Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures & Tables
- Preface
- Foreword
- 1 The Troubles of an Anthropologist
- 2 The History & Ethnogenesis of the Acholi
- 3 The Crisis
- 4 The War of the Holy Spirit Mobile Forces
- 5 The Holy Spirit Movement as a Regional Cult
- 6 The March on Kampala
- 7 The History of Religions in Acholi
- 8 Alice & the Spirits
- 9 The Texts of the Holy Spirit Movement
- 10 The War in Acholi, 1987-96
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 August 2017
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures & Tables
- Preface
- Foreword
- 1 The Troubles of an Anthropologist
- 2 The History & Ethnogenesis of the Acholi
- 3 The Crisis
- 4 The War of the Holy Spirit Mobile Forces
- 5 The Holy Spirit Movement as a Regional Cult
- 6 The March on Kampala
- 7 The History of Religions in Acholi
- 8 Alice & the Spirits
- 9 The Texts of the Holy Spirit Movement
- 10 The War in Acholi, 1987-96
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
On 2 January 1985, an Acholi woman from northern Uganda named Alice Auma was possessed by an alien Christian spirit known as Lakwena ('Messenger’ in Acholi), and became known as Alice Lakwena. From this event ensued a powerful prophetic movement, the Holy Spirit Movement, and its very nearly successful military insurrection against the government of Uganda. Alice was still alive, a refugee in Kenya, when this book was published. A last report was of her sitting in a bar drinking gin and Pepsi-Cola: Lakwena had deserted her. Hers was a personal tragedy. But if we look behind her, as is done in this valuable book, we can discern a far greater tragedy, namely, the history of the many thousands of Acholi men and women who took her as their prophet and followed Lakwena's message to put right the cruel and sinful world in which they lived, a message that led them to defeat and even greater misery. Alice's Holy Spirit Movement failed: yet, like many ‘failures’ it transformed its country's history.
Prophets and prophetic movements are nothing new in African history, but few prophets have been observed by outsiders. Many appeared during the colonial period in reaction to unpopular administrations; the colonial administrators considered the prophets to be rebels and tried to prevent outsiders from meeting them. A problem in studying them is that many prophetic movements have today been mythologized as national independence movements, and most of their prophets have become mythical personages. It is difficult to reconstruct events.
Many sanguine politicians expected that, after political independence, these movements would cease, but they have not done so. We should ask why these movements still appear and become strong enough to lead to overt political action. The people who take part in them are ordinary citizens and not crazed religious maniacs. Why do people follow self-proclaimed prophets, and why do they die for their beliefs? These are important questions, and this book provides some of the answers within a specific region at a specific time in history, rather than giving wholly ‘theoretical’ generalizations.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Alice Lakwena and the Holy SpiritsWar in Northern Uganda, 1986-97, pp. ix - xiiPublisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2000