Mai Chaza

Mai Chaza
Born 1914
Buhera, Zimbabwe
Died 26 December 1960 (aged 4546)
Zvimba, Zimbabwe
Nationality Zimbabwean
Other names Theresa Nyamushanya[1]
Occupation Church leader, prophetess
Known for Founder, Guta raJehovah movement

Mai Chaza[note 1] (1914 – 26 December 1960) was a Zimbabwean church leader and prophetess[2] who broke away from the Methodist Church in the 1950s to found her own movement, Guta raJehovah (City of God), which was also known as the "Mai Chaza Church".

Biography

Early life and beginning of prophetic career

Mai Chaza was born in 1914 to the Nyamushanya family and married Chiduza Chaza of Wedza, by whom she had six children.[3] A devout Methodist, she was originally active within the ruwadzano, the Methodist Church's prayer groups in Zimbabwe.[4] In 1948 she was driven from her home in the mining town of Concession after being accused of causing the death of a sister-in-law through witchcraft. She moved to the township of Highfield in Salisbury (now Harare), where she was given shelter by another Methodist family.[5][6] She became ill around 1953–54 and was thought to be have become deranged before falling into a coma. Her husband divorced her and returned her to her family.[2]

When Mai Chaza recovered, she was hailed as having returned from the dead. She announced that she had been instructed by God to become a faith healer, live a celibate life, and heal the sick, especially barren women. She also claimed to have been reconciled with the spirit of her dead sister-in-law.[7] She began working as a n'anga, a traditional healer, telling people the causes of their illnesses in exchange for a payment of two shillings and sixpence. The Methodist hierarchy ordered her to stop and refused her request to have her own preaching circuit. She responded by establishing her own unauthorised circuit.[5]

Establishment of the City of God

In 1954, Mai Chaza relocated to Kendaka's Kraal within the Seke Reserve in Mashonaland, about 100 miles (160 km) south-east of Harare. She quickly attracted numerous followers; by the end of 1954, the village, built on a site measuring only one acre, had grown to 615 domiciles with around 2,500 inhabitants. They called it the Guta raJehovah or City of God.[5][6] In her new identity as a prophetess,[2] the self-proclaimed Mutumwa ("Messenger [of God]" or "Angel"), Mai Chaza received thousands of supplicants wishing to find cures for their medical conditions. She was hailed by her followers as Mai Muponesi ("Mother Saviour), Maqenga ("Heavens"), Gwayana ("Lamb"), or as an African reappearance of Christ.[8] Satellite "Cities of Jehovah" with healing centres were established in several locations around Rhodesia,[8] and also in neighbouring Bechuanaland (now Botswana).[9] She was said to have summoned the spirits of the 19th century Ndebele king Lobengula, the historical spirit medium Chaminuka and the founder of Rhodesia, Cecil Rhodes, and to have released them from purgatory and reconciled them.[10]

Mai Chaza's style of worship mixed Methodism with African traditional healing. A 1954 visitor to the Guta raJehovah described the scene:

The touching strains of a Methodist hymn greeted us and we saw – in a grass enclosure – hundreds of women swaying and clapping hands. In their midst was a long line of women, sitting on the ground ... From one end came Mai Chaza, touching and praying. She touched and squeezed their bellies. These were barren women and the ceremony was intended to make them fruitful. Headman Chiota told us that within the last few weeks no less than 68 women who had not given birth for a very long time were now expecting.[11]

Mai Chaza was credited with having cured numerous women, who stayed in the Guta for periods of between six months and two years. Not all were cured, however; such failures were claimed to be the result of the woman lacking sufficient commitment to God and her failure to fully confess her previous sins. Followers were instructed that they had to confess every sin they had committed in their entire lives, from childhood up to the point of approaching Mai Chaza. They also had to surrender objects associated with sin, such as alcohol, money and tobacco, as well as "pagan" artefacts such as traditional medicines and charms. Members of the Guta were thus expected to be spiritually pure.[5] Mai Chaza herself went further, renouncing marriage and sexual relationships; as Toyin Falola and Nana Akua Amponsah note, this was indicative of the "extraordinary measures" that a woman engaged in spiritual healing was expected to take in order to "substantiate her right to heal and lead".[12]

Her words and deeds were recorded in the Guta raJehovah Bible by her followers, who numbered at least 60,000 people and were drawn largely from the ranks of the poor and uneducated.[8] This Bible was seen as supplanting the New Testament, and depicts Mai Chaza as a member of the Trinity.[8] Women who were unable to conceive travelled to her church so that they could be touched by Mai Chaza, in the hope of being able to have a successful pregnancy.[4] Individuals regarded as possessed by demons would fall to the floor and acknowledge the authority of the Holy Spirit.[2]

Influence

Mai Chaza's movement posed problems for the mainstream Methodist Church, which was torn between a wish not to alienate her followers – many of whom saw her meetings as being authorised by the church – and the theological need to prevent her church from straying too far from official church doctrine. The Methodist Church instead took a middle path in the hope that the movement could facilitate a "revival within the Church" and advised tolerance and patience towards it.[11]

Elsewhere, the Guta raJehovah movement was debated and criticised in the pages of journals such as the African Weekly. Mai Chaza's success in attracting thousands of followers was criticised as a wasteful diversion of valuable man-hours, while African opinion leaders such as Charles Mzingeli scorned the idea that barrenness could be cured through repenting sins. Stories emerged accusing Mai Chaza of exploiting her followers and enriching herself.[5]

The rapid growth of her church necessitated a move first to Mount Dangare in the Zimunya Communal Lands near Umtali (now Mutare, in eastern Zimbabwe) in 1956, and subsequently to Zvimba District north-west of Harare, in 1960.[6] It was at Zvimba that Mai Chaza died on 26 December 1960. According to legend, she disappeared from her coffin as it was being lowered into the grave, thus fulfilling her statement that she would "not have a grave here on earth".[2]

After her death, her spirit was claimed to have entered Bandal Mapaulos, a Malawian, who took the title Vamatenga ("someone from heaven"). He was, however, less influential and the church's numbers have shrunk since Mai Chaza's death.[8]

Notes

  1. Meaning "Mother Chaza"; her real name was Theresa Nyamushanya.

References

  1. Chara, Tendai (August 28, 2016). "Inside Mai Chaza's shrine". Sunday Mail. Zimbabwe. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Jestice, Phyllis G. (2004). Holy People of the World: A Cross-Cultural Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 532. ISBN 978-1-57607-355-1.
  3. Dube, Lilian (April 2011). "Mai Chaza: An African Christian Story of Gender, Healing and Power". University of San Francisco.
  4. 1 2 Sheldon, Kathleen (2016). Historical Dictionary of Women in Sub-Saharan Africa. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 168. ISBN 978-1-4422-6293-5.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Scarnecchia, T (1997). "Mai Chaza's Guta re Jehova (City of God): Gender, Healing and Urban Identity in an African Independent Church". Journal of Southern African Studies. 23(1): 87–105.
  6. 1 2 3 Akyeampong, Emmanuel Kwaku; Gates, Henry Louis (2012). Dictionary of African Biography. OUP USA. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-19-538207-5.
  7. Rubert, Steven C.; Rasmussen, R. Kent (2001). Historical Dictionary of Zimbabwe. Scarecrow Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0810834712.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 Anderson, Allan (2001). African Reformation: African Initiated Christianity in the 20th Century. Africa World Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-86543-883-5.
  9. Morton, Fred; Ramsay, Jeff; Mgadla, Part Themba (2008). Historical Dictionary of Botswana. Scarecrow Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-8108-6404-7.
  10. Okoth, Assa (2006). A History of Africa: African nationalism and the de-colonisation process. East African Publishers. p. 128. ISBN 978-9966-25-358-3.
  11. 1 2 Higgs, Catherine (2002). Stepping Forward: Black Women in Africa and the Americas. Ohio University Press. pp. 154–5. ISBN 978-0-8214-1455-2.
  12. Falola, Toyin; Amponsah, Nana Akua (2012). Women's Roles in Sub-Saharan Africa. ABC-CLIO. pp. 79–. ISBN 978-0-313-38544-5.
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