basis of his claim to the throne  of Niani? What is his historical significance? 2. Where is ancient Mali?  What is the difference between ancient Mali the place and ancient Mali  the empire? 3. Who are the Mande speaking peoples of West Africa? 4. Are  the Mandingo speaking people a tribe? Why or why not? 5. What is the  role of magic in ancient Mandingo culture? 6. Is belief in magic similar  to religious belief? 7. According to the story, what type of economy  did ancient Mali have? 8. In Mandingo culture, who is a griot, and what  role does he play (and he’s always a man) in the government? 9. How  reliable is the griot’s version of the history of Mali? Is the griot a  storyteller or a historian? 10. How are the women portrayed in this  story? 11. In ancient Mali, hunters were either members of a special  guild or a secret fraternity. What specific knowledge did hunters in  ancient Mali possess that gave them that special status and privilege?  (THE ANSWER IS NOT THAT THEY KILL ANIMALS) 12. Based on the information  in this story, are you able to identify some of the social classes in  ancient Mali? What are they?

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