Creation Stories..........


MAHUNGU
Congolese myth of the creation of man and woman


At that time there lived in the universe a single being who was called Mahungu,
 that is the Being complete in himself,
 total, perfect, finite.
In fact, Mahungu was the summit of perfection.
 He lived in perfect  harmony with all created things,
 knowing only perfect joy and happiness and knowing nothing even of the existence of suffering or pain.



Mahungu possessed all powers,
 all opposing forces: 
he could provoke the tempest and the hurricane with a violent breath.
 The Being of perfect synthesis,
 he could create or destroy,
 give life or take it away.


Mahungu was neither man nor woman.
 But in his quality of complete Being,
 he contained both Man and Woman.
 He must have been hermaphroditic.



One day, not far from where he lived, Mahungu saw a tree germinate.
 This tree was known as the Devine Tree or the Tree of God.
 It was what today we call the ‘Palm Tree’. 
The supreme being forbade Mahungu to approach the tree and
 in particular he was forbidden to walk round it.




 Mahungu obeyed for sometime, 
but one day, unable any longer to resist his curiosity, 
he approached the tree and walked round it.
At once the Complete Being was divided into two and became two distinct entities’
 Lumbu, the Man, and Muzita, the Woman. 
At the same time, the knowledge of suffering and the sense of not being
 complete was instilled in the man and woman.




The man wanted to recover his feminine attributes which had left him
 and the woman wanted to recover her masculine attributes which had left her.
 They said to themselves: Let us walk back round the tree in the other direction;
 perhaps we will return to our initial state. 




So they retraced their steps.
But when they reached the starting point,
 they found that they were still two
 and had not succeeded in forming once more a ‘single Being’.




Suffering, “imperfection and feeling of incompleteness had been instilled in them forever,
 as well as nostalgia for their lost unity.
 They felt strongly the need for each other and the closer they got to each other,
 the more the feeling of incompleteness was softened.




 But this need to be close to each other also grew
 until the day when the different part’s of their bodies fitted together,
 harmonized and brought them back for an instant to the primordial state of Mahungu.




They repeated this closeness several times
 without ever managing to maintain this moment of perfect unity or to make it last.
 But from this union was born another being like them who,
 without being the Complete Being perfect in himself,
 remains the symbol of the efforts
 of the man and woman to find their initial
 unity again.

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