Tsandi

Coordinates: 17°45′S 14°53′E / 17.750°S 14.883°E / -17.750; 14.883
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Tsandi
Tsandi is located in Namibia
Tsandi
Tsandi
Location in Namibia
Coordinates: 17°45′S 14°53′E / 17.750°S 14.883°E / -17.750; 14.883
Country Namibia
RegionOmusati Region
ConstituencyTsandi
Government
 • TypeVillage council
Time zoneUTC+2 (SAST)
[1]

Tsandi (Oshiwambo: that which is at the center) is a village in the Omusati Region of northern Namibia and the district capital of the Tsandi electoral constituency. It is a former mission station of the Finnish Missionary Society. It is situated on the main road MR123 (Outapi - Tsandi - Okahao).

Tsandi is the residential place of the Uukwaluudhi royal homestead.[2] It is also the trade center for the whole constituency and one of the oldest villages in the Uukwaluudhi kingdom. Tsandi Lodge is 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) away from the town in the direction of Outapi.[3]

Politics[edit]

Tsandi is governed by a village council that has five seats.[4] Omusati Region, to which Tsandi belongs, is a stronghold of Namibia's ruling SWAPO party. For the 2015 local authority election no opposition party nominated a candidate, and SWAPO won all five seats uncontested.[5]

SWAPO also won the 2020 local authority election. It obtained 261 votes and gained four seats. The Independent Patriots for Change (IPC), an opposition party formed in August 2020, obtained 72 votes and gained the remaining seat.[6]

History[edit]

The Finnish missionaries, who arrived in Ovamboland in 1870, visited the west of the area towards the end of the following year, visiting e.g. Uukwaluudhi, but the visit to that tribe did not have any tangible results at the time.[7]

In 1909, the leadership of the Finnish Missionary Society in Finland considered that missionary work should be begun also in the west of Ovamboland, and in particular among the Uukwaluudhi tribe. The local head of the mission, Martti Rautanen, together with some of his colleagues, went in July and August 1909 to Uukwaluudhi to select a site for a new mission station. They chose a place called Tsandi, and a month later the missionary August Hänninen began the construction work at the site.

The Finns came to the site at the invitation of King Iita, but he died already at the end of the same year. However, his successor Mwala Nashilongo was also friendly with the Finns, and likewise his people, too. They were not suspicious of the Finns, and the locals turned to them when they were ill. However, they did not show much interest to the preaching activities, and the local congregation consisted mainly of people who have moved there from Ondonga. The first local to be baptized in 1912 was an Uukwaluudhi man, and his three children were also baptized at the same time. The total number of people baptized on that day was 12.[8]

Hänninen soon noticed that conducting divine services and running a school outside, under a local tree, was difficult, so he encouraged his congregation members to build a proper church, built of bricks. Hänninen himself promised to acquire nails and other items and windows for the building, and teacher Aini Packalén promised to pay for the door, and the parish members made the bricks. Each man produced 500 bricks. The construction work was carried out during the cold season of 1912, and at the beginning of August, the building was completed. Its inauguration was attended to by people from all neighbouring tribes.[9]

Hänninen also went on preaching trips to the neighbouring tribe of Uukolonkadhi, and he was also asked to visit the tribe of Ombalantu. And auxiliary mission was founded in Uukolonkadhi, in the care of an ardent teacher and evangelist from Ongandjera, Abraham Iintamba.[10]

In 1922, Aatu Järvinen, a new missionary, came to Tsandi. Before the First World War he had attended a course of tropical diseases in Tübingen, Germany. He founded the clinic of Tsandi.[11]

During the 1930s, the missionary Sulo Aarni worked in Tsandi. His wife was the above-mentioned Aini Packalén. He made trips to the Kaokoveld, nearly 100 miles to the west, to visit the Hereros who lived there.[12]

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Tsandi Map — Satellite Images of Tsandi
  2. ^ NACOBTA Trust entry for the Uukwaluudhi Royal Homestead Archived 2009-11-15 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Tsandi lodge, last accessed 15 April 2016
  4. ^ "Know Your Local Authority". Election Watch. No. 3. Institute for Public Policy Research. 2015. p. 4.
  5. ^ "Local elections results". Electoral Commission of Namibia. 28 November 2015. p. 6. Archived from the original on 10 December 2015.
  6. ^ "2020 Local Authority Elections Results and Allocation of Seats" (PDF). Electoral Commission of Namibia. 29 November 2020. p. 13. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  7. ^ Peltola 1958, s. 49.
  8. ^ Peltola 1958, s. 150–151.
  9. ^ Peltola 1958, s. 166.
  10. ^ Peltola 1958, s. 150–151.
  11. ^ Peltola 1958, s. 191.
  12. ^ Peltola 1958, s. 232.

Literature[edit]

  • Peltola, Matti (1958). Sata vuotta suomalaista lähetystyötä 1859–1959. II: Suomen Lähetysseuran Afrikan työn historia [‘One Hundred Years of Finnish Missionary Work 1859–1959. II: The History of FMS’s Missionary Work in Africa’]. Helsinki: The Finnish Missionary Society.

17°45′S 14°53′E / 17.750°S 14.883°E / -17.750; 14.883