Cameroon's
Mankon people mourn 'missing' king and welcome successor
For
the people of Mankon in the grass-fields of north-west Cameroon, their king -
known as the fon or fo - never dies. He simply disappears.
So
the regional governor Adolphe Lele incurred the wrath of the Mankon people when
he broke a taboo by announcing the death of the 97-year-old Fon Angwafor III
late last month.
"The
fon is the custodian of all land in Mankon. He is the very source of our
cultural spring. He is the fountain of our spirituality. He is the bridge
between the yesteryears, the here and now and the aftertime," says
barrister Joseph Fru Awah, a Mankon notable.
Fon
Angwafor III, who succeeded to the throne in 1959, was the first monarch to get
a western education. He attended school during a time when royal children were
kept out of classrooms to protect them from what was considered a commoner's
playground.
In
a country where farming is a way of life for many people, he continued his
education by becoming an agro-technician.
He
was a polygamist, like other Mankon rulers, and according to history, the
number of wives he had was never revealed. However, it would be a conservative
estimate to say he had approximately a dozen. He is also reported to have left
behind a large number of offspring.
Fon
Angwafor III was frequently referred to as King Solomon the Wise by his
subjects.
"He
always sounded like a teacher. Each time I met him, I would go away with some
food for thought and plenty of humour," said Eveline Fung, who met the
king on numerous occasions.
But
he had his fair share of critics. When colonial rule ended in the 1960s, he was
one of the architects of the unification of English- and French-controlled
territory into what is now Cameroon.
Mankon
is one of the biggest kingdoms in English-speaking Cameroon, home to hundreds
of thousands of people.
Some
of those who advocate English-speaking Cameroon's secession have never forgiven
Fon Angwafor III for supporting unification.
Rare
for a monarch, he also served in parliament, making history by becoming
Cameroon's first - and only - independent MP from 1962 to 1988.
In
1990, he became the national vice-president of the ruling party under Paul
Biya, Cameroon's authoritarian president. He remained in the post until his
"disappearance".
His
critics felt that as a monarch, he should not have got involved in partisan
politics. But he defended his decision, insisting that he was "the father
of all" and his involvement in politics was aimed at advancing the
development of communities.
Taboo to shed tears
It
took three long weeks for the Kwifor, the secretive supreme council of Makon
kingmakers, to formally declare the "disappearance" of the king.
Until
then, people whispered phrases like "there is smoke in the palace",
and refused to even say that their monarch had "disappeared" -
although he had already been "inhumed" at a sacred place unknown to
the public. The Mankon regard it as taboo to say that their king has been
buried.
Once
the announcement of his "disappearance" was made on 29 May, men did
not wear caps, and women did not farm as a mark of respect for the monarch.
The
mourning culminated on 7 June when tens of thousands of people turned up at the
300-year-old royal palace in Bamenda - a city with a population of 500,000 and
the heartland of the Mankon.
But
no-one shed a tear. It is an abomination to cry for a missing fon.
Pebbles thrown at new king
Both
women and men were dressed in skirts made from dried banana stems, or bamboo.
Their upper bodies were bare, except for the women who wore black bras.
Flanked
by members of the Kwifor, the new king - son of Fon Angwafor III - walked into
the palace courtyard, barefoot and bare-chested, with only a white cloth
wrapped around his waist.
The
crowd gently threw pebbles and small stones, grass and leaves, at him in a
symbolic ritual to show that this was the last time that any commoner would
hurt him or be disrespectful towards him.
As
he was pelted, he sprinted away into the palace while his subjects walked to nearby
streams to wash off the ash they had smeared on their bodies.
They
then changed into their best traditional outfits - including colourful handmade
gowns and headgear - before returning to the royal courtyard.
It
was a time of joy and and celebration to mark the "reincarnation" of
the missing fon into his successor.
"He,
Fon Angwafor III, reigns, then he is missing, as if to retreat and rejuvenate
and then he reappears with a renewed verve and flare to rekindle the
ever-burning and -blazing flame of Mankon nationhood," says the secretary
general of the Mankon Traditional Council, Ntomnifor Richard Fru.
And
so Angwafor John Asaah, chosen by the "missing" king as his heir,
emerged from the palace.
Dressed
in a reddish loincloth, he was raised on to an intricately carved stool by the
Kwikfor to signify that he had been "enstooled" - as the Mankon
people call the enthronement of their king.
The
crowd went wild with joy at the palace plaza when, for the first time, the
Kwifor declared his new names: Fo Fru Asa-ah Ndefru Angwafor IV.
"Who
would want to miss an event that has taken 63 years to happen?" said
Adeline Nguti, who had gone to the palace to witness the historic occasion.
"The
next one might not happen in my lifetime."
Her
twin sister Irene added: "We are all here to welcome our new king in
strict traditional fashion. This is what our culture demands. I hope the new
fon will be a great custodian of our tradition, just as his father."
But
one ritual was missing - the celebratory gunfire of Mankon men, with their
hunting rifles. The government banned guns - normally fired at cultural
ceremonies - some time ago because of the insurgency waged by armed groups
demanding the secession of English-speaking Cameroon.
It
was a poignant reminder of the conflict that has hit the region since 2017.
Many hope the new king will help achieve peace.
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