The king of South Africa’s large Zulu community has challenged a professor and cultural expert to a stick fight, saying he had been insulted, along with the entire Zulu nation.
King Misuzulu kaZwelithini issued the challenge to Prof Musa Xulu in front of thousands of people who had gathered at his newly built royal palace for the annual Reed Dance.
“We are angry and we will do anything to protect and preserve our cultures,” he said, according to the Timeslive news site.
Prof Xulu told the BBC he took the king’s personal challenge as a joke, however he said he was worried for his safety in case he was attacked by other Zulus.
“I have received threats from hired assassins,” he said, adding that he had lodged a formal complaint with the police.
King Misuzulu did not specify exactly what Prof Xulu had said to anger him but he was quoted as saying: “It pains me to see another man telling me how to do my job.”
Prof Xulu told the BBC he believes the king was angered by an interview he gave to local media, in which he said that the move to the new eMashobeni palace could be seen as wasteful, given that 152 million rand ($9m; £6.5m) had been spent on renovating the Enyokeni palace where the reed dance had been held since 1984, when the ceremony was introduced to South Africa.
But “talking about public finance is not an insult,” he said.
On the question of stick-fighting, he said this was part of Zulu culture but those fighting had to be equals and “I’m not equal to the king”.
The 64-year-old professor also said he had not done any stick-fighting since before he was a teenager.
Credit: bbc.com