Excerpt
of Disciples of Fortune
Nature must have designed the uniquely situated area in central Africa
that became known as Cameroon even before the western colonial powers
conquered Africa and sought to create larger entities from the ethnic
groups and tribes of the continent. The world knew the area as the
German colony of Kamerun for more than three decades until its partition
by Britain and France into British Cameroons and French Cameroun. That
was after the victorious European powers wrestled the colony from the
hands of Germany during the First World War.
For thousands of years, the land mass experienced groves of migrating
tribes and ethnic groups that wandered across the African continent.
However, Cameroon got its diversity and unusual mix of ethnic groups
that persist today from the migrations of the last millennium.
It is from the southern half of Cameroon that Africa’s largest
ethno-linguistic group called Bantu, otherwise known as Niger-Congo-B,
spread to eastern and southern Africa.
Northern Cameroon is the western fringe of the withering Nilo-Saharan
populations from The Sudans and Ethiopia. It also became the base of
early settled Niger-Congo-A populations.
Over the years, the Nilo-Saharan and Niger-Congo-A ethnic groups of the
North were subjected to expansion from Afro-Asiatic speaking Shua Arabs,
Tuaregs and numerous Chadic groups from West Africa and North Africa.
Doomed to perpetual distrust and misunderstanding in a stretch of land
that starts as a plain and turns into a plateau in its southern stretch
called the Adamawa, these populations of the North have finally learned
to live together.
Beyond this Adamawa plateau region is a portion of Central Cameroon
called the Western High Plateau. For centuries, this hilly region of
highland savannah was the borderland of the Northwestern Bantus,
comprising at the time scattered and sparsely populated settlements of
small Bantu villages braving the chilly climate of the mountainous
terrain.
The Central Highlands that constitute the Adamawa plateau and the
Western High Plateau was in a state of turmoil in the eighteenth
century. The disastrous sweep of Sene-Gambian speaking Fulani warriors
brought about by Ousman Dan Fodio’s jihad to spread Islam in what became
Northern Nigeria and Northern Cameroon destabilized the indigenous
populations of the North by forcing the different ethnic groups there to
either resist the invaders and their religion or capitulate to their
might. The Bamileké people were one of the groups that chose to fight.
Following years of resisting the Fulani warriors and witnessing the
scorch of their homelands in the Adamawa region, the Bamileké people
buckled and moved to the South in search of a new homeland.
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