How The British Created The Mfecane To Cover Up Their Use Of Witchcraft

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  • Опубліковано 5 лип 2024
  • The British created the Mfecane to cover up their witchcraft by searching for Rainmakers in Southern Africa who could only be found using WitchDoctors.
    The only way the British would've located the fabled gold in what they later named Matebeleland after committing genocide against the original inhabitants - the Proto-Bantu was to use WitchDoctors.
    This video shows how they achieved this and stole the gold, land and attempted to erase an entire civilization.
    If you'd like to show your support for this channel, please give to our kofi. here: ko-fi.com/yenzi
    Thanks for watching
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 115

  • @lavimuia7612
    @lavimuia7612 Місяць тому +42

    I have always wondered why the British invariably cut off the heads of African leaders and carried them off e.g., in the case of Samoei in Kenya, some kings in Ghana, Tanzania( the German leadership were their cousins then). Sometimes, the entire body was " disappeared" so to speak e.g., Dedan Kimathi in Kenya; the young stolen Ethiopian prince who died in Britain etc.Their bodies have never been recovered. To date. Nobody wants to talk about them. Everyone pretends nothing ever happened, including the current African leadership.

    • @urbantheatre8134
      @urbantheatre8134 Місяць тому +4

      This is the age of information and truth

    • @mike_MT_jonez
      @mike_MT_jonez Місяць тому +2

      The young stolen Ethiopian prince. Came across this story only a few years ago.

    • @patriciahercules6852
      @patriciahercules6852 Місяць тому +2

      The dead heads spoke to them and gave them the knowledge to run the world

    • @lavimuia7612
      @lavimuia7612 Місяць тому +1

      @@patriciahercules6852 No doubt about it.

    • @TheDecimusic
      @TheDecimusic 29 днів тому +1

      ksenia menshikova talks about this. they probably siphoned the energy of the african leaders to rule the countries. thats how they work

  • @IrisRainbowMagick
    @IrisRainbowMagick 28 днів тому +12

    This is so important and this is why magic and spirituality have become so stigmatized because they don't want us to know that that's literally how they've taken over the world and they still use it today

    • @jknott1509
      @jknott1509 26 днів тому

      If you're sensitive to it, people like the Rothschilds have a very similar energy to a medicine man or shaman. They're powerful spiritual beings with a strong spiritual protection. Thats why they can walk down the street and most people just see an old man.

  • @daowonimdee
    @daowonimdee Місяць тому +17

    In my traditional Afrikan practice, I was taught the correct English word translation for our magick: SCIENCE, not "witchcraft". Whether you are using it to HEAL or KILL, it is still science. We do not do "witchcraft" in Afrika, we do science.

    • @inyenyenzi
      @inyenyenzi  Місяць тому +5

      Thanks for watching. The creators of these sciences have very high standards - you don't sit in their company if you smell like a hyena - they won't allow it.
      When it is used to do harm to others, these people are called Mulozi/Muloyi - translated to 'One who gathers to create absence/lack' - that's wrong and we don't equate the two, Haka and Mulozi, they aren't the same.
      Witches are corrupted people who don't follow or respect the rules, therefore they are kicked out which is why they become scavengers - hyena riders.
      The best among us cannot be lowered and equated to the worst among us.
      We have a word for Witches, if it was all the same, those words wouldn't exist.
      Witches aren't good, they don't sit at the same table nor are they equal to the Light Revealers. That's an insult

    • @daowonimdee
      @daowonimdee Місяць тому

      @inyenyenzi Science is science, and different Afrikan nations interpret it their own way. How we do things in Ghana is not necessarily the same as how it is done in South Afrika. It is what it is.

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому +2

      ​@@inyenyenzi I see that you are preparing to say that Balozi people (Bakololo) are witches...

    • @maphuthegommaboreramela4586
      @maphuthegommaboreramela4586 29 днів тому +1

      @@GwazaJuse😂.. I see that too

    • @chocolatesugar4434
      @chocolatesugar4434 29 днів тому +2

      We call it obeah and also science in Jamaica as well ❤

  • @lealbobbernstein9516
    @lealbobbernstein9516 Місяць тому +8

    just wish you spoke with more energy, listening to you for a long time is really hard. otherwise nice video keep the good job up

  • @XhosaBibleAudios
    @XhosaBibleAudios Місяць тому +1

    Great presentation🙏

  • @cullberry
    @cullberry 29 днів тому +1

    So interesting! Looking forward to watching the channel grow!

  • @Maweh_Mysteries
    @Maweh_Mysteries Місяць тому +1

    I love your content...Keep Going, You're doing great💕😊

  • @joeskys2362
    @joeskys2362 Місяць тому +2

    Interesting❣

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому +1

      Please know that this is a fiction story, it has no historical logic

  • @alukso
    @alukso Місяць тому +2

    Very interesting 🤔❤❤

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому +1

      It's a fiction story.

  • @Cizzlemane
    @Cizzlemane Місяць тому +3

    Please speak louder and more clearly… otherwise this was great!

  • @BaseLineBillionaires888
    @BaseLineBillionaires888 28 днів тому +1

    U speaking facts outea

  • @patrickfontaine142
    @patrickfontaine142 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you for explaining the republic destruction of our Empires....

  • @daowonimdee
    @daowonimdee Місяць тому +2

    In what language is "Haga Maga" from? Please post your sources for the info in the video. Thanks.

  • @kongowea9903
    @kongowea9903 27 днів тому

    I have learned so much from one video, Thank you greatly. You have given some confirmations about indeed witchcraft. I have a question did you say Shagga or CHAGGA . If chagga is there any connections to the chagga tribe of east Africa ?

  • @maphuthegommaboreramela4586
    @maphuthegommaboreramela4586 29 днів тому +1

    Where would you place the Masubya? I saw the on part two the mentioning of wearing white and linens or cottons. I read & saw an illustration in an old book that indeed the people either were naked or wore white. The Masubya wore white and referred to as priests. I could be wrong but they somehow linked them to the Ncube priesthood or Bakgatla here in South Africa. I’d love to hear your thoughts. Do you think they were part of the original proto Bantu?

  • @KATKattalestv
    @KATKattalestv 27 днів тому +1

    They are still using it. Who are the Real Savages? They are still using Humiliation Rituals...Keep telling the stories.💜😻

  • @divinehd1442
    @divinehd1442 Місяць тому +1

    Deep thanks❤

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому

      It's misinformation don't trust it as history. It's only good as fiction.

  • @NinjaLeeful
    @NinjaLeeful 29 днів тому +2

    The same way they appoint our presidents today

  • @hlogilehlogonolo5438
    @hlogilehlogonolo5438 27 днів тому

    I have multiple articles basically explaining how Mfecane wasn’t as what A lot of people believed actually was For Example Mzilikazi was previously thought that he migrated North because of Mfecane when in actuality he migrated North because of the Boers trekking inland and there’s so many more instances if you want to read the Article I can provide a link and if you have articles about Mfecane that goes against it pls provide me some It’s our duty and responsibility as Africans to find the truth of Our forefathers and mothers history

  • @xumenikomeshoshinana7038
    @xumenikomeshoshinana7038 9 днів тому

    Please how do I get hold of you
    0:52

  • @vutomirodney
    @vutomirodney 18 днів тому

    What's the link between Tonga people of Zimbabwe/Zambia and the Tsonga people of South Africa/Mozambique, Zimbabwe? Tsonga people never had a king as a whole and they were invaded by the Shangani, an offshoot of the Nxumalo/Ndwandwe.

    • @inyenyenzi
      @inyenyenzi  18 днів тому +1

      It was the Tonga that were invaded by Shangani. Tsonga seems to be what was appropriated by Shangani after he invaded them, in an attempt to erase the Tonga. Tonga are not a subgroup of Tsonga.
      There seems to have been an attempt to erase the Tonga and place them as a subgroup of some group when they are the First-Bantu in Southern Africa. This is evident when you look at every major Nguni invasion's target - they were targeting the people who were called Tonga because they had been separated from their King after the tearing of their Kingdom at Great Zimbabwe separating the West from the East - Tonga means 'people without a King'.
      The Moongas were large district of this Kingdom (they are on old Maps) lived along the Lupata Mountains in the Inyanga region. The Abalombwana had a district along the Sabi River. The Manansa were the Capital district.
      The entire Southern Africa was their Kingdom before the Arab invasion and it was divided into districts. I am still mapping them out.

  • @cedricngouwajocktane1978
    @cedricngouwajocktane1978 Місяць тому

    Great ❤❤❤

  • @tshwarelolebeko2395
    @tshwarelolebeko2395 Місяць тому +3

    I am so curious how you are separating Tonga and Kalanga as though they were not part of the same civilization, or how they were also absorbed into other "tribes" like Shona, Ndebele, Sotho-Tswana etc. The nations have kept their identities throughout time with their clan praises regardless of the tribes they were assimilated in, or is there something I am missing?

    • @inyenyenzi
      @inyenyenzi  Місяць тому +2

      Thanks for watching.
      BaTonga-HiManansa are the Proto-Bantu who precede everyone.
      Karanga is a dialect of Shona.
      BaTonga-HiManansa and Karanga have always been separate people with different priorities and loyalties. We have never identified as Karanga in any capacity and their name means 'Watchmen' ours now means 'Those without a King or those from the Walls'
      The Karangas haven't liked us at all and we are always mean to them.
      The goal of my work is to be honest and lay out what happened, so we can better understand each other and carve a respectful way forward.
      It won't be comfortable and I won't lie.

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому

      ​​@@inyenyenzi the goal of your work is chauvinistic tribalism, you are saying that only baTonga are people and everyone else is imposters, liars, debaucherers and scoundrels. We see your violence even though you speak it with a small American voice.

    • @theblackgods4699
      @theblackgods4699 Місяць тому

      ​@@inyenyenzi karanga people are shona the original comment is referring to kalangas

    • @former9085
      @former9085 24 дні тому

      @@inyenyenzi "The goal of my work is to be honest and lay out what happened, so we can better understand each other and carve a respectful way forward."
      Then get your timeline right.
      The British abolished slavery in 1805. The Mfecane took place long after that. Plus, no blacks from South Africa were ever enslaved.

    • @tshwarelolebeko2395
      @tshwarelolebeko2395 8 днів тому

      ​@@inyenyenzi But I am not speaking about Karanga (as a Shona dialect) but Kalanga/Kgalaka/Khalanga/Karanga as found in almost all tribes of Southern Africa (especially South-Eastern). Shona (colonial term) absorbed a part of them. Kalanga/Kgalaka means those of the Sun/ people of the East/North (Like Bakone who are also one with Bakwena/Baroka). Their history starts from the areas of Mpumalanga/KZN/Limpopo/Eswatini/Mozambique. Most of the clans in this nation are Ronga/Roka (rainmakers) by orgin. I know that their history is suppressed and are today divided into tribes, but you are limiting the real history if you are going to categorize them as Shona. They have a very similar tradition to the ancient Egypt especialy with the crocodile god, and their funeral ceremonies with the young men who helps with the burial being referred to as jackals/hyenas. Our history is scattered but this perception is further aggravating it, please do a research on them.
      Research also on the term Mbezi/Mbedzi/Mpedi/Mbhedzi, children of Thobela/Thovela/Thovera who also have Tonga relations, then you will uncover something there.

  • @KokeBoogotti
    @KokeBoogotti Місяць тому +2

    Very nice presentation, but whoever is doing this video is mixing up the Tarae people of the Americas and the Africans because the tobacco and the corn came from the Americas used by the British to enslave the African at the same time

    • @inyenyenzi
      @inyenyenzi  Місяць тому +3

      Thanks for watching.
      The tobacco, alcohol and corn that were grown in America were also being sold in Africa and did contribute to drug addiction especially among the Coloureds.
      'Kuwayi' - dependence on tobacco had a really negative effect on African populations.
      The instability from the raids created food insecurity which was now only available from European and Middle-East traders.
      Every time a population grew their own food, they were targeted and their crop was destroyed by the mercenaries - who would then depopulate the region, abduct people who were then forced to work on European and Middle-Eastern controlled plantations..
      I hope you subscribe and learn more about the world beyond America and how everything was interconnected.

  • @andrewndambuki2207
    @andrewndambuki2207 Місяць тому +1

    Sources??

  • @BwanaKabungo
    @BwanaKabungo 27 днів тому

    Ms Narrator,
    Firstly, I like your accent 😊
    Secondly, are you Zambian?
    Thirdly, will you be my wife??😍

  • @lk6789
    @lk6789 29 днів тому

    🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @user-wc1zb5fx8n
    @user-wc1zb5fx8n 28 днів тому +1

    I have spirits
    I found out I am Persian royalty
    A British officer married a Persian princess in the 1800s
    I come from this family
    I have powers
    Spirits tell me I come from Egypt
    My powers cause enemies to die

  • @yahyashabakasanhajafula3402
    @yahyashabakasanhajafula3402 Місяць тому +3

    Salaam my dear sister
    Shaka Zulu created the original Mfecane. It was his campaign to annex weak ethnic clans into a power confederation. Mfecane cannot be a Mfecane if this entails the British or any Toubab as its chief arranger and organizer. Shaka coined this term and it is a disgrace to attribute this term to a Toubab colonizer.

    • @tshwarelolebeko2395
      @tshwarelolebeko2395 Місяць тому +3

      Does that make sense to you? How are you to honor Mfecane something that reduced our military power for the Europeans to invade us easily? Even if Shaka was not part of the mercenaries, his history is a shame to us in Southern Africa, because due to it many clans/nations were scattered away making it easier for the Europeans to occupy our lands and capturing the scattered disempowered clans/nations.

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому

      There was no such person as "Shaka Zulu" that's the name of a TV show.

    • @yahyashabakasanhajafula3402
      @yahyashabakasanhajafula3402 Місяць тому +1

      @@GwazaJuse educate me on the real name….

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому

      @@yahyashabakasanhajafula3402 the name you're looking for is Shaka kaSenzangakhona.

    • @yahyashabakasanhajafula3402
      @yahyashabakasanhajafula3402 Місяць тому

      @@tshwarelolebeko2395 it is not honoring or glorifying acts of war. I was making a point that the creator of this term was not a Toubab.
      Secondly, the British was in striking position to take over all of Azania. The Zulu confederacy held off the British from taking arrested to country. Final the British succeeded after long bloody battles with the Zulu confederacy.
      I am a Fulani and historian! I am fully aware of the negative stereotypes at misinformation and disinformation that is leveled towards many groups on this continent. It is very important that we tell our own story but we get it right. So that is my aim.

  • @zodwancube3874
    @zodwancube3874 Місяць тому +5

    You are Talking Nonsense stop lying Mzilikazi was our Ancestors he was a Black Ndebe shame on you

    • @tshwarelolebeko2395
      @tshwarelolebeko2395 Місяць тому

      You don't want to hear the truth we see, this sums up the reason there would even be Mfecane after all. Especially in a season where whites were already on our lands and have already began to raid the western cape regions. Honoring the like of Mzilikazi is to attest to the fact that indeed we were barbaric like these whites mention us to be, which was not true at all. What clan are you truly, research on it, you might find out that you had nothing to do with Mzilikazi at all.

  • @former9085
    @former9085 24 дні тому

    You have a timeline problem. The British abolished slavery in 1805. The Mfecane took place long after that. Plus, no blacks from South Africa were ever enslaved.

    • @inyenyenzi
      @inyenyenzi  24 дні тому +2

      Just because the law says don't steal doesn't mean everyone will do it 🙃
      This slave trade took place at the Cape Colony.
      If you still disagree feel free to explain why San, Bantu and Nilo-Saharan were at the Cape Colony - were often escaping and being hunted to be taken back.
      Read John Campbell(Travels In SouthAfrica Undertaken At the Request of the London Missionary Society) or John Philip(Researches in South Africa) or the History of the Griqua(they were the slave raiders)
      They weren't indentured servants either - Shosholoza the Invictus Song is about summoning the mountain gods to burn the trains that took the Wenela program labor to South Africa - so they had very strong feelings about being indentured to Europeans and that would not have happened voluntarily.

    • @former9085
      @former9085 21 день тому

      @@inyenyenzi "Just because the law says don't steal doesn't mean everyone will do it"
      Strawman argument.
      "This slave trade took place at the Cape Colony. "
      The slaves at the Cape Colony were Malay and Indonesian. No Bantu were taken as slaves in South Africa.
      "If you still disagree feel free to explain why San, Bantu and Nilo-Saharan were at the Cape Colony - were often escaping and being hunted to be taken back."
      The San are an interior tribe from Namaqualand. The original tribes at the Cape Colony were Khoikhoi and Goringhaicona. There were no Bantu and Nilo-Saharan at the Cape Colony. The first time European and Bantu settlers encountered each other was at the Great Fish River about 1000 km east of Cape Town in the early 1800's.
      "History of the Griqua(they were the slave raiders)"
      Griqua were an interior tribe as well. Their area was known as Griqualand.
      "They weren't indentured servants either"
      The only indentured labour in South Africa was Indians brought to the Natal sugarcane fields by the British as the Zulu refused to work in the fields. Agricultural labour is seen as a woman's work by the Zulu culture and is considered beneath the status of men.
      "Shosholoza the Invictus Song is about summoning the mountain gods to burn the trains that took the Wenela program labor to South Africa"
      The workers traveled voluntarily on the train to work on the mines. Nobody forced them and they were paid, got leave, shelter and meals. None were slaves nor indentured.
      With its origins going back to the gold mines of South Africa, Shosholoza holds a firm place in the cultural consciousness having gone through the transformation from a work song to a kind of a solidarity anthem in the African South that is commonly chanted during public actions and sporting events.
      The song is believed to have been originally composed by workers from Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe while traveling by steam trains to and from the mines. This certainly explains how the railway theme finds its place in the song in the form of an onomatopoeia, in this case the word 'shosholoza' which imitates the sound of a working steam train, though the word can also can be understood as 'go forward'.
      I suggest you read the unrevised history of South Africa. I lived a lot of it.

    • @former9085
      @former9085 7 днів тому

      @@inyenyenzi "This slave trade took place at the Cape Colony. "
      Correct. And the slaves were Malay and Indonesian. There were no Bantu at the Cape.
      "History of the Griqua(they were the slave raiders"
      The Griqua are indigenous to South Africa. Both Whites and Blacks are settlers in South Africa.
      "They weren't indentured servants either"
      The only indentured labour in South Africa was imported from India as the Zulu refused to work in the sugar cane fields.
      "f you still disagree feel free to explain why San, Bantu and Nilo-Saharan were at the Cape Colony - were often escaping and being hunted to be taken back."
      The indigenous inhabitants of the Cape were the Khoikhoi and Goringhaicona. The first meeting of Bantu and White settlers took place at the Great Fish River about 1000 km east of Cape Town in about 1830, almost 200 years after the Dutch settled at the Cape and after slavery was abolished.

    • @aleenazahir
      @aleenazahir 5 днів тому

      @@former9085So slavery was abolished but not apertheid

    • @former9085
      @former9085 8 годин тому

      @@aleenazahir "So slavery was abolished but not apertheid"
      This is the reason dates are so important in history. Slavery was abolished in 1805. Apartheid started in 1948, 143 years after slavery was abolished. Apartheid ended in 1988. It lasted 40 years.
      There was no slavery under apartheid. South Africa had a very low unemployment rate during apartheid compared to the 40% unemployment today. The apartheid government had to erect electric fences along thousands of kilometres of border to prevent blacks from neighbouring countries streaming to South Africa and taking the jobs of black South Africans.

  • @zodwancube3874
    @zodwancube3874 Місяць тому +3

    If you don't have anything to tell people stop spending Liar about our Ancestors

    • @divinehd1442
      @divinehd1442 Місяць тому +1

      Did u read that in a book? Or did u see first hand.

    • @tshwarelolebeko2395
      @tshwarelolebeko2395 Місяць тому

      Which ancestor? Anyone who took part in Mfecane to overcome other nations played the role of mercenary for the Europeans, whether directly or indirectly. We also can't ignore the fact that witchcraft indeed was used just on the fact that we were aware that spirituality can be weaponized too.

  • @karabomosimanegape686
    @karabomosimanegape686 Місяць тому +2

    please repackage and rebrand your content.. you are totally deluded of history.. i don't know whose agenda you are pushing but find a better strategy..

    • @tshwarelolebeko2395
      @tshwarelolebeko2395 Місяць тому

      We were given so much bs history by the missionaries and their African agents. Although this is a shameful part of our history, we ned to talk about how indeed we had to betray each other for the whites to emerge victorious.

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse Місяць тому

      She's pushing Tonga tribalism. She believes only baTonga are people

    • @siyabongamngomezulu9743
      @siyabongamngomezulu9743 20 днів тому

      Your comment is not adding value because you are not explaining why you have this particular point of view.

    • @GwazaJuse
      @GwazaJuse 19 днів тому

      @@siyabongamngomezulu9743 just watch the rest of the videos. This person doing the videos is a terrible tribalist who believes only baTonga are actual people and everyone else is just barbarians

  • @TingTong2568
    @TingTong2568 Місяць тому +1

    Even before that, there was no official king in southern Africa

    • @theblackgods4699
      @theblackgods4699 Місяць тому +1

      Are you slow Southern Africa had many Kings from many different tribes

    • @samkelombambo916
      @samkelombambo916 29 днів тому

      Wow !!! Racism really does make you stupid

    • @TingTong2568
      @TingTong2568 21 день тому

      @@theblackgods4699 lol. Yeah right! More like chieftans instead of kings