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Claire's Reviews > Kintu

Kintu by Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi
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it was amazing
bookshelves: around-the-world-2018, fiction, historical-fiction, history, ugandan-literature, favorites

1750 Buddu Province, Buganda

Kintu is the name of a clan, the original clan elder Kintu Kidda fell in love with Nnakato, an identical twin (the younger) and her family refuse to allow him to marry her unless he married her sister Babirye first. He refused. They resisted. He relented.
Kintu's mind lingered on the primal conflict that led to a soul splitting into twins. No matter how he looked at it, life was tragic. If the soul is at conflict even at this remotest level of existence, what chance do communities have? This made the Ganda custom of marrying female identical twins to the same man preposterous. It goes against their very nature, Kintu thought. Twins split because they cannot be one, why keep them as such in life? Besides, identical men did not marry the same woman.

Babirye gave him four sets of twins while Nnakato was unable to conceive. When the twins, raised as if they belonged to Nnakto were adults, Nnakato finally gave birth to a son Baale. They adopted a baby boy Kalema, from Ntwire a widower who was passing through their lands, who decided to stay in gratitude to Kintu and Nnakto for raising his son in their family.

When tragedy occurs, Kintu tries to conceal it, Ntwire suspects something and places a curse on Kintu and his family and future descendants.

The novel is structured into Book One to Book Six, the first five books focus on different strands of the Kintu clan, the first book being the original story of Kintu Kidda and his family in the 1750's, the latter stories set in modern times; colonial interlopers have left their imprint, however this is not their story nor a story of their influence, except to note the impact on the kingdom.
After independence, Uganda - a European artefact - was still forming as a country rather than a kingdom in the minds of ordinary Gandas. They were lulled by the fact that Kabuku Mutees II was made president of the new Uganda. Nonetheless, most of them felt that 'Uganda' should remain a kingdom for the Ganda under their kubuka so that things would go back to the way they were before Europeans came. Uganda was a patchwork of fifty or so tribes. The Ganda did not want it. The union of tribes brought no apparent advantage to them apart from a deluge of immigrants from wherever, coming to Kampala to take their land. Meanwhile, the other fifty or so tribes looked on flabbergasted as the British drew borders and told them that they were now Ugandans. Their histories, cultures and identities were overwritten by the mispronounced name of an insufferably haughty tribe propped above them. But to the Ganda, the reality of Uganda as opposed to Buganda only sank in when, after independence, Obote overran the kabaka's lubiri with tanks, exiling Muteesa and banning all kingdoms. The desecration of their kingdom by foreigners paralysed the Ganda for decades.

Each beginning of the six parts/books however narrates a little of the story of a man named Kamu Kintu, who had been removed from his home and was on his way for questioning by the local counsellors, when targeted by a mob of angry villagers and killed. We don't find out who he is or how he is connected to the families we encounter, until Book Six, where the threads that tie the clan together reconnect.

Throughout each family and over the years, certain aspects replicate throughout the families, the presence of twins, premature death, as if the curse that was muttered so long ago continues to reverberate through each generation. Some of them are aware of the curse, they remember the story told by their grandmothers, others haven't been told the truth of their origins, in the hope that ignorance might absolve them.
Her grandmother's story had intruded on her again. All day at work, the story, like an incessant song, had kept coming and going. Now that she was on her way home, Suubi gave in and her grandmother's voice flooded her mind.

Some are haunted by ghosts of the past, thinking themselves not of sound mind, particularly when aspects of their childhood have been hidden from them, some have prophetic dreams, some have had university educations in foreign lands and try to sever their connections to the old ways, though continue to be haunted by omens and symbols, making it difficult to ignore what they feel within themselves, that their mind wishes to reject. Some turn to God and the Awakened, looking for salvation in newly acquired religions.

It's brilliant. We traverse through the lives of these families, witness their growth, development, sadness's and joys, weaving threads of their connections together, that will eventually intersect and come to be understood and embraced by all as the clan is brought together to try and resolve the burden of the long held curse that may have cast its long shadow over this clan for so many generations.
One of the things that’s particularly unique about the novel, is the contrast of the historical era, 1750’s with the modern era, the historical part shows the unique way of life before the arrival of Europeans, in all its richness and detail, how they live, the power structures, the preparation for the long journey to acknowledge a new leader, the protocols they must adhere to, the landscapes they traverse. An article in The Guardian notes twin historical omissions and concludes that the novel is the better for it:

Makumbi mostly avoids describing both the colonial period, which so often seems the obligation of the historical African novel, and Idi Amin’s reign, which seems the obligation of the Ugandan novel. Kintu is better for not retreading this worn ground.

It reminded me of the world recreated by the Guadeloupean-French-African writer, Maryse Condé, in her epic historical novel Segu, another African masterpiece, set in the 1700’s in the kingdom of Segu.

I hope the success of Kintu encourages other young writer’s from within the vast storytelling traditions of the many African countries to continue to tell their stories and that international publishers continue to make them available to the wider reading public, who are indeed interested in these lives, cultures, histories and belief systems of old that continue to resonate in the modern-day, despite political policies and power regimes that seem to want to change them.

Highly Recommended.
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Reading Progress

March 11, 2018 – Started Reading
March 11, 2018 – Shelved
March 11, 2018 – Shelved as: to-read
March 11, 2018 – Shelved as: around-the-world-2018
March 11, 2018 – Shelved as: fiction
March 11, 2018 – Shelved as: historical-fiction
March 11, 2018 – Shelved as: history
March 11, 2018 – Shelved as: ugandan-literature
March 11, 2018 –
page 90
20.83% "Book 1
Kintu wants to marry Nnakanto, an identical twin, he must also marry her sister, he resists. Her family resists.
He accepts the twin but doesn't marry her until their 4 sets of twins are adult.
Nnakanto eventually has a son, Baala, they adopt Kemala, raise them as twins.
A new king, Kintu travels to pass 3 moons there
Kemala's father utters the curse
Baale prepares & is prepared by his father Kintu, to marry"
March 12, 2018 –
page 160
37.04% "Book 2
Suubi Nnakintu
Mmengo, Kampala
Jan 2004
Kamu Kintu's body is identified, removed for buria
Meanhile:
Suubi takes a taxi, her grandmothers story intrudes on her mind, about Ntwire the man who refused to integrate, who cursed Kintu and all his descendants
Ssanyu presence, 2nd time since graduation, the apparition of a dead twin
Story of how she comes to be, Bulange village 1980, Kulata, palace, school"
March 13, 2018 –
page 200
46.3% "Faisi and Kanani, the Awakened, go out sowing
Twins Ruth & Job
The sister of Kanani, with her tribe of kids take in Ruth,
her husband stays one week in 4
2 weeks for 1st wife, 1 each for 2nd and 3rd"
March 16, 2018 –
page 317
73.38% "Miisi and his British education
Hes children with their lack of
Being perceived as a foreigner
changed by his education
the metaphor of the African with European legs
Frankenstein"
March 17, 2018 – Finished Reading
May 19, 2024 – Shelved as: favorites

Comments Showing 1-9 of 9 (9 new)

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message 1: by Diane (new)

Diane Wallace Wonderful review, Claire!


Claire Thanks Diane, it's a brilliant novel, refreshing and unique, excellent storytelling and the ability to tell these different stories of families and bring them all together, against a backdrop of a region that has been through tumultuous change that affects people in different ways. An inside story of a culture, just loved it.


Samir Rawas Sarayji Oooh... this looks good!


Claire Samir wrote: "Oooh... this looks good!"
This book took it's time to get to us because despite winning the Kwani manuscript prize (from 240 African novels submitted) and some have said it may be because it ignores the colonial period, publishers believed it wouldn't be of interest to readers in English. Well I can't speak for other readers, but this is exactly the kind of voice in literature that's been missing for so long, the authentic voice from within the culture, that ability to reach back inside the culture and connect the present to the past, without having to make it relevant to a period or a post -period when white men visited Africa.


Samir Rawas Sarayji Yes!!! Couldn't agree more. Publishers are too stuck in their fixed labels that it takes a breakthrough every time to make them realize how wrong they are :-( Check out 'Season of Crimson Blossoms' by Abubakar Adam Ibrahim, he does a wonderful job of depicting the Hausa Fulani culture in northern Nigeria without much regarding post-colonialism.


Samir Rawas Sarayji A well-deserved shout out to you :)

/review/show...


Claire Samir wrote: "A well-deserved shout out to you :)

/review/show..."


Thank you so much for this, so glad to hear you felt the same way about this excellent work.


message 8: by sylvie (new) - added it

sylvie Hi Claire🌺
Re-reading, I loved 💗 The First Woman.
I set aside Silence is a Sense, so much trauma and hate ( hate towards Muslim immigrants in London) I will pick it up again, it is a good read.


Claire sylvie wrote: "Hi Claire🌺
Re-reading, I loved 💗 The First Woman.
I set aside Silence is a Sense, so much trauma and hate ( hate towards Muslim immigrants in London) I will pick it up again, it is a good read."

The First Woman is fabulous.
I haven't read Silence is a Sense yet, but it's on its way to me, thanks for the warning, I'll choose when to read it carefully.


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