The Cultural Use of the Wild Olive Tree by the amaXhosa People in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa

Authors

  • Michelle Linda Cocks Rhodes University
  • Anthony Patrick Dold Rhodes University

Keywords:

Bio-cultural diversity, amaXhosa, South Africa, Wild Olive tree

Abstract

The cultural meanings of harvested plants have for the most part been ignored in academic research on non-timber forest products (NTFPs) in southern Africa. Historically scientists have tended to ignore the complex relationships between nature and culture. Given the country’s unique political and economic past and the current search for sustainable use of natural resources, a focus on the convergence of natural science and cultural diversity is important at this time. Empirical data on cultural practices is being collected in order to develop fresh and relevant insights into the complex relationships between culture and biodiversity. The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that the concept of culture needs to be brought into our understanding of the role of NTFPs. We document the use and value of a specific tree, Olea europaea L. subsp. africana (Mill.) P.S. Green, called Umnquma in the Xhosa language, for cultural purposes, by both rural and urban households.

References

Ainslie, A., S. Cinderby, T. Petse, Z. Ntshona, and P. Bradley. 1997. Rural Livelihoods and Local Level Natural Resource Management in Peddie District (Johannesburg and Stockholm: LAPC and SEI).

Bank, L. 2002. ‘Beyond Red and School: Gender, Tradition and Identity in the Rural Eastern Cape’, Journal of Southern African Studies 28.3: 631-49. doi:10.1080/0305707022000006558.

Bhabha, H. 1990. The Location of Culture (London: Routledge).

Bond, G.C., and D.M. Ciekawy. 2001. ‘Fabricating the Occult, Distancing the Familiar’, in G.C. Bond and D.M. Ciekawy (eds.), Witchcraft Dialogues: Anthropological and Philosophical Exchanges (Research in International Studies: African Series 76; Athens, OH: Ohio University Centre for International Studies): 316-33.

Campbell, B.M., and M.K. Luckert (eds.). 2002. Uncovering the Hidden Harvest: Valuation Methods for Woodland and Forest Resources (London: Earthscan Publishing).

Canclini, G. 1995. Hybrid Cultures: Strategies for Entering and Leaving Modernity (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press).

Cocks, M.L. 2006a. ‘Bio-cultural Diversity: Moving beyond the Realm of “Indigenous” and “Local” People’, Human Ecology 34.2: 185-200. doi:10.1007/s10745-006-9013-5.

———. 2006b. ‘Wild Resources and Practices in Rural and Urban Households in South Africa: Implications for Bio-cultural Diversity Conservation’, PhD diss., Wageningen University, The Netherlands. Online: http://library.wur.nl/wda/dissertations/dis4026.pdf (accessed 30 August 2008).

Cocks, M.L., L. Bangay, K.F. Wiersum, and A.P. Dold. 2006. ‘Seeing the Wood for the Trees: The Role of Woody Resources for the Construction of Gender Specific Household Cultural Artefacts in Non-traditional Communities in the Eastern Cape, South Africa’, Environment, Development and Sustainability 8: 519–33. doi:10.1007/s10668-006-9053-4.

Cocks, M.L., and A.P. Dold. 2004. ‘A New Broom Sweeps Clean: The Economic and Cultural Value of Grass Brooms in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa’, Forests, Trees and Livelihoods 14.1: 33-42.

———. 2006. ‘Conservation of Bio-cultural Diversity: The Role of Medicinal Plants in Xhosa Culture’, Journal of Ethnobiology 26.1: 60-80.

Cocks, M.L., and V. Møller. 2002. ‘Use of Indigenous and Indigenized Medicines to Enhance Personal Well-being: A South African Case Study’, Social Science and Medicine 54.3: 387-97. doi:10.1016/S0277-9536(01)00037-5.

Cocks, M.L., and K.F. Wiersum. 2003. ‘The Significance of Biodiversity to Rural Households in Eastern Cape Province of South Africa’, Forests, Trees and Livelihoods 13: 39–58.

Comaroff, J., and J.L. Comaroff. 1999. ‘Occult Economies and the Violence of Abstraction: Notes from the South African Postcolony’, American Ethnologist 26.2: 279-303. doi:10.1525/ae.1999.26.2.279.

Cook, P.A.W. 1931. Social Organization and Ceremonial Institutions of the Bomvana (Cape Town and Johannesburg: Juta & Co.).

Cunningham, A.B. 1997. Review of Ethnobotanical Literature from Eastern and Southern Africa. People and Plants Africa Regional Programme Bulletin No 1. Online: http://peopleandplants.org/web-content/web-content%201/regions/africa/aen1/review.htm (accessed 30 August 2008).

Dold, A.P., and M.L. Cocks. 1999. ‘Imithi yamasiko—Culturally Useful Plants in the Peddie District of the Eastern Cape, with Specific Reference to Olea europaea subsp. Africana’, Plantlife 21: 24-26.

———. 2000a. ‘The iNtelezi Plants of the Eastern Cape: Traditional and Contemporary Medicines’, Aloe 37.1: 10–13.

———. 2000b. ‘Indigenous Plant Use by amaXhosa People of the Eastern Border of the Great Fish River Reserve, Eastern Cape’, Annals of the Eastern Cape Museums 1.8: 26-53.

———. 2001. ‘Traditional Veterinary Medicine in the Alice District of the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa’, South African Journal of Science 97.9-10: 375–79.

———. 2002. ‘The Trade in Medicinal Plants in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa’, South African Journal of Science 98: 589–97.

Du Toit, B. 1980. ‘Religion, Ritual, and Healing among Urban black South Africans’, Urban Anthropology 9.1: 21-49.

Goebel A., B. Campbell, B. Mukamuri, and M. Veeman. 2000. ‘People, Values, and Woodlands: A Field Report of Emergent Themes in Interdisciplinary Research in Zimbabwe’, Agriculture and Human Values 17: 385–96. doi:10.1023/A:1026523629029.

Groenfeldt, D. 2003. ‘The Future of Indigenous Values: Cultural Realism in the Face of Economic Development’, Futures 35: 917-29. doi:10.1016/S0016-3287(03)00049-1.

Hunter, M. 1936. Reaction to Conquest (London: Oxford University Press).

Low, A.B., and A.G. Rebelo. 1996. Vegetation of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (Pretoria: Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism).

Mander, M. 1998. Marketing of Indigenous Medicinal Plants in South Africa: A Case Study in KwaZulu-Natal (Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations). Online: http://www.fao.org/docrep/W9195E/w9195e00.htm (accessed 30 August 2008).

Mucina, L., and M.C. Rutherford (eds.). 2006. The Vegetation of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland (Pretoria: SANBI).

Niehaus, I., with E. Mohlala and K. Shokane. 2001. Witchcraft, Power and Politics: Exploring the Occult in the South African Lowveld (London and Sterling, VA: Pluto Press).

Palmer, R. 1997. Rural Adaptations in the Eastern Cape, South Africa (Working Paper 11; Institute of Southern African Studies. National University of Lesotho).

Pauw, B.A. 1975. Christianity and Xhosa Tradition: Belief and Ritual among Xhosa-speaking Christians (Cape Town: Oxford University Press).

Poland, M., D. Hammond-Tooke, and L. Voigt. 2003. The Abundant Herds: A Celebration of the Nguni Cattle of the Zulu People (Vlaeberg: Fernwood Press).

Pooley, E. 1993. The Complete Field Guide to Trees of Natal, Zululand and Transkei (Durban: Natal Flora Publications Trust).

Posey, D.A. 1999. Cultural and Spiritual Values of Biodiversity: A Complementary Contribution to the Global Biodiversity Assessment (London: Intermediate Technology Publications and United Nations Environment Programme).

Shackleton, C.M., S.E. Shackleton, T.R. Netshiluvhi, and B.A. Geach. 2002. ‘Direct-use Value of Woodland Resources in Three Rural Settlements, South Africa’, in Campbell and Luckert 2002: 26-28.

Soga, J.H. 1931. The Ama-Xosa Life and Customs (Lovedale, Cape Province: Lovedale Press).

Somova, L.I., F.O. Shode, P. Ramnanan, and A. Nadar. 2003. ‘Antihypertensive, Antiatherosclerotic and Antioxidant Activity of Triterpenoids Isolated from Olea europaea, subspecies africana Leaves’, Journal of Ethnopharmacology 84: 299-305. doi:10.1016/S0378-8741(02)00332-X PMid:12648829.

Spiegel, A. 1997. ‘Continuities, Culture and the Commonplace: Searching for a New Ethnographic Approach in South Africa’, in P. McAllister (ed.), Culture and the Commonplace: Anthropological Essays in Honour of David Hammond-Tooke (Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press): 9-29.

Statistics South Africa. 2001. Census 2001: Primary Tables Eastern Cape 1996 and 2001 Compared. Online: http://www.statssa.gov.za/publications/Report-03-02-05/Report-03-02-052001.pdf (accessed 30 August 2008).

UNESCO. 2002. Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity (Paris: UNESCO). Online: http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001271/127160m.pdf (accessed 30 August 2008).

Van Wyk, B., B. Van Oudtshoorn, and N. Gericke. 1997. Medicinal Plants of South Africa (Arcadia: Briza Publications).

Van Wyk, B., and P. Van Wyk. 1997. Field Guide to Trees of Southern Africa (Cape Town: Struik).

Viljoen, R. 1994. ‘Fuelwood, Social Forestry and Rural Development’, Plant for Life/The Biomass Initiative Conference Report. Conference, 28–29 September.

Williams, V.L., K. Balkwill, and E.T.F. Witkowski. 2000. ‘Unraveling the Commercial Market for Medicinal Plants and Plant Parts on the Witwatersrand, South Africa’, Economic Botany 54: 310–27.

Wilson, M., S. Kaplan, and T. Maki. 1952. Keiskammahoek Rural Survey Volume 3: Social Structure (Pitermaritzburg: Shooter & Shooter).

Published

2008-01-16

Issue

Section

Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture

Categories