- Kpana Lewis
Kpana Lewis (born 1830-1912) was a Sherbro chief from
Sierra Leone and an opponent of colonial rule of the British. He exercised strong influence over all Sherbro chiefs. Part of his fame rested in his pervasive use of the Poro Secret society to oppose the Britishcolonialists . He was considered so powerful that, whileBai Bureh was allowed to return fromexile after the 1898Rebellion , Kpana Lewis continued to be held in exile in theGold Coast (nowGhana ), where he died in 1912..Early life and leadership
Kpana Lewis was born in 1830 in
Sherbro Island in theSouthern Province of Sierra Leone to a political dominant Sherbro family. His grandfather, Bai Kong Kuba Lewis was the most dominantking among all of the Sherbro people. Kong Kuba Lewis signed atreaty ceding Sherbro country to the British in 1825, but the British did not exercise any direct authority over the Sherbros until the end of the century. Kpana Lewis assumed the leadership of the Sherbro people in 1879, after his father died. As a leader, Kpana Lewis was able to bring quite a few of the county back under the authority of the Sherbro. This he did by using the enormous power of the Poro Secret Society, of which he was a leading member. Poro is reported to have spread into the interior of Sierra Leone from Yoni on Sherbro Island, which was the capital of the Sherbro Kingdom and where Kpana Lewis resided. He thus came to restore something of the old glory of the Kong Kuba, and to regain authority over former mainland provinces of the once powerful Sherbro Kingdom.When the British proclaimed a Protectorate in 1896, many of the terms of the Protectorate Ordinance were distasteful to the local rulers. Above all was the Hut Tax. Kpana Lewis was one of the few leaders who actually led a group of chiefs to the capital
Freetown to protest against the tax. While the BritishGovernor informed him that the Sherbro in the Colony was unaffected by the tax, Kpana Lewis did not sit back and leave the other rulers to continue protesting alone because his own territory was not involved. On his return to Yoni, Kpana Lewis used the Poro to give force to his disgust with the colonial measures.Rebellion
The Poro traditionally had a role of ensuring concerted action for
political oreconomic purposes. It could as easily place a ban on war as on the harvest, a ban which no one dared disobey. It thus fulfilled the role of a modern judiciary system and police force. It was this that Kpana Lewis now used to effect a boycott of trade with Europeans and theKrio people who Kpana Lewis and other indigenous tribal leaders accused of supporting the British. When the District Commissioner, called a meeting of chiefs in the area to warn them against any kind of rebellion, one of the chief said that he had to confer with Kpana Lewis, whom he regarded as his leader and not the British. So great was his power and influence over these rulers that they were willing to openly defy powerful British officials in favour of Kpana Lewis' authority. The British then quickly passed a law making it a criminal offence to use the Poro to restrain trade.When the
Hut Tax War of 1898 rebellion broke out, led by Temne war-chiefBai Bureh , nothing could convince the District Commissioner that Kpana Lewis was not the brain behind the resistance. Even though the British had no evidence connecting Kpana Lewis with the Rebellion, he was detained as a suspect and was subsequently sent into exile in theGold Coast along with Bai Bureh and the Mende chiefNyagua . The British then installed their own man, Fama Yani, as the leader of the Sherbro people. Fearing that if Kpana Lewis returned, his presence would lead to the overthrow of Fama Yani, the British refused to allow his return, thought Bai Bureh was ultimately brought back to Sierra Leone. Despite protests by Kpana Lewis' son, called Kong Kuba, and of intervention by the Anti-Slavery Society inLondon , the British Government held him in the Gold Coast where he died after more than a decade in exile.External links
* [http://www.sierra-leone.org/heroes5.html ] at www.sierra-leone.org
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