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6 - Medicinal Plants: Their Selection & their Properties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2013

William Beinart
Affiliation:
Rhodes Professor of Race Relations, African Studies Centre, University of Oxford
Karen Brown
Affiliation:
Research Associate at the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, University of Oxford
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Summary

Our plants are powerful and they work well. Vets cannot identify and treat all diseases so we need our own medicines. Cows are like humans they get the same diseases and need the same cures. Plants that are good for humans are good for our cattle as well.

(April Nhlapo, Lusaka, QwaQwa).

April Nhlapo kept his two cows and one calf in his kraal in the backyard of his house in the densely populated village of Lusaka. He explained how he loved his cows ‘they are my bank and my source of milk’. He sold milk to his neighbours and traded calves when he needed cash. Like many stockowners we interviewed in Lusaka he had a good knowledge of locally available plants and treated himself and his cattle with ‘medicines I find in the veld’.

Pre-industrial societies worked with local natural resources on a daily basis and often achieved a rich knowledge of the plant species around them. African societies used plants for a wide range of purposes, from food and building, to furniture and utensils. Plants provided countless elements of material culture and in this way they were part of a deep indigenous knowledge; people knew where they grew, which were edible, which could be cultivated, and how they could be used. Some species had specific cultural connotations or ritual functions. Plants were equally important for medicinal and veterinary uses and, as in many pre-industrial societies, the boundary between food and medicine was not always tight.

Type
Chapter
Information
African Local Knowledge and Livestock Health
Diseases and Treatments in South Africa
, pp. 163 - 196
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2013

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