Document #1154049
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
The traditional lands of the Gonja people
[Guang, Guan or Ngbanya] are found in the northern part of Ghana in
the area surrounding the confluence of the Black and White Volta
Rivers (Ethnologue, 1992, 267).
According to Ethnologue, the Gonja
language is part of the Kwa family and includes the Gonja, Choruba
[Choroba] and Dumpo [Ndmpo] dialects (1992, 267). The entry in the
New Encyclopaedia Britannica, however, states that the
Guang [Gonja] peoples speak "Gur (or Voltaic) and Guang languages
of the Niger-Congo family". The entry further states that "The
commoners speak various Gur or Guang languages; the rulers and
Muslims speak Gbanyito, a Guang language (1989, 532).
The Gonja system of chieftancy is complex.
In order of rank, the chiefs are: Yabumwura (the traditional
paramount chief); Nkulongwura (divisional chiefs); Binimu (elders);
cub-chiefs; village headmen; and B'wurche (female chiefs) (Braimah,
Tomlinson and Amankwatia 1997, 155ff.). The divisional chiefs fill
the paramount chieftancy in turn according to a formalized system
of rotation. For further information concerning the rituals
associated with chieftancy matters and the privileges and
responsibilities of chiefs within the Gonja system please refer to
the attached.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum.
References
Braimah, J.A., H.H. Tomlinson and
Osafroadou Amankwatia. 1997. History and Traditions of the
Gonja. Calgary: University of Calgary Press.
The New Encyclopaedia
Britannica. 1989. 15th ed. Vol. 5. Edited by Pkilip W. Goetz.
Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Pittman, Richard, Joseph E. Grimes and
Barbara F. Grimes. 1992. Ethnologue: Languages of the
World. 12th ed. Dallas, TX: Summer Institute of Linguistics,
Inc.
Attachments
Amankwatia, Osafroadou. "Gonja
Traditional and Customary Practice and Procedure in Chieftancy
Matters Since 1923" in Braimah, J.A., H.H. Tomlinson and Osafroadou
Amankwatia. 1997. History and Traditions of the Gonja.
Calgary: University of Calgary Press. pp. 155-174.
Pittman, Richard, Joseph E. Grimes and
Barbara F. Grimes. 1992. Ethnologue: Languages of the
World. 12th ed. Dallas, TX: Summer Institute of Linguistics,
Inc. Ethnolinguistic map of Ghana, p. 266.