Vusamazulu Credo Mutwa

Vusamazulu Credo Mutwa, Credo Mutwa also Vusamazulu or Credo Mutwa Vusa'mazulu ( born July 21, 1921 for the area of ​​present-day Zululand district of KwaZulu -Natal, South Africa ) is a Sangoma and Sanusi is the people of the Zulu in South Africa. He has written several books, also published in German language.

Life

Mutwa father was a widower with three children, Christian faith, when he met Mutwa mother, a young Zulu girl. Mutwa father and his mother were not allowed to marry because her father, a traditional set of old Zulu warrior, would not agree to this compound with a Catholic. The illegitimate birth of the child Mutwa caused a scandal in the village, mother and child were chased out of the budget of the grandfather. The child of one of his aunts was later adopted.

With the new family Mutwa moved to the south of Natal, near the Mkomazi River. He took 13 years for the first time in the school. The family moved to the Transvaal in 1935, when his foster father found work there as a construction worker. The young Mutwa was captured in 1937 by a group of miners and raped, causing him traumatized and for a long time made ​​physically and mentally ill.

Mutwa was only cured with the help of his despised by his father as pagans and idolaters, grandfather. This Mutwa convinced that the time of his illness was a sign that he should a shaman, a healer will. It was initiated by a young sangoma named Myrna who was a daughter of his grandfather.

Publications

  • Indaba - My Children, Blue Crane Books, Johannesburg 1964, ISBN 0-8021-3604-4. in paperback: Kahn & Averill, London 1985, ISBN 0-900707-90-9.
  • German: My people. My Africa. The incredible reports of a Zulu sorcerer from South Africa, translated by Hans Peter Dürr, D- pressure Spescha, St. Gallen 2004, ISBN 3-9521837-0-9.
  • English: Zulu Shaman. Dreams, Prophecies, and Mysteries, Stephen Larsen (editor), foreword by Luisah Teish, 2nd edition; Destiny Books, Rochester, Vermont, USA 2003, ISBN 0-89281-129-3. German: Indaba. A medicine man of the Bantu tells the story of his people, excerpts from Indaba - My Children and My People, translated by Rainer Wegmershaus, Sabine Gerken, Dirk Johnsen, Goldmann, Munich 1987, ISBN 3-442-12015-2.
  • The Reptilian Agenda, interview with David Icke, UFO TV 2004 3 DVD, 400 minutes
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