Defender of the Sacred Sites

Salutations, fellow Positive People :-)  I have been researching women who make a difference and I would like to do a series on them, powerful earthly goddesses who touch lives and hearts; who bring the sacred feminine into everyday life.  Here is the first lady I have met, she is lovely, I hope you enjoy meeting her as I did.8110521257?profile=original

Defender of the sacred sites

It takes guts for a woman to challenge modernity and male domination with ancient knowledge.

To some Mphatheleni Makaulule is a demon’s daughter, destined to burn in the fires of a Christian hell. To others she’s an emissary from the ancestors and a keeper of ancient tribal traditions.

But Makaulule tells me she’s just a traditional woman from rural Venda with healing abilities. Yet traditional rural women generally don’t win Bill Clinton Fellowships to study leadership at the United Nations and at universities such as Tufts and Harvard.

Neither do they normally travel to the Amazon, Ethiopia, Colombia, Spain, Britain and Kenya in pursuit of knowledge about ancient ­cultures and global warming.

I’m in Thohoyandou to talk to Makaulule about a waterfall she’s protecting. It’s called Phiphidi and is lovely beyond imagining. Here the Mutshindudu River cascades down black granite into a pool rimmed by huge ancient trees, their muscular roots entwined in embrace and their gnarled branches reaching out over the water.

For countless generations women have come to the pool to perform rituals for bountiful crops, good rains and the health of the Venda people. The river is one of 24 that flow from the Thathe Holy Forest, higher up in the Soutpansberg, said to be protected by a white lion. Along their courses are groves, pools, falls and a lake where, the women say, trees, creatures and the air we breathe are purified and renewed.

Phiphidi is part of a biodiversity hot spot in Limpopo Province that supports hundreds of plant and animal species, some of which are endemic. Thirty percent of South Africa’s tree species grow in the area, though it accounts for less than 1% of the country’s area. In addition, 60% of South Africa’s birdlife, 40% of its mammals and 30% of its reptiles call the Soutpansberg home.

But when I visited Phiphidi, a front-end loader was clawing at piles of gravel and driving a road to the head of the falls. Under construction were eight chalets, a restaurant, laundry, bar and lapa, as well as an imposing, lockable gate. A Limpopo hotel group was already advertising the falls and the sacred lake, Fundudzi, in its “Land of Myth and Legend” tour package.

Ancestral traditions
The development was evidently sanctioned by a local chief, Jerry Tshivhase, and was being undertaken by the Tshivhase Development Foundation Trust, of which the BEE billionaire Mashudu Tshivhase is a director. Both men are related to King Kennedy Tshivhase.

After my visit the organisation that Makaulule formed, Dzomo la Mupo (Voice of Nature) took them all to court and forced building operations to cease. The king, coincidentally, had his kingship stripped. The message is clear: don’t mess with ancestral traditions.

Makaulule is the firstborn of the third wife of a traditional healer whom she revered. Her mother, too, had healing skills inherited from her own father, a traditional spiritual guide. Her father was 74 when she was born, the 11th of 24 children, a large clan related to the king. “My father gave me the name of Mphatheleni, which means to rebuild,” she says, “and I take it very seriously. He knew what he wanted me to do.”

From standard eight, with her father now old, Makaulule went to live with her uncle, a fervent Christian who saw it as his duty to turn her from her “heathen” ways. She tried to oblige, but kept having dreams in which her father, who died when she was in her second year at university, instructed her in the old ways of her people. When she told her uncle, he said her father was a demon and prayed over her head to exorcise him.

In her final year the spiritual contradictions were becoming intolerable. Right after graduation she had a breakdown. In hospital they diagnosed hyperstress and pulmonary tuberculosis. Her uncle visited her to preach. Weak and in bed, she had little resistance, so she fought back in the only way possible.

One day she dressed herself and ran away to the only place she thought she could find peace and healing: a forest at the foot of a sacred mountain near Elim named Luvhola. Alone, but with a memory of herbal remedies her father had taught her, and with wild fruits and spring water, she healed herself. When her strength returned she built a rough hut and daily climbed the mountain to sit and think.

Finding strength
“I spent two years in the forest,” she says, “with no money, living the way of my father. I wasn’t afraid—my totem is the warthog. I walked a lot. Friends brought me books and relatives came with food. Mostly I needed to stay alone, but I visited older members of my clan, learning from them the history of my people. It was a rite of passage and I found the strength to do what I’m doing now.”

She gathered traditional objects, old cooking utensils, cloth and beads—some from the collection of her father. Then, with plans that came to her in a dream and help from the community, Makaulule built a cultural village—a traditional kitchen, bedroom, grandparents’ room and initiation hut. She conducted ceremonies with snuff and finger millet, communed with the ancestors and explained to anyone who came along what she was doing and why.

A tour guide looking for traditional contacts couldn’t believe his luck when he visited her. Soon busloads of tourists from all over the world were coming to sit on the ground around Makaulule to hear what she had to say.

“I made many friends that way, but I realised most of the tourists just wanted to take photographs,” she says. “They weren’t going to do anything with what I was telling them. My place was listed as a picnic spot in the tour pamphlet. I was just ­entertainment.”

After that she studied tourism for a while, but eventually Makaulule decided it was time to leave the forest. Back in Thohoyandou, she saw the offer of Bill Clinton Fellowships and applied. She was accepted and flew to the United States, where she studied leadership and other skills at various universities, including Harvard.

“When I returned people said: ‘Yho, you’ve been to the United States and now you’re a millionaire. You must start a business.’ But that’s not what I was preparing myself for. Money doesn’t interest me. I went back to what I was doing. “I worked with those who were really interested in tradition and that’s how I met people from the Gaia Foundation. I spent days with them. They really understood what I was doing.

Living comfortably
“With their help and with the African Biodiversity Network, we started Dzomo la Mupo to defend sacred sites and traditional rituals. I took my ideas all over the world and met amazing people—shamans, traditional leaders and people who understood the link between old customs and Earth-healing. In the Amazon it touched me how comfortable people were living in an indigenous way with nature.”

Back home, though, all was not well. Her uncle, who had failed to convert her, turned her family and even her mother against her, claiming she was doing demonic work. They forced her to remove from the family home all her traditional clothes and objects—even the TV set she’d bought her mother. Her uncle held a meeting during which he exorcised the “demon” spirit of her father from the house. “He said: ‘I cast the demon spirit of evil out of this house. Jesus help you.’”

Her mother, on instruction from her uncle, burned a book that contained all the descriptions of ailments, preparations and cures collected by her father over a lifetime. Makaulule couldn’t begin to estimate the depth of cultural knowledge lost in that single action. But it hardened her resolve to seek accommodation of traditional knowledge in the modern world.

She began seeking out elders and recording their memories. She asked them why they didn’t speak out in defence of sacred sites. “They said: ‘We’re staying among Christians. We don’t want trouble.’

“I conducted workshops with these people and, with Dzomo la Mupo, they are now a force, they have become free. I helped them have a voice. And when chiefs started building at Phiphidi Falls they said: ‘That is enough!’”

The group hired a top lawyer, Roger Chennels, to fight the development in court. And, for now, he has stopped it. In traditional society it’s not easy for a woman to go up against a man and nearly impossible to go up against a chief. Makaulule had taken on a chief and a king and won. She’s deeply saddened that her belief in the value of cultural traditions has isolated her from her family. But she knows what she’s doing is right for the world and her people.

“There are 24 rivers flowing out of the Thathe Holy Forest. If you cut it down, what then? That’s the end of the farming system in Venda. “Sacred sites are places that make evaporation, that make rain. If you don’t protect the pools and waterfalls, where do the people get clean water to drink? Rituals aren’t empty things. They’re the Earth wisdom of hundreds of generations of wise people.”

Makaulule had a meeting to attend and her cellphone was ringing. She apologised and stood up to go. “I have to stay strong to live the way I do and be who I am,” she says. “We’re not chosen, we choose. Defending the old ways and bringing that knowledge to the future for our children is what I’ve chosen. It’s not easy, but I won’t be stopped.”

http://www.mg.co.za/article/2011-03-11-defender-of-the-sacred-sites

Doesn't she have the most beautiful eyes?  :) 

8110521469?profile=original

"There are 24 rivers flowing out of the Thathe Holy Forest. If you cut it down, what then? That's the end of the farming system in Venda. Sacred sites are places that make evaporation that makes rain. If you don't protect the pools and waterfalls, where do the people get clean water to drink? Rituals aren't empty things. They're the Earth wisdom of hundreds of generations of wise people"

1999 Mpathe built the "Luvhola Cultural Village" with the help of community members. Then, in 2006, Mpathe met with the African Biodiversity Network and the Gaia Foundation who have been working together to seek African solutions to the environmental and socio-economic challenges that face the continent. A partnership developed and in 2007 the Mupo Foundation was formed and registered in order to further facilitate this work. By 2009 Mphathe, with other traditional women leaders called 'Makhadzis' formed a group known as Dzomo la Mupo to protect a series of sacred sites in the Venda region which are under threat from development.

http://www.gaiafoundation.org/mphatheleni-mupo

"We have a word called 'Mupo'. 'Mupo' describes the origin of creation, the creation of the whole Universe. When we look at Nature we see Mupo. When we look at the sky we see Mupo. Mupo means all that is not man-made."

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  • Thank you to Drekx for bringing this to my attention, wow they are sooo beautiful :-)

    8114653096?profile=original8114653853?profile=original

  • SOLAR SISTERS SPREADING LIGHT IN AFRICA :)

    As a community leader in the small town of Mityana, central Uganda, she's been witnessing the health hazards and financial strains that a shortage of electricity can bring to people living in energy poor, rural areas.

    "Just three miles away from here, people in the villages don't have electricity -- some of them use candles, some use kerosene lamps," says Walusimbi, who runs schools for orphans and disadvantaged children in Uganda.

    "One morning there was a kid that was picked from school early in the morning because her sibling had died in a fire," she says. "[The kid] had lit a candle in the house and then went outside to do some other chores, so the candle melted away and the house was all on fire. By the time that they came back to see what's going on, the whole house was burned down and the kid was burned to ashes."

    In Uganda, some 90% of the population lives without access to electricity, according to World Bank figures. Apart from the health risks, Walusimbi, 50, says that lack of electricity is also preventing people from escaping poverty.

    "People that are living without electricity, their day ends up so quickly -- they can do less work compared to the people with full light," she says.

    A third of the world population doesn't have access to electricity -- it's not going to be solved by philanthropy.
    Katherine Lucey, Solar Sister founder

    But for Walusimbi, there is light at the end of the tunnel. She has joined Solar Sister, a group aiming to eradicate energy poverty while creating economic opportunities for women.

    Using an Avon-style women's distribution system, Solar Sister trains, recruits and supports female entrepreneurs in East Africa to sell affordable solar lighting and other green products such as solar lamps and mobile phone chargers. The women use their community networks of family and neighbors to build their own businesses, earning a commission on each sale.

    Solar Sister founder Katherine Lucey, a former investment banker with expertise in the energy sector, says this model is creating access to safe, affordable and clean energy while helping women to earn a steady income to support their families.
    Solar Sister in Africa. Click to expand.Solar Sister in Africa. Click to expand.

    "This gives them a chance to earn money in a way that is a lot more steady -- they have control over it and that money can come into the family," says Lucey, who is based in Rhode Island, in the United States. "In almost all cases we see them using that to spend on education for their children."

    During her 20-year career as an energy executive, Lucey says she'd seen how access to electricity was fundamental for economic growth. But whilst working on large-scale energy projects in developing countries, she also realized that the pressing needs of many poor individuals were still not being served. After dark, houses not connected to the electricity grid rely mainly on open-flame kerosene lamps for light. Such lanterns, however, pose fire hazards, emit toxic fumes and a put a strain on family budgets.

    "You really can't raise up above subsistence living if you don't have light, electricity and energy," says Lucey. "And when you do have it, it's just tremendous what people are able to accomplish and the impact it has on people's lives: children can study more and go to school, women can start businesses and are able to provide for their families."

    According to Lighting Africa, a joint World Bank - International Finance Corporation program developed to increase access to clean sources of energy for lighting, 589 million people in the continent live without access to a public electricity facility. The group says African poor rural households and small businesses pay $10 billion per year for lighting purposes, while communities not connected to the grid spend $4.4 billion annually on kerosene.

    http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/17/world/africa/solar-sister-africa-ligh...

    'Solar sisters' spreading light in Africa
    Solar Sister is a network of women who sell solar lighting to communities that don't have access to electricity.
  • Our Lives is a new IRIN series following 20 people in 10 countries as they try to get by in these testing times. The men and women featured - from teachers to truck drivers - describe how they cope with the rising cost of living, and explain their hopes for the future. This series will be regularly updated.

    http://www.irinnews.org/In-depth/96695/98/Our-Lives-A-survivors-gui...

    8114655474?profile=original

  • Yes!  Women all over the world are rising up together in love and fellowship with the earth, it's beautiful to see.  I'd like to add more women who are role models of the new paradigm to this Positive group, just to demonstrate the changes that are emerging as we grow into Love and Light. 

    Thanks so much for contributing, if you'd like to add any women who have touched your life, it would be awesome. 

    Lol, and not sure what it is about but having a love affair with Africa, I think some of my favorite lives were spent there. 

  • Thank you, Kat, that tree is stunning... gosh imagine how old it is.  Hm, and yes how sad that her family discarded her like that, I bet her western higher education had a bit to do with it too, they don't appreciate empowered women in some parts there, if you know what I mean. 

    Here is a song I fell in love with recently, kwaito music is the sound of their ghettos, a unique spiritual blend...

  • http://www.gaiafoundation.org/news

    Awesome news from Gaia Foundation.

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Recent Activity

Kelly Lightchalice replied to Kelly Lightchalice's discussion Defender of the Sacred Sites in Sharing Positive Vibes
"Thank you to Drekx for bringing this to my attention, wow they are sooo beautiful :-)"
Jan 22, 2013
Kelly Lightchalice replied to Kelly Lightchalice's discussion Defender of the Sacred Sites in Sharing Positive Vibes
"SOLAR SISTERS SPREADING LIGHT IN AFRICA :)
As a community leader in the small town of Mityana,…"
Jan 22, 2013
Kelly Lightchalice replied to Kelly Lightchalice's discussion Defender of the Sacred Sites in Sharing Positive Vibes
"Our Lives is a new IRIN series following 20 people in 10 countries as they try to get by in these…"
Jan 22, 2013
Kelly Lightchalice replied to Kelly Lightchalice's discussion Defender of the Sacred Sites in Sharing Positive Vibes
"Yes!  Women all over the world are rising up together in love and fellowship with the earth, it's…"
Jan 22, 2013
Kelly Lightchalice replied to Kelly Lightchalice's discussion Defender of the Sacred Sites in Sharing Positive Vibes
"Thank you, Kat, that tree is stunning... gosh imagine how old it is.  Hm, and yes how sad that her…"
Jan 22, 2013
Kelly Lightchalice replied to Kelly Lightchalice's discussion Defender of the Sacred Sites in Sharing Positive Vibes
"http://www.gaiafoundation.org/news

Awesome news from Gaia Foundation."
Jan 21, 2013
Kelly Lightchalice replied to Kelly Lightchalice's discussion Defender of the Sacred Sites in Sharing Positive Vibes
""
Jan 21, 2013
Kelly Lightchalice posted a discussion in Sharing Positive Vibes
Salutations, fellow Positive People :-)  I have been researching women who make a difference and I…
Jan 21, 2013
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