Wanjiru, Sacrificed by Her People
"Wanjiru, Sacrificed by Her People" is the title given to a story of the Kikuyu people living in what is now Central Kenya. Other titles include "The girl who was sacrificed by her kin",[1] and varieties thereof.
The story comes to us through the work of William and Katherine Routledge, who recorded the tale and published it in 1910. The tale was told to them by one of the Kikuyu people who visited their camp (after 1906) in what was then British East Africa.[2]
The tale tells of a young woman who is sacrificed by her people to counter a drought. While she slowly sinks under ground, the rains begin to fall. A young warrior who loved her seeks her; when he gets to the place where she sank down, he sinks also, and follows her trail into the underworld. She is in a terrible state, but he tells her he will put her on his back and take her away. Unlike Orpheus, however, the young man makes no "tragic mistake" and he and Wanjiru leave the underworld alive.[3] He tells her people they treated her "shamefully", and marries her--though he grudgingly pays her bride price.
References
- Gersie, Alida (1991). Storymaking in Bereavement: Dragons Fight in the Meadow. Jessica Kingsley Publishers. pp. 87–90. ISBN 9781853021763.
- Routledge, William Scoresby; Routledge, Katherine (1910). With a prehistoric people, the Akikuyu of British East Africa, being some account of the method of life and mode of thought found existent amongst a nation on its first contact with European civilisation. London: Arnold.
- Sherman, Howard J. (2014). "Sacrificed by her kin". Mythology for Storytellers: Themes and Tales from Around the World: Themes and Tales from Around the World. Routledge. ISBN 9781317464174.