The Harvard Crimson :: News :: Reflections on a Harvard Tribal Gathering

Dad in a whimsical mood, written in 1963, found online by my sister Louise:

The Harvard Crimson :: News :: Reflections on a Harvard Tribal Gathering

[…]

The Chief nodded his head and the contestants took the field. With him, three of his “yara” (household servants) moved sedately and ceremoniously to the middle of the ground to supervise proceedings. Then, at the signal of a high pitched blast on a cowrie studded war horn the young men, the “samari,” (warriors who have reached full puberty, been initiated into the tribe, but are still unmarried), the hope of the future and the finest physical specimens available, met, and joined, if not in combat, then certainly in the nearest thing to it short of actual warfare.

By general consent, a halt was called, and the amphitheatre was again given over to the maidens and the “gadarawa,” this time each group being accompanied by their own troupe of drummers and hornblowers, and each vying with the other to enhance the general cacophany. Then, for a second time, the warriors took the field. Again the mock battle was repeatedly enacted, an advance here, a retreat there, until the crowd was cheering wildly.

I was awakened out of my reverie by a raucous voice shouting in my ear. “Iced Coke–Hot chocolate!” The electric time clock at the end of the horseshoe flashed to its final reading–00.00. The referee’s whistle blew. The contestants withdrew. A score of nil-nil was generally adjudged by the cognoscenti to be as good as could have been hoped for.

I was still thinking, as I strolled with my host in the rear of the band back towards Harvard Square (quite the best way to avoid the traffic) that what I had witnessed was but a manifestation of what I had seen a hundred times before during 7 years in tribal Africa. Perhaps, I mused, there is something to be said for tribalism after all: perhaps the urge to “belong,” to be at one with a greater whole, to sink individuality into tradition and tradition into loyalty, is too strong for any of us to resist

Comments

One response to “The Harvard Crimson :: News :: Reflections on a Harvard Tribal Gathering”

  1. Brad

    Ahhhh. Droll. Very droll.

    There are so many easy targets to insult, but for 1963, this is actually gently multi-cultural in its own way.

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