Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-lrblm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-02-11T05:48:34.454Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

JOHN M. WEATHERBY, The Sor or Tepes of Karamoja (Uganda): aspects of their history and culture. Salamanca: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca (pb €22 – 978 84 9012 067 5; Kindle £7.44). 2012, 212 pp.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2016

BEN KNIGHTON*
Affiliation:
Oxford Centre for Mission Studiesb.knighton@btinternet.com
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2016 

John Weatherby went to Uganda as an art teacher, grew interested in the people he taught, and earned an MA at Makerere University for an ethnographic thesis on the Sebei on Mount Elgon in 1967, when that was quite an achievement. Indeed, the history department there, containing J. B. Webster, R. S. Herring and J. E. Lamphear, produced irreplaceable research on north-east Uganda. Now Weatherby's daughter, Joanna, has had the University of Salamanca publish her father's ethnographic monograph on the So/Soo/Sor, a Kuliak people living on Mount Moroto, above the high school where her father was posted to teach art before President Amin effectively ended all research in Uganda. This offering from 1974 is therefore a valuable record of the past twice over, since the oral memory of most of his contributors went back four generations to the first half of the nineteenth century, and one to 1779, not only in Sor clans on Moroto but also on Mount Kadam. I have been able to check the prophecy of a female Sor seer, Larubekume Namodang, who reputedly told the Cubae age section in waiting of the Karimojong to delay its first initiations, or else the Europeans would come (pp. 115–16). According to my research, the Cubae started initiating in 1913, and according to that of my internal examiner, James Barber, the government first visited the Karimojong at Moroto in March 1914 and started building in July in the Léa Valley. They should have listened to her!

Although he died in 2003, Weatherby is surprisingly up to date, matching Roger Blench's 2006 dating of the Sor's proto-Kuliak ancestors to 3,000 BP (p. 47), but he does not consider, like Blench, that they might have shifted their language from Cushitic to their peculiar Nilo-Saharan. Nor does he note their 500-mile, north–south spread, despite referring to a memory of their being at Lokapel, the granite inselberg overlooking the Dopes River (p. 102). Places associated with the Kuliak, whether Nyangea, Ik or Sor, are identifiable by their Nilotic names: the Tepes Hills in Ethiopia, the Dopes River running south along the length of Karamoja, Endebess in Kenya, and caves on Mount Elgon, where Weatherby does record Sor fleeing famine in the 1830s (p. 108).

Weatherby makes a case for the historical continuity of Sor culture (pp. 117–19, 121, 133, 215). Nowhere is this more evident than in his special interest in the Sor spirit cult. There are two levels of initiation into different charismata, Kensan and Arras:

It is when the Kensan initiated advance into the Arras school of initiation that they are trained to become as if they were ‘possessed’. In their Kensan group they are strong men wearing feathers and a skin cape, but in the Arras school during the whole year of initiation, separated from the world of their homesteads, they become like helpless children, never allowed to eat alone, fed by the Arras, beaten [very hard by vengeful wives], degraded, and unable to retaliate. It seems they thus reach a state of ‘dissociated personality’. (p. 123)

Indeed, the Arras often live like widowers, with only a grandson, as they are ‘living with their God’, Belgen. Yet this is in tension with the infringing ‘modern world’ (p. 119) and ‘the more recent changes which press in upon their community from all sides’ (p. 133). This begs the question of how much – and where – the Sor have changed, for religion itself may reflect as well as carry, and even cause, social change. It is a pity that Weatherby was not aware of the survey made in 1957 by the Assistant District Commissioner, John Cleave. While this might not have penetrated the spiritual silences, it was more methodical in visiting virtually every Sor homestead on Moroto. He found that the Mount Moroto population had tripled in forty years. A fifth of households were Pokot immigrants, who accepted the local polity, while the Sor promoted a policy of intermarriage with them, the Karimojong and the Turkana, to the point that these comprised 31 per cent of women on Moroto. This accords with Weatherby's data (pp. 153–76), in which all twenty genealogies include Karimojong names, more frequently in recent generations. The last generation introduces Christian names. Was this associated with changes in spirit worship and initiation?

Since 1972, cattle herding has increased, usually in alliance with the Maseniko, and so has speaking Ngakarimojong and participating in local government at Moroto Municipality. Are these changes the privilege of ‘modernity’? The answer lies in Weatherby's contribution to the history of clans, wherein lies room for greater research. Clan names of Ser(a), Minito, Miro, Riam, Erepo, Kere, Kulok (Kuliak), K(w)or, Liwa/Riwa and Oropom recur among the Karimojong, reflecting Nilo-Saharan and Nilotic – Southern, Western, and Eastern – origins. In the ongoing absorption of various clans, multiplied by exogamy bringing in and perpetuating customs and memories at the hearth, Sor and Karimojong have always coped with difference, and so with change, including shifts in language and economy. Any future research cannot afford to ignore the data in this book and in Weatherby's four other publications, if it is to achieve any historical or cultural depth.