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Dinka Bor or Dinka Jonglei?: Historical Roots of the Ethnic Identity Crisis in Jonglei State

“JONGLEI MERRY-GO-ROUND OF POLITICAL GAMBLES THROUGH ETHNIC ASSIMILATION SUPERIORITY SYNDROME: FROM NYARWENGIZATION THROUGH KONGORIZATION TO BORIZATION.”

By Jacob Jokmagai Dengadiit, Juba, South Sudan

 

(1) INTRODUCTION

Wednesday, August 22, 2018 (PW) — I recently wrote an article entitled, ‘WHERE IS THIS OLD MAN CALLED BOR?’ I was addressing the name that has been taken as our daily topic of discussion while in real sense, we have issues of concern like poverty, insecurity, lack of infrastructure, poor healthcare, and lack of jobs topping the list of our daily utopian needs.

I was marveled later by some of the comments I received under my article. I saw that this problem is more of an ethnic identity crisis. I remembered the disagreements between #Team_Magot and #Team_Gongic_Lualmawut back in Juba during the wrestling tournament in the middle of this year. I also recalled the ditching songs between Bor and Twi especially. I still see them going live on the same matter. I see a push and a pull between the name ‘Bor’ and ‘Jonglei.’

Because of the above reasons, I recoiled back into my world of thoughts and I was like, “Ureka! History will settle this matter once and for all.” I went into research only to discover the one and only thing that many of my friends have been always bothering me about. “Jokmagai, please write a book.” That is one of the constant words I hear when I talk to some of my relatives and friends. To my friends I discovered that I can really write a book.

My research was on the names; ‘Dinka Bor, Bor Asili and The Dinka of Jonglei.’ I had promised to write an article and published it here as a point of debate and discussion. The title of my research was: “JONGLEI MERRY-GO-ROUND OF POLITICAL GAMBLES THROUGH ETHNIC ASSIMILATION SUPERIORITY SYNDROME: FROM NYARWENGIZATION THROUGH KONGORIZATION TO BORIZATION.” As I was doing that research, I addressed the issue at hand and when I later finished, I discovered that I had already written 44 pages. The ideas were still jumping in from the creative side of the brain and I was like, “Let me write a book on this then.” Look! Already 44 pages in about a week!

I am therefore withholding the debate until I finish the book. Don’t be discouraged, I cannot leave you empty-handed. I will give you the historical highlights for your inferences on the Dinka Bor and the Dinka of Jonglei issue.

(2) HIGHLIGHTS FROM HISTORY: (1821-2018)

(a) The Turko-Egyptian Rule (1821-1881)

(b) The Mahdists Regime (1881-1898)

(c) The Anglo-Egytian Condominium (1898-1956)

(d) The Arab Regimes (1956-1972; 1983-2005)

(e) Jonglei after CPA (2005-2018)

(3) CONCLUSIONS USING HISTORICAL FACTS

An wakai!/An Pan e ma! Hol Dialect

Gol e ma! Monythany/Thony Dialect

Mao! Mao! Twi Dialect

Werkuo!/Kokuo! Bor Dialect

Paanda!/Were yiin! Nyarweng Dialect

THE BIG QUESTIONS???

DOES THE ADMINISTRATIVE NAME OF A PLACE BECOME YOUR ETHNIC IDENTITY BY DEFAULT?
WHAT IMPLICATIONS COULD THAT BRING INCASE THE NAME OF THAT ADMINISTRATIVE AREA CARRIES AN ETHNIC CONNOTATION AND THE SAID PARTY TO BE CALLED BY THAT NAME IS HESITANT?
ADMINISTRATIVE AREAS HAVE CHANGED ACROSS THE LAND OF JONGLEI; HAVE THE ETHNIC IDENTITIES CHANGED TOO?
GET MORE FROM MY UPCOMING BOOK!
By. Jokmagai e Dengadiit
Contact me at: jokmagai@gmail.com

REFERENCES

Abushouk A.I. (2010). The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan from Collaboration Mechanism to Party Politics, 1898-1956. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. Vol. 38. No.2. pp.207-236.

Hutchinson, S. (2012). A Guide to the Nuer of Jonglei State. University of Wisconsin-Madison. pp.6.
Imani M.O.E., Gadalla E.O., Deng P.L. & Abdalla M.E. (1978). The Existing Services in Kongor and Bor Districts. Report No.6. pp.1,3,17&21.
Johnson D. H. (1989). Political Ecology in the Upper Nile: The Twentieth Century Expansion of the Pastoral ‘Common Economy.’ Journal of African History. Vol.30. pp.469-476.
Johnson D. H. (1982). Tribal Boundaries and Border Wars; Nuer-Dinka Relations in the Sobat and Zaraf Valleys (1860-1970). Journal of African History.23. pp. 187.
Johnson R.T. (1934). Sudan Notes and Records Volume XVII, Part I; The Religious and Spiritual Beliefs of the Bor Dinka.pp.126-128
Kibedde G. (1997). The North-South Conflict in Historical Perspective. Journal of African and Afro-American Studies.pp.15-16.
Mawut L. L. (1985). Dinka Resistance to Condominium Rule (1902-1932). University of Khartoum. pp.1
May D.N.N. (1994). The British Southern Policy in Sudan: An Inquiry into the Closed District Ordinances (1914-1946). Northeast African Studies. Vol 1. No.2-3. pp.165-185.
Nyok P. T. (2008). Paradoxical Existence of Jonglei State Head Quarter in Bor.
Preliminary Report by the Southern Development Investigation Team. (1954). Natural Resources and Development Potential in the Southern Province of Sudan: London. Sudan Government. pp.80.
Willis C.A. (1928). Sudan Notes and Records Volume XI; The Cult of Deng.p.196.
Wyld J. (1930). Report and Notes on Bor-Duk District; The Upper Nile Handbook; Chapter

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