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In the 2012 half-hour Swahili language TV Series, Siri ya Mtungi, made specially for Tanzania, she played the role of "Tula". Others featured include: Godliver Gordian, Yvonne Cherrie. [2] [3] [4] In another Swahili language film by Jordan Riber released in 2018 titled, Hadithi za Kumekucha: Fatuma, the
Fatuma (theatrically as Hadithi za Kumekucha: Fatuma), is a 2018 Tanzanian drama film directed by Jordan Riber and co-produced by director himself with his parents; John Riber and Louise Riber. [1] It is the sequel to its first feature film Hadithi za Kumekucha:TUNU . [ 2 ]
Kibaraka is a folktale sourced from the Swahili, published in late 19th century. Linguist Jan Knappert published a very similar tale with the title The Giant Horse, wherein the protagonist is also named Kibaraka. In both, a youth named Kibaraka gets entangled with a cannibal sorcerer and escapes thanks to a giant horse's help; also with the ...
In 2017, he directed Hadithi za Kumekucha: Tunu, [4] and in 2018, Fatuma. [1] [5] In the same year, he directed and produced Bahasha. [6] [7] In the 2018 Zanzibar International Film Festival selected Riber's Bahasha as the opening film for premiering, which together with Fatuma were placed in the "Long Features" category. [8]
Lazy Lion is an African animal story, written by Mwenye Hadithi and illustrated by Adrienne Kennaway, [1] about a lion who wanted a house to keep him dry from the big rain that was coming. [2] It was published in November 1990, by Little, Brown .
Kinjikitile gave his people 'holy water' (Swahili: maji) - consisting of water mixed with millet and castor oil [7] - claiming that it would protect them from German bullets. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] His followers wore millet stalks around their foreheads, and were equipped with an arsenal that included cap guns , spears and arrows. [ 8 ]
On 20 June 2009, the Swahili Wikipedia gave its main page a makeover. As of December 2024, it has about 91,000 articles, making it the 77th-largest Wikipedia. [4] The Swahili Wikipedia is the second most popular Wikipedia in Tanzania and Kenya after the English version with respectively 14% and 4% of the visits, as of January 2021.
Tanzania Nakupenda Kwa Moyo Wote" is a Swahili-language patriotic song about Tanzania in East Africa. [1] The song's history and authorship is uncertain, but stretches back to the colonial days, when then it was sung as thus " Tanganyika, Tanganyika nakupenda kwa moyo wote ."