African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda

Some African indigenous medicine healers and neo-liberalists have misused the cherished objectives of community values and turned it into witch-craft characterized with human sacrifice, money extortion, and many more evil related practices. The study was on activities of traditional indigenous knowl...

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Main Author: Godfrey, Barigye
Format: Article
Published: International Journal of Research in Sociology and Anthropology 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12493/155
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author Godfrey, Barigye
author_facet Godfrey, Barigye
author_sort Godfrey, Barigye
collection KAB-DR
description Some African indigenous medicine healers and neo-liberalists have misused the cherished objectives of community values and turned it into witch-craft characterized with human sacrifice, money extortion, and many more evil related practices. The study was on activities of traditional indigenous knowledge in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda. It was established that most African indigenous healers were mainly practicing herbalism, midwifery/traditional birth attendance, spirituality/foretelling, bone-setters, snake poison healers and rain-makers. The African indigenous healers were in the age group of 40 years and above, had an educational level of secondary, most of them were females, who were Banyankore, Baganda, Congolese and Swahili, and were married. Most of the beneficiaries of African indigenous medicine were farmers and Banyankore by tribe. It was concluded that African indigenous medicine practices and systems of local people are interactive technology whose dissemination is feasible, efficient, and cost-effective when learnt from village-level experts.
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spelling oai:idr.kab.ac.ug:20.500.12493-1552024-01-17T04:44:44Z African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda Godfrey, Barigye African Indigenous Knowledge Some African indigenous medicine healers and neo-liberalists have misused the cherished objectives of community values and turned it into witch-craft characterized with human sacrifice, money extortion, and many more evil related practices. The study was on activities of traditional indigenous knowledge in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda. It was established that most African indigenous healers were mainly practicing herbalism, midwifery/traditional birth attendance, spirituality/foretelling, bone-setters, snake poison healers and rain-makers. The African indigenous healers were in the age group of 40 years and above, had an educational level of secondary, most of them were females, who were Banyankore, Baganda, Congolese and Swahili, and were married. Most of the beneficiaries of African indigenous medicine were farmers and Banyankore by tribe. It was concluded that African indigenous medicine practices and systems of local people are interactive technology whose dissemination is feasible, efficient, and cost-effective when learnt from village-level experts. Kabale University 2019-05-29T13:44:09Z 2019-05-29T13:44:09Z 2019 Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12493/155 application/pdf International Journal of Research in Sociology and Anthropology
spellingShingle African Indigenous Knowledge
Godfrey, Barigye
African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda
title African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda
title_full African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda
title_fullStr African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda
title_full_unstemmed African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda
title_short African Indigenous Medicine Activities in Mbarara Municipality, Uganda
title_sort african indigenous medicine activities in mbarara municipality uganda
topic African Indigenous Knowledge
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12493/155
work_keys_str_mv AT godfreybarigye africanindigenousmedicineactivitiesinmbararamunicipalityuganda