The role of the Agikuyu religion and culture in the development of the Karing'a religiopolitical movement, 1900-1950 with particular reference to the Agikuyu concept of God and the rite of initiation
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Date
1981-05Author
Wa Kangethe, Kamuyu
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The central hypothesis of this study is that
the Agikuyu reIigion and culture played the primary
role in the developent of the Karing'a religio-political
movement and that the missionry religion and
education and the colonial rule played a secondary role
in the developent of that movement. The study intends
to investigate whether or not test the statement that the
Karin'g'a movement was retrogressive and advocated a
complete return to the gikuyu 'conservative traditionalism'
and of what the missionary nd the colonial authorities
calIed a return to paganism' is valid.
The field data mainly from Kiambu District of
Central Province, Kenya been utilized to test the
central hypothesis of this study. The major argument
is that the missionaries'campaign against the female
circumcision and other cultural and-religious ractices of the Agikuyu was aimed at penetrating the core values
of the Agikuyu; and that the Agikuyu responded to thiscampaign by forming their own schools and churches where
with their core values could be encouraged, promoted,
maintained.
The present study is historical-anthropological.
It is hi torieal because the events hich led to the
rise of the Kring' movement ere invariably historical.
The study is important to those interested in understanding
the nature of the African resistance-cumreligious
movements. Lastly, the study of this nature
is relevant in enriching our knowledge of the role of
the African cultural and religious heritage in
modernising African societies.
Citation
Degree of Doctor of PhilosophyPublisher
University of Nairobi Department of Arts Philosophy