Mwana Kupona Explained

Mwana Kupona binti Msham (born on Pate Island, died c. 1865) was a Swahili poet of the 19th century, author of a poem called Utendi wa Mwana Kupona ("The Book of Mwana Kupona"), which is one of the most well-known works of early Swahili literature.

Relatively little is known about her life. Her grandson Muhammed bin Abdalla[1] reported in the 1930s that Mwana Kupona was born on Pate Island, and that she was the last wife of sheikh Bwana Mataka, ruler of Siu (or Siyu), with whom she had two children. Mataka died in 1856; two years later, Mwana Kupona wrote her famous poem, dedicated to her 14-year-old daughter Mwana Heshima. Mwana Kupona died around 1865 of uterine hemorrhaging.

Utendi wa Mwana Kupona

The poem dates to about 1858 (year 1275 of the Islamic calendar), and is centered on the teachings and advice of Mwana Kupona to her daughter, concerning marriage and wifely duties.[2] Despite the seemingly secular subject, the book is prominently religious and even mystical, and it has been compared to the Biblical Book of Proverbs. A few lines of the poem are dedicated to the author herself:

Swahili:

Translation:

Mwenye kutunga nudhumu

Ni gharibu mwenye hamu

Na ubora wa ithimu

Rabbi tamghufiria

Ina lake mufahamu

Ni mtaraji karimu

Mwana Kupona Mshamu

Pate alikozaliwa

Tarikhiye kwa yakini

Ni alifu wa miyateni

Hamsa wa sabini

The author of this work

is a sorrowful widow

her worst sin

The Lord will forgive

Know her name

she is Reliant-of-the-Provider

Mwana Kupona Mshamu

born in Pate.

The date in reality

Is one thousand two hundred

Seventy-five.

References in culture

See also

Notes

  1. http://www.swahilimanuscripts.soas.ac.uk/perl/Project/showSwahiliItem.pl?ref=MS%2053508c MS 53508c
  2. Extracted in Margaret Busby (ed.), Daughters of Africa, Cape: 1992, pp. 67–69.

References