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History is preserved by individuals. Ernest M. Kongola, a retired
educator in living in Dodoma, Tanzania, has devoted much of the
last twenty years to preserving the history of his people, the
Gogo. He has produced seven volumes of clan histories, biographies,
accounts of important events, and descriptions of customs and
traditions. Maddox demonstrates how the past is constructed by
critical actors like Ernest Kongola as part of an ongoing process
of constructing the present. Kongola participates in the
construction and maintenance of a truly post-colonial social order.
His work as a public historian, as much as his written narratives,
shapes the role of history in the region. In his projects, he seeks
to harmonize three different visions of the past. One defines
community created by ties of blood and located in a specific place.
A second characterizes history as the development of the modern
nation. The third sees history as the struggle to attain a "state
of grace" with the divine. Kongola seeks to place his community,
which he defines as family and "tribe," within the context of the
Tanzanian nation, within the moral and spiritual order of
Christianity, and within a global society. By "performing" history
as a public figure, he defines more than just himself and his place
in the social order of modern Tanzania; he defines his class. He
consciously seeks to redefine social norms and cultural practices
and to regularize them with Christianity and secular nationalism.
In doing so he participates in the creation of both a national,
Tanzanian modernity and a particular, Gogo one.
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