Mngwa
From: http://www.fortunecity.com/roswell/siren/552/af_mngwa.html
Captain William Hichens, Native Magistrate of Lindi,
Tanganyika (now Tanzania), recorded the following events, which had taken place
in 1922.
Going to relieve the midnight watch, an oncoming
native constable one night found his comrade missing. After a search he
discovered him, terribly mutilated, underneath a stall. The man ran to his
European officer, who went with me at once to the market. We found it obvious
that the askari had been attacked and killed by some animal--a lion, it seemed.
In the victim's hand was clenched a matted mass of
greyish hair, such as would come out of a lion's mane were it grasped and torn
in a violent fight. But in many years no lion had been known to come
into the
town.
We were puzzling the problem at the boma next morning
when the old Arab Liwali or native governor of the district hurried into our
office, with two scared-looking men at his heels. Out late the previous
night, they said, they had slunk by the market-place lest the askari should see
them
and think them evil-doers; and as they crept by they were horrified to see a
huge brindled cat, the great mysterious nunda which is feared in every village
on the coast, leap from the shadows and bear the policeman to the ground.
The Liwali, a venerable and educated man, assured us
that within his memory the nunda had visited the village several times. It was
an animal, not a lion or a leopard, but a huge cat as large as a donkey and
marked like a tabby. I had heard this tale, and put it down as silly
superstition, but the Liwali's assertion put a different light on things...
...That same night another constable was torn to
pieces, and clutched in his hands and scattered about the buckles of his uniform
was more of that grey, matted fur...
Mr. Hichens has thus made what may be the earliest
mention in the European press of an animal the Tanzanian natives have known of
for hundreds of years: the dreaded Nunda or Mngwa ("strange one"). The
animal
is reputed to be a gigantic cat, and is supposedly quite fierce.
Hichens, who seems to be the primary source of material
on the creature, quotes an old Swahili war-song. The song was written in
approximately 1150.
I dwell not in the city to become a worthless
idler,
I plunge me in the forest to be eaten by the Mngwa!
In Swahili Tales, Edward Steere
recounts the tale of Sultan Majnn. The legend recounts how the sultan's cat
escapes and begins to kill chickens. The sultan lets the cat go about its
business and it soon moves up to killing goats and sheep. Finally the sultan
declared that it was no longer a cat--"its name is Nunda". The sultan's son
vows to slay the cat. He kills a dog, a civet, a zebra, a giraffe, a
rhinoceros, and an elephant before finally tracking down the cat.
"This must be the Nunda," he said. "My mother has told
me that its ears are small and these are small; she has told me that the Nunda
is broad and not long, and this is broad and not long; she has told me that
it
has two blotches like a civet, and this has two blotches like a civet; she has
told me that its tail is thick and this tail is thick; and all the peculiarities
she told me of are here."
Of course this creature is the Nunda, and he kills the
animal. The story ends with the son inheriting the kingdom, marrying,
and
ruling for many years.
But back to Hichens' report: he sent the "grey, matted
fur" to headquarters to be identified. It was said to be "a fur
and not a hair
as you state: probably cat."
In 1937, Hichens wrote again of the attacks, as they had
begun again.
Not long ago a man was brought in to me at Mchinga on
a litter and terribly mauled by some great beast. He said it was a mngwa
... One well-known hunting-song tells of the Simba [lion], Nsui [leopard], and
the
Mngwa all in one verse, plainly showing that there is no confusion in the native
mind between these three great carnivores.
Hunter Patrick Bowen told author Frank Lane that he had
once tracked a Mngwa. It had carried off a young boy, and Bowen and another man
followed the tracks of the animal. "The spoor we were following appeared to be
that of a leopard as large as the largest lion." Bowen recorded that its hairs
were brindled and noticeably different from those of a leopard. Bowen also
noted that it was possible that some of the depredations atributed to the chemosit or Nandi Bear were the work of the Mngwa.
Bernard Heuvelmans, in his discussion of the animal in
On the Track of Unknown Animals, advances the theory
that the mngwa may be an abnormally-colored specimen of some known species. And
in a 1986 Cryptozoology article, he proposes that it
may be a larger subspecies of the golden cat (Profelis
aurata).
COLEMAN, Loren
1999 Cryptozoology A to Z (w/ Jerome Clark). New York: Simon & Schuster/Fireside.
HEUVELMANS, Bernard
1986 Annotated Checklist of Apparently Unknown Animals With Which Cryptozoology
is Concerned. Cryptozoology 5 (1-26).
1995 On the Track of Unknown Animals (reprint). London: Kegan Paul.
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