280. The Bakweri cultural chant: “i-nye na liiya nanu” (Let me be as I am).
“i-nye na liiya nanu” is a house-hold word. The chant has profound meanings. It warns or reminds people that it is being foolhardy to acquire wealth, fame, knowledge through dubious/dishonest means – stealing, embezzlement, extortion, assistance from secret sects.
Oral history has it that during the years 1800 to 1950 there lived in the village of Wonyavio (the home village of my maternal grandfather) a man whose name was Ngando. He was arrogant and seemed to live above his means, hanging his coat where he could not reach.
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Bakweri Clan: “Mbenga Mbowa” and “Wojuwa” villages.
Bakweri (Vakpwe) clan is one of the five clans of the aboriginal inhabitants of Fako Division. The other clans are:
Valongi (Balong).
Mungo.
Bimbia.
Molondi/Wovea (Bota).
However since the creation of Bakweri Land Claim Committee in 1946 the name Bakweri has assumed the status of a general reference to the ancestral lands of all aboriginal inhabitants of Fako Division. The objective of the Bakweri Land Committee (BLCC) is to pursue the claim that the aboriginal inhabitants of Fako Division be recognized as the owners of all parcels of land in Fako Division on which CDC plantations have been established.
Each clan except Balong speaks a dialect that is similar to dialects spoken in other clans.
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