Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T02:17:06.409Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Sobel Rumors and Tribal Truths: Narrative and Politics in Sierra Leone, 1994

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2013

Catherine E. Bolten*
Affiliation:
University of Notre Dame

Abstract

This article examines a case study from war-torn Sierra Leone in 1994, in which a rumor galvanized violent public action and only dissipated when a seemingly unrelated issue was resolved. I argue that the circulation of rumors can foment the emergence of political narratives focused on topics that are otherwise taboo, and creates the space to act on them without overtly disturbing the status quo. I analyze the content of interview material with residents of the town of Makeni and eight months of articles printed in national newspapers to illustrate the subtle emergence of tribal accusations in the context of military mutiny. The rumor itself concerned an imminent attack by mutinous, criminal soldiers (called sobels) on the town they were meant to defend. This instigated a mass demonstration, shooting into a crowd, political mudslinging, and accusations that some politicians were trying to “tribalize the war.” Responding to the distress, the government removed the offending “tribalist” administrator from Makeni, and all talk of sobel fears dissipated, even as the reality of sobels was borne out in confirmed attacks and a high profile court-martialing. That tribal favoritism was the real issue was illustrated by residents' embrace of their new military administrator and the town's unprecedented move towards development in the midst of renewed security threats.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Allport, G. W. and Postman, L.. 1946. An Analysis of Rumor. Public Opinion Quarterly 10, 4: 501–17.Google Scholar
Arendt, H. 1968. Truth and Politics. In Between Past and Future: Eight Exercises in Political Thought. New York: Viking.Google Scholar
Ashby, P. 1999. Unscathed. London: Pan MacMillan.Google Scholar
Bangura, U. 1994. SOS North Speaks Out: Politicians are Responsible for Makeni Fracas. Weekend Spark 484 (6 May).Google Scholar
Bayraytay, A. 1994a. NPA Explains Makeni Power Failure. Afro Times, 31 Aug.–6 Sept.Google Scholar
Bayraytay, A. 1994b. Radio Station for the North. Afro Times, 19–20 October.Google Scholar
Big Change of Guards in NPRC. 1994. Daily Mail, 6 Sept.Google Scholar
Bolten, C. 2012. I Did It to Save My Life: Love and Survival in Sierra Leone. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Collier, H. 1994. Falla Sewa Returns to Big Welcome. Unity Now, 11 July.Google Scholar
Conteh, S. and Beecher, A.. 1994. Trouble in Makeni. New Globe, 20–24 Apr.Google Scholar
Development '94 Inside Makeni Town. 1994. Standard Times. 22 Aug.Google Scholar
Ellis, S. 1989. Tuning in to Pavement Radio. African Affairs 88, 352: 321–30.Google Scholar
Fallah Sewa Dropped from Government. 1994. New Citizen, 8 Sept.Google Scholar
Feldman-Savelsberg, P., Ndonko, F., and Yang, S.. 2005. How Rumor Begets Rumor: Collective Memory, Ethnic Conflict, and Reproductive Rumors in Cameroon. In Fine, G. et al. , eds., Rumor Mills: The Social Impact of Rumor and Legend. New Brunswick: AldineTransaction.Google Scholar
Fermé, M. 1998. The Violence of Numbers: Consensus, Competition, and the Negotiation of Disputes in Sierra Leone. Cahiers d'Études Africaines 38, 150/152: 555–80.Google Scholar
Fermé, M. 1999. Staging Pɔlitisi: The Dialogics of Publicity and Secrecy in Sierra Leone. In Comaroff, John and Comaroff, Jean, eds., Civil Society and the Political Imagination in Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Fine, G. 2005. Introduction: Rumor Matters. In Fine, G. et al. , eds., Rumor Mills: The Social Impact of Rumor and Legend. New Brunswick: Aldine Transaction.Google Scholar
Government Sends Peace Mission to Makeni. 1994. New Citizen, 25 Apr.Google Scholar
Grass Roots Association Launched in Makeni. 1994. Standard Times, 31 Oct.Google Scholar
Hadji, D. J. 1994. Makeni on Fast Forward. Vision, 26 May–2 June.Google Scholar
Hadji, D. J. and Rogers, S.. 1994. Makeni: ABY Kamara on the Trail. Vision, 23 Nov.Google Scholar
Hasan-Rokem, G. 2005. Rumors in Times of War and Cataclysm: A Historical Perspective. In Fine, G. et al. , eds., Rumor Mills: The Social Impact of Rumor and Legend. New Brunswick: Aldine Transaction.Google Scholar
Hoffman, D. 2011. The War Machines: Young Men and Violence in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Durham: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
How Makeni Exploded into Violence and Death. 1994. New Citizen, 25 Apr.Google Scholar
Kakar, S. 2005. Rumors and Religious Riots. In Fine, G. et al. , eds., Rumor Mills: The Social Impact of Rumor and Legend. New Brunswick: Aldine Transaction.Google Scholar
Kamara, B. L. 1994a. Army Chief of Staff Visits North. Daily Mail, 3 June.Google Scholar
Kamara, B. L. 1994b. PC Kasanga II Rallies His People. Daily Mail, July 26.Google Scholar
Kamara, B. L. 1994c. Rebels Ambush Kono-Matotoka Road. Daily Mail, 9 Aug.Google Scholar
Kamara, B. L. 1994d. Makeni Lights Return. Daily Mail, 6 Oct.Google Scholar
Kamara, B. L. 1994e. Makeni Sets Three Committees. Daily Mail, 8 Oct.Google Scholar
Kandeh, J. 1992. Politicization of Ethnic Identities in Sierra Leone. African Studies Review 35, 1: 8199.Google Scholar
Kandeh, J. 1999. Ransoming the State: Elite Origins of Subaltern Terror in Sierra Leone. Review of African Political Economy 26, 81: 349–66.Google Scholar
Kirsch, S. 2002. Rumour and other Narratives of Political Violence in West Papua. Critique of Anthropology 22, 1: 5379.Google Scholar
Knapp, R. H. 1944. A Psychology of Rumor. Public Opinion Quarterly 8, 1: 2237.Google Scholar
Kposowa, F. 1994. Abass Bundu, Frank Kargbo Head North. Unity Now 3, 13 (18 Apr.).Google Scholar
Kroeger, K. 2003. AIDS Rumors, Imaginary Enemies and the Body Politic in Indonesia. American Ethnologist 30, 2: 243–57.Google Scholar
Lama, B. 1994. Colonel ‘Avivavo’ Takes Makeni by Storm. Daily Mail, 21 Sept.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. 1994a. Rebels Write Letter to Secretary of State. New Citizen, 17 Jan.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. 1994b. New Security Measures in Makeni. New Citizen, 14 Feb.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. 1994c. Electricity and Roads Top of Rehabilitation Agenda. New Citizen, 6 Oct.Google Scholar
Linton, K. 1994. Makeni and the Major. Concord Times, 17 May.Google Scholar
Makeni Demonstration Should Be Investigated. 1994. New Citizen, 16 May.Google Scholar
Makeni Gets Electricity at Last. 1994. New Citizen, 13 Oct.Google Scholar
Makeni Goes Gay as 10-Year Blackout Ends. 1994. Liberty Voice, 6, 18 (7 Oct.).Google Scholar
Makeni Now Calm. 1994. Weekly Echo, 26–30 Apr.Google Scholar
Makeni Tragedy: How and Why It Happened. 1994. Vision, 7, 13 (5–12 May).Google Scholar
Malayka, S. 1994. Bai Kasanga II Briefs Subjects on Rebel War. Liberty Voice, 6, 1 (6 Aug.).Google Scholar
Meeting in the North: Abass Speaks. 1994. New Shaft, 3–8 May.Google Scholar
Murphy, W. 1998. The Sublime Dance of Mende Politics: An African Aesthetic of Charismatic Power. American Ethnologist 25, 4: 563–82.Google Scholar
Musambachime, M. C. 1988. The Impact of Rumour: The Case of the Banyama (Vampire Men) Scare in Northern Rhodesia, 1930–1964. International Journal of African Historical Studies 21, 2: 201–15.Google Scholar
Neubauer, H. J. 1999. The Rumour: A Cultural History. Braun, C., trans. London: Free Association Books.Google Scholar
New SOS North Assumes Office. 1994. New Citizen, 22 Sept.Google Scholar
Nkpa, N. K. U. 1977. Rumors of Mass Poisoning in Biafra. Public Opinion Quarterly 41, 3: 332–46.Google Scholar
People's Defense Force Formed. 1994. New Citizen, 25 Apr.Google Scholar
Provincial Diary: Shebora Addresses His Subjects. 1994. Standard Times, 1 Aug.Google Scholar
Renne, E. 1993. The Stolen Pregnancy and other Rumors of Reproduction. Paper presented at Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association, Boston.Google Scholar
Richards, P. 1996. Fighting for the Rainforest: War, Youth, and Resources in Sierra Leone. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Rosnow, R. and Fine, G.. 1976. Rumor and Gossip: The Social Psychology of Hearsay. New York: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Scheper-Hughes, N. 1996. Theft of Life: The Globalization of Organ Stealing Rumours. Anthropology Today 12, 3: 311.Google Scholar
Scott, J. C. 1990. Domination and the Arts of Resistance: Hidden Transcripts. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Sesay, S. A. 1994. Recruited by both Rebels and Army? New Shaft, 6–12 Sept.Google Scholar
Shaw, R. 1996. The Politician and the Diviner: Divination and the Consumption of Power in Sierra Leone. Journal of Religion in Africa 26, 1: 3055.Google Scholar
Shaw, R. 1997. The Production of Witchcraft/Witchcraft as Production: Memory, Modernity, and the Slave Trade in Sierra Leone. American Ethnologist 24, 4: 856–76.Google Scholar
Shaw, R. 2002. Memories of the Slave Trade: Ritual and the Historical Imagination in Sierra Leone. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Shibutani, T. 1966. Improvised News: A Sociological Study of Rumor. New York: Bobbs-Merrill.Google Scholar
Spencer, J. 2000. On Not Becoming a “Terrorist”: Problems of Memory, Agency, and Community in the Sri Lankan Conflict. In Das, V. et al. , eds., Violence and Subjectivity. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Tribalism Alive in the North? 1994. New Globe, 11–14 May.Google Scholar
White, L. 1997. The Traffic in Heads: Bodies, Borders, and the Articulation of Regional Histories. Journal of Southern African Studies 23, 2: 325–38.Google Scholar
White, L. 2000. Speaking with Vampires: Rumor and History in Colonial Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Zack-Williams, A. B. 1997. Kamajors, Sobels, and the Militariat: Civil Society and the Return of the Military in Sierra Leonean Politics. Review of African Political Economy 24, 73: 373–80.Google Scholar
Zack-Williams, A. B. 1999. Sierra Leone: The Political Economy of Civil War, 1991–1998. Third World Quarterly 20, 1: 143–62.Google Scholar