Sotho-Tswana mythic animals: Stratagem for environmental conservation.
Abstract
This article argues that pre-colonial indigenous knowledge placed restrictions
on the use of certain animals and perceived them as sacred. This policy was
often successful as several species of wildlife are to be found “in many black
African areas” today. Communities with chiefs worked together to ensure
preservation of sacred animals. Such sacred animals had mythological
connotations attached to them – with the purpose of preservation of such
fauna. The article deals with the mythic animals among the indigenous Sotho-
Tswana group of South Africa and expounds their roles and how they were
perceived by the community under study throughout history in a dynamic
manner. The article proposes the defiance of some colonial-time interpretations
of mythic animals as “superstitious” and “a belief in magic”. It contends that
journeying back to the colonial and apartheid era by retelling, reinterpreting
and redefining mythic animals showing the history in a changing historical
manner will be a step towards a dynamic study of socio-environmental history
of sacred animals. The approach of the article is multi-disciplinary drawing
from religion, environment, history, linguistics, philosophy, psychology and
Africanist genre to show that, mythic animalistic history is not a closed official
document as received in the frontier but is dynamic.