''''Mzee'''' is the Swahili word for an ''''old timer'''', a respected elder. Mzee Ali Kalikilima was born near the present-day town of Tabora in western Tanzania, probably in the 1870s-there is mention of ''''The Doctor'''', Dr David Livingstone-to black Muslim parents of noble birth. Aged 14, Ali led his first slaving safari to the shores of Lake Tanganyika and thence, with his caravan of captured slaves and ivory, through the malaria-, tsetse fly- and lion-infested wilds, to the Arab markets of Dar es Salaam, some 1,200 kilometres away on the Indian Ocean. With the arrival of the German colonizers, Ali joined the German East African forces as an askari. He worked on the railway line that was being laid from Dar es Salaam to Dodoma and finally to Mwanza on the shores of Lake Victoria-a monumental feat. With the outbreak of the First World War, he found himself attached to the forces of the legendary German commander, General von Lettow-Vorbeck. He saw action at the Battle of Salaita Hill near Mombasa and was with the General to the end, fighting a guerrilla campaign through southern Tanganyika, Portuguese East Africa, Nyasaland, Northern Rhodesia and to final surrender. After the war, he joined the British Colonial Service as a game scout.
See more
Current price
€15.73
Original price
€18.50
Save 15%
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Product Details
Format: Paperback
Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
Publication Date: 29 Feb 2016
Publisher: 30 Degrees South Publishers
Publication City/Country: South Africa
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781928211631
About Bror MacDonellKerrin Cocks
Bror Urne MacDonell was born in 1921 in Elizabethville the Belgian Congo. For the first twenty years of his life he was known as Bror OErne-Glieman (his father''''s Scandinavian surname) but discovered that the Belgian authorities had erroneously registered his surname as MacDonell (his mother''''s previous surname). He was educated in France and later at Eton in England. He became fluent in over a dozen languages including French Swahili chiShona and several other African languages. Aged nineteen he was drafted into service during World War II. He served as Regimental Sergeant-Major with the African Light Infantry in East Africa and India and later transferred to Army Intelligence with the Northern Rhodesia Regiment. After the war he took up a varied career in hunting locust control farming African administration and local government working in the remotest bush of Northern Rhodesia and Tanganyika. He moved to Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) during the sixties and began writing Mzee Ali in 1963 from his campfire ''''bush notes'''' of the forties. (Several UK publishers rejected the manuscript as being too politically incorrect -presumably because of the references to the black-on-black slave-trading.) He retired tot he South Coast of KwaZulu-Natal where he died in 1998. He is survived by his wife Majorie and four children. Kerrin Cocks a journalist by profession has worked in the military-history publishing industry for fourteen years. She conceptualized the Africa@War series (co-published by 30 Degrees South and Helion & Co.) In 2009 she scripted directed produced and edited the full-length DVD documentary that accompanied Richard Wood''''s book Counter-Strike from the Sky: The Rhodesian All-arms Fireforce in the War in the Bush 1974-1980 which was bought and aired on the New Zealand Documentary Channel. She is the author of Rhodesian Fire Force 1966-1980 (2015) and co-author of I Won''''t be Home Next Summer: Flight Lieutenant R.N. Selley DFC (1917-1941) (2014). She lives in Barberton South Africa.