MADI


Meaning of MADI in English

also spelled Ma'di, or Ma'adi Sudanic-speaking peoples who inhabit both banks of the Nile River in northwestern Uganda and in The Sudan. They speak a Central Sudanic language of the Chari-Nile branch of the Nilo-Saharan family. They are closely related to the Lugbara, their neighbours to the west. Primarily hoe cultivators, with millet as their staple crop, the Madi also fish, hunt, and keep cattle; smithing is an important craft. The settlement pattern of ordinary people is one of large joint family homesteads. The country is divided into areas under the ritual care of vudupi (or owners of the landi.e., descendants of the indigenous or preclan population of the area). Vudupi have a ritual relationship with the land that includes the presumed power to control wind and crop-destroying pests. The Madi also have about 25 chiefdoms with boundaries that differ from those of the ritual lands. The chief is the head of the dominant patrilineal clan that first settled in the chiefdom, later groups being assigned accessory lineages. The chiefship is a powerful office with many privileges; its authority is sanctioned by a belief that the chief's lineage ancestors will punish recalcitrant subjects. Ritual centres on the worship of ancestors.

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