ON THE QUESTION OF
BALUE ORIGINS
By Blessed E. Ngoe
It is almost about a
week ago that I witnessed a number of well-meaning Balue people express their
dissatisfaction with the remarks that someone, in another forum, made about
them and their origins.
Background:
In one of the Oroko forums to which I do not belong, someone allegedly and
erroneously made the claim or seemed to suggest that the Balue people do not
know where thy come from. In fact, it is said that the young man boasted that
he could knock off any Balue chief by simply asking the said chief to recount
the history of his people. What arrogance! Naturally, those claims did not sit
in well with a good number of Balue people in that forum, my humble self-included.
What the claim implied is that the Balue are, to say the least, ignorant of who
they are as a people, having no knowledge of their past to chart their
knowledge of their present. If a group of people do not know from where
they came, cultural knowledge teaches us that they most likely would have no
idea about where they go.
In response to that
young man, whose name I asked for but wasn't given, I want to tell you a little
bit about who the Balue are, at least when it comes to where they actually come
from with the hope that he will find it informative.
Let me start here: I
happen to be the grandson of one of the most celebrated keepers of oral history
in Balue land, Tata Nefenda Itoh Mofa (baptized Nicholas when he became a
Catholic in 1922). My grandfather's narratives of Balue origins remain fresh in
my mind, even though he died over two decades ago. Being so dated, I would not
want to rely so much on my memory of what my grandfather said, but on recent
data taken from my research interviews with people who, in their youth, were
actually taught Oroko history in school. I know that sounds strange and
far-fetched to so many, but once upon a time, some of our fathers and
grandfathers (born between 1935 and 1945) were taught Oroko history in mission
schools all over what has become known today as Ndian division.
In this exposition,
I will rely on information I got from two sources: Pastor Johnson N. Mesembe
and Mr. Gregory E. Mbongo, all of blessed memory. Their narratives of Balue
history corroborate what older oral historians, from whom they gathered
knowledge, said.
ORIGINS
The Balue agree that
they descend from two great leaders, NANGENOA and NALIOMO. Both are said to be
descendants of Erume (Elume) Nangoi. Oral history holds that the apical
ancestor of the Balue (Elume Nangoi) came from the BIMA VILLAGE OF BEBOKA. His
ancestors had settled in this village after fleeing the coastal site of BATEKA.
The story goes that in Bateka, during a high-level festival, a European (most
probably a Portuguese) happened on the people unannounced. His appearance, seen
as breaking a taboo, met with fatal hostility. The people dumped the intruder's
dead body into a creek. Three days later, the tides brought back the body to
the banks of the river close to the settlement of our ancestors. Upon seeing
this, and gripped by fear of the unknown, our ancestors fled their native land
to higher grounds. Those who would become the ancestors of the Bima, Bakundu,
Balue (and consequently Ekombe and Mbonge) settled in the village now known as
BEBOKA (the mother of all Bima villages).
It is said that
ELUME NANGOI (that is Elume of Ngoi or Elume, son of Ngoe) took a BATANGA WOMAN
as wife. His descendants later settled in a probably extinct, village called
MAYƆKƆ,
near MADIƐ NGOLO in the
EKAMA territory of that land.
MIGRATION
An unfortunate
incident in which an assailant group came upon the women of the village, in the
absence of the men, further drove the sons of Elume eastward, away from
Ngololand. It is said that all of their women and children were killed as the
men were away hunting. These sons of Elume wandered through the forest in
search of a peaceful place to settle. In their travels, they came upon a young
woman who could not speak their language. My position is that this was most
probably a BAROMBI MAIDEN, as the Barombi were the ancient occupants of the
territory they were in. The eldest among the wanderers took the young woman as
wife. Their children, led by Nangenoa and Naliomo continued the journey through
the (ba)Rombi Hills (now called Rumpi Mountains) and discovered a flourishing
Barombi town where the townsmen were skilled potters. The sons of Elume laid
siege upon the town, capturing it, and renaming it BETƐNGƐ,
after the clay pots that were made there.
It is from Betɛngɛ
that the earliest Balue villages spread as the population grew with time. The
historians said that the sons of Nangenoa founded DIKOME and several other
settlements in the northern half of Balue land, including some that are today
in Mbonge territory. Meanwhile, the sons of Naliomo founded BAFAKA (still
called Bonaliomo today) and many other settlements in southern Balue land,
including some that are today in Balondo territory.
BALUE OF TODAY
Although these
origins and migration story of the Balue seems very linear and clear cut, it is
worth noting that not all Balue villages came about as a result of this route.
Many Balue villages splintered from Mbonge, Balondo, Bakundu, and Ngolo
villages. Moreover, there's at least one Balue settlement that was used to
settle "slaves". I put slaves in quotes because it is a polarizing
term that should be taken with a pinch of salt. Again, even the so-called
original Balue villages are, indeed, blended. Many family (lineage) founders came
from different parts of the Oroko Nation. For example, in Bafaka, there are
lineages whose apical founders came from the Balondo village of Illor, the
Ngolo villages of Madie and Mbange, the Mbonge village of Disoni, and the
Bakundu villages of Mbu and Mbakwa, etc.
Indeed, the Balue
are a true blend of what we call the Oroko of today, having their most ancient
roots in the riverain region of the Ndian - BATEKA. Their intermediate origins
are undoubtedly, BEBOKA BIMA. They settled for a while (and in peace) in EKAMA
NGOLO, and are the maternal descendants of the BATANGA (and probably the
BAROMBI). Their sons became many and brought forth the MBONGE and the EKOMBE as
well as many who today are called BALONDO. The Balue are the Oroko in
miniature.
***Blessed Efilo
Ngoe is a Ph.D. candidate studying Communications at University of Colorado,
Boulder***
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