Once on a private internet community a few years back we
discussed the origins of the townships in Lusaka, something I had forgotten
about until a friend asked me to write about it to commemorate the capital city’s
centenary this year.
Obviously, a number of other writers have written about some
of the names of some of the townships and residential areas such as John Laing,
John Howard, Kuku and others having been farms belonging to those people and
Kuku having been a cooks’ quarters. I will not talk about these names.
My interest is in the names of residential areas such as
Libala, Lilayi, Chilenje, Chainama and even Kabulonga that I will talk about. A
Soli friend of mine, now late, who hailed from Nyangwena in the Manyika area of
Chongwe explained these names to me over 20 years ago.
As people may know by now, Lusaaka was a Soli village
somewhere near where the National Assembly stands in the capital city. But
again, the name could have been derived from Lusakasa, the name given to one
primary school in the city. We will leave the origins of the name Lusaka here.
Starting with Libala, the Soli phrase, according to my
friend, is libala lya kame,
translated as my field. It may appear as if the Soli villagers had their maize
fields in the Libala area. It is not known how the name came to be used for the
township that was built there but one would imagine that when the fields were
being cleared, the people were crying libala
lya kame, libala lya kame (my field, my field)!
Libala Township stretches from near UTH on the western fringe
up to the eastern end of Arakan Barracks. The southern fringe keeps on
expanding beyond what was the Njanji Commuter railway line.
For Lilayi, very well known for its police training college
several kilometres south of the capital, it probably originated from the Soli
expression lilayi lisuba, the sun is
setting or what in most Zambian languages is one way of saying, euphemistically,
it’s getting late.
It is not clear how and why the people who built Lilayi
Training School adopted the name Lilayi but one would imagine that the local
Soli workers, at the end of the day, would say lilayi lisuba, pick up their tools and go back to their homes in the
surrounding villages.
Chilenje, as you might expect, was probably a village or settlement
in which Lenje was mostly spoken in an area of mostly Soli speakers. Lenje
language was probably more prominently spoken in the northern fringes of Lusaka
but having it spoken in what is now Chilenje was a bit unusual thereby
referring to the area by the language spoken there.
The name Chainama has always been associated with the mental
hospital of that name to the east of Lusaka’s central business district. It has
also assumed connotations of madness or confusion. One would often hear terms
such as “you are chainamic!” to mean
you are confused.
In Soli, chena simply
means well like from a greeting muli
anchoni? with ndi chena ma or ta as the case maybe, ma for woman or mother and ta for man or father. Like most names
that have been distorted in the process, Chena
ma came out as Chainama. One would think that there must have been a revered
woman in the area whom everybody responded to as ndi chena ma—I’m well mother—upon her greeting. Simply put,
Chainama is a response to a greeting in the Soli language.
Have you ever wondered how the name Kabulonga, even
mispronounced with a strong b as in brewery, came about? Legend has it that there
lived in that area, a woman who was married to one Buloongo and she was
referred to as MukaBuloongo or
Buloongo’s wife.
As expected, the English colonial masters must have had
difficulties pronouncing the name MukaBuloongo and shortened it to Kabulonga
and the name has stuck to this day.
And still talking about names, Lusaka’s residential areas
that have English names also have local names which are rarely used if
acknowledged. Chelston, Rhodes Park,
Northmead, Olympia Park, Villa Elizabetha all have local names.
Chelston is Chakunkula, the name which a school in the area
is named after. The local name for Rhodes Park, named after imperialist entrepreneur
John Cecil Rhodes, is Maluba.
Northmead is Mutambe while Villa Elizabetha is Namununga.
Olympia Park is supposed to be Chiwalamabwe which is the equivalent of
mposamabwe or stone throwers which is a reference to Zambia’s freedom fighters.
It is probably symbolic that even the National Assembly building was built on
Manda Hill in Chiwalamabwe otherwise known as Olympia Park.