Cecil Majaliwa
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Cecil Majaliwa was a former slave from
Zanzibar Zanzibar is a Tanzanian archipelago off the coast of East Africa. It is located in the Indian Ocean, and consists of many small Island, islands and two large ones: Unguja (the main island, referred to informally as Zanzibar) and Pemba Island. ...
who became the first African to be ordained as a priest in what is now
Tanzania Tanzania, officially the United Republic of Tanzania, is a country in East Africa within the African Great Lakes region. It is bordered by Uganda to the northwest; Kenya to the northeast; the Indian Ocean to the east; Mozambique and Malawi to t ...
. After being freed, he was educated in Zanzibar and England by the
Universities' Mission to Central Africa The Universities' Mission to Central Africa (c.1857 - 1965) was a missionary society established by members of the Anglican Church within the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Durham, and Dublin. It was firmly in the Anglo-Catholic tradition of ...
. He was highly successful during eleven years as an Anglican missionary in the south of the country. However, the European leaders of the mission downplayed his achievements and failed to promote him.


Early years

Cecil Majaliwa was a Yao. At the age of six he was sold in the slave market of Zanzibar. Bishop
Edward Steere Edward Steere (1828 - 26 August 1882) was an English Anglican colonial bishop in the 19th century. Life Steere was educated at London University and ordained in 1850. After curacies in Devon and Lincolnshire, he joined William Tozer (Bishop in ...
received him in the early 1870s, and he was educated at the Kiungani school. By 1878 he had become a teacher. In 1879 he married Lucy Magombeani, also a teacher and former slave. He became a
lay reader In Anglicanism, a licensed lay minister (LLM) or lay reader (in some jurisdictions simply reader) is a person authorised by a bishop to lead certain Church service, services of worship (or parts of the service), to preach and to carry out pastoral ...
and worked at the Mbweni mission. He excelled among the former slaves at Kiungani and around the end of 1883 was sent to
St Augustine's College, Canterbury St Augustine’s College in Canterbury, Kent, United Kingdom, was located within the precincts of St Augustine's Abbey about 0.2 miles (335 metres) ESE of Canterbury Cathedral. It served first as a missionary college of the Church of England (18 ...
, a missionary college in England. After returning to Africa he worked at Mbweni for a year. In April 1886 he was ordained a
deacon A deacon is a member of the diaconate, an office in Christian churches that is generally associated with service of some kind, but which varies among theological and denominational traditions. Major Christian denominations, such as the Cathol ...
.


Chitangali station


First visit (1886)

The Ruvuma mission was founded in 1880 by
William Percival Johnson William Percival Johnson (12 March 1854 in St Helens, Isle of Wight – October 1928 in Liuli, Tanganyika) was an Anglican missionary to Nyasaland. After education at Bedford School (1863–1873) and graduation from University College, Oxford, h ...
and four graduates from Kiungani. It was considered much less advanced than the Usambara mission. Majaliwa was assigned to Chitangali in the Ruvuma Mission in June 1886. Chitangali was at the edge of the Makonde plateau escarpment, and had been a place where farmers on the plateau could buy slaves. The plateau provided a place of refuge from Ngoni raiders and a source of food during droughts. Bishop
Charles Smythies Charles Alan Smythies (6 August 18447 May 1894) was a British Colony, colonial bishop in the 19th century. Life Smythies was born in Colchester, the son of the Rev. Charles Norfolk Smythies, vicar of St-Mary-at-the-Walls there, and his wife Is ...
took Majaliwa to start his "new scheme" in this Yao community. The chief, Barnaba Matuka, had been converted to Christianity at
Masasi Masasi is one of the six districts of the Mtwara Region of Tanzania. It is bordered to the north by the Lindi Region, to the east by the Newala, Newala District, to the south by the Ruvuma River and Mozambique and to the west by Nanyumbu District ...
in 1880 by W. P. Johnson, and had also been taught at Kiungani. Two of Barnaba Matuka's sons had been educated by the Mission, one at Kiungani and the other at
Newala Newala is a district of the Mtwara Region of Tanzania. It is bordered to the west by Masasi, Masasi District, to the east by Tandahimba, Tandahimba District, to the south by Newala Town, and to the north by Tandahimba and Masasi Districts. Th ...
. Barnaba Matuka was a likely candidate for being selected as supreme chief (Nakaam) in the region. The missionaries hoped that freed slaves could bridge the gap between the Europeans and local culture, but this was not always the case. Often the freed slaves had forgotten their native language and lost their ties to their families, or had become urbanized in Zanzibar and did not adapt well to village life. This was not the case with Majaliwa, who quickly learned the local customs and earned the respect of the Yao and Makonde people and their leaders. Most of the villagers could not speak
Swahili Swahili may refer to: * Swahili language, a Bantu language officially used in Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda and widely spoken in the African Great Lakes. * Swahili people, an ethnic group in East Africa. * Swahili culture, the culture of the Swahili p ...
, but Majaliwa soon became fluent in Yao. He could soon recite the Ten Commandments and the Liturgy in Yao. At the end of 1886 Majaliwa returned to Zanzibar with Bishop Smythies, as had been planned.


Second stay (1888–1897)

In June 1887 an English missionary reopened the station in Chitangali with Harry Mnubi, a former slave and teacher who had been educated in England around the same time as Majaliwa. In November 1887 Barnaba Matuka was made Nakaam and was confirmed as a Christian by Smythies. His elder son returned to Kiungani and committed to a missionary life on
Advent Sunday Advent Sunday, also called the First Sunday of Advent or First Advent Sunday, is the first day of the liturgical year in the Western Christian Churches and the start of the Christian season of Advent; a time of preparation for the celebration of ...
(27 November) 1887. Msjaliwa heard that the missionary at Chitangali was having little success, and in May 1888 returned there with his wife and children when the missionary left for England on leave. Majaliwa suffered from the isolation and danger. He had forgotten the language of his childhood, and was also forgetting English. He wrote "I am left alone in the midst of the heathen like a cottage in the middle of a forest." There was a threat of a Ngoni raid soon after he arrived. Everyone in the village fled to the hills, including Majaliwa's wife and four children, but he remained in the village until the danger had passed. This display of bravery earned respect from the villagers. Barnaba Matuka constrained Majaliwa's activities and chose which of his followers could convert to Christianity. However, the Nakaam's support made it possible for Majaliwa to focus on teaching Christianity. The Nakaam made most of his relatives Christians, helped run the mission, and discouraged the spread of Islam in the region. His sons also helped as teachers and readers. Majaliwa was forced to improvise, but with the help of the chief's sons built up school attendance to 25–30 children. He caused a sensation by playing a harmonium. Majaliwa's efforts were not confined to Chitangali and the Yao people. He visited the people of the
Makonde Plateau The Makonde Plateau, also known as the Newala Plateau, is a plateau in southeastern Tanzania. It is mostly within Mtwara Region, with the northeast corner in Lindi Region. The Makonde Plateau is a roughly rectangular, rising from the coast west ...
, where one of the chiefs promised to send his sons and other children to school at Chitangali. He often toured Makonde country, making converts there. He built churches and schools at Miwa and Mwiti. When there was no priest at Masasi he went there to perform the church rituals. He traveled to Newala to hear the confessions of Yao Christians, since no other priest understood their language. Majaliwa used local volunteers for construction and maintenance of churches and for transport of church goods. Through the friends he had made while in England he obtained the money needed for teaching materials, baptismal gifts and school prizes, so his station was as well supplied as those run by European priests. Majaliwa was ordained as a priest in January 1890, the first African priest in the mission. After six years Chitangali had 86 pupils in its school. 69 people had been baptized as Christians, and 143 were learning about the religion. Six of Majaliwa's pupils went on to become priests, and two became deacons. Bishop Smythies said that the religion of the people converted by Padre Cecil Majaliwa seemed very real. By 1893 the influence of the station at Chitangali extended to a wide surrounding region, and Majaliwa was the leading priest in the Ruvuma district. In 1893 Yohanna Abdallah, the Nakaam's son, stood in for Majaliwa while he was attending the
synod A synod () is a council of a Christian denomination, usually convened to decide an issue of doctrine, administration or application. The word '' synod'' comes from the Ancient Greek () ; the term is analogous with the Latin word . Originally, ...
in Zanzibar. Abdallah and his assistant Cypriani Chitenge both became priests a few years later.


Later years and legacy

Majaliwa's wife was homesick for Zanzibar. They wanted to return there to raise their children in a civilized place. After eight years Majaliwa asked for leave the take a holiday in Zanzibar, but was refused. He eventually decided to go anyway, and left Mwiti in August 1897 for Zanzibar, where he settled to raise his children. The mission authorities were taken aback by Majaliwa's lack of the subservience they expected from an African. They criticized him for abandoning his mainland missionary work, and downplayed his achievements. The mission's published history omits mention of Majaliwa's subsequent career. Majaliwa lived on in Zanzibar in an uneasy relationship with the mission, and several times was suspended from his duties. Cecil Majaliwa and Petro Limo helped Percy L. Jones-Bateman and Herbert W. Woodward in their revision of the
British and Foreign Bible Society The British and Foreign Bible Society, often known in England and Wales as simply the Bible Society, is a non-denominational Christian Bible society with charity status whose purpose is to make the Bible available throughout the world. The ...
's Kiunguja Swahili translation of the
New Testament The New Testament (NT) is the second division of the Christian biblical canon. It discusses the teachings and person of Jesus in Christianity, Jesus, as well as events relating to Christianity in the 1st century, first-century Christianit ...
, published by the Mission Press at Zanzibar. Majaliwa once said of the disputes between the Christian denominations, "You argue and talk and we have to listen, but when you have gone we shall remember that for all of us Africans the difference is the darkness out of which we came and the light in which we are." Bishop Smythies had considered making Majaliwa bishop of the Ruvuma district, but his successors William Moore Richardson and John Edward Hine let the idea die. Although Hine was willing to raise African clergy to the rank of archdeacon, when he left this was abandoned too, and the highest rank any African reached in the UMCA missions before independence in 1961 was that of honorary canon. However, Majaliwa's grandson John Ramadhani became a bishop 1980 and the third African Archbishop of the
Anglican Church of Tanzania The Anglican Church of Tanzania (ACT; ) is a province of the Anglican Communion based in Dodoma. It consists of 28 dioceses (27 on the Tanzanian mainland, and 1 on Zanzibar) headed by their respective bishops. It seceded from the Province of Ea ...
in 1984. Another of his grandchildren,
Augustino Ramadhani Augustino Steven Lawrence Ramadhani (28 December 1945 – 28 April 2020) was a Tanzanian jurist and Christian leader. He was Chief Justice of Tanzania from 2007 to 2010, and a Judge of the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights from 2010 to 2 ...
, became
Chief Justice of Tanzania The chief justice of the United Republic of Tanzania is the highest post in the judicial system of United Republic of Tanzania. The chief justice is appointed by the president and presides over the Court of Appeal of United Republic of Tanzania. ...
from 2007 to 2010.


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* * * * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT: Anglican missionaries in Tanzania