
|
African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development
Rural Outreach Program
ISSN: 1684-5358 EISSN: 1684-5358
Vol. 19, No. 2, 2019, pp. 14372-14392
|
Bioline Code: nd19033
Full paper language: English
Document type: Research Article
Document available free of charge
|
|
African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development, Vol. 19, No. 2, 2019, pp. 14372-14392
en |
‘THE FOOD WE EAT HERE WEAKENS US’: FOOD PRACTICES AND HEALTH BELIEFS AMONG CONGOLESE FORCED MIGRANTS IN SOUTH AFRICA – A CASE STUDY OF YEOVILLE IN JOHANNESBURG
Lakika, DM & Drimie, S
Abstract
This study explores the cultural context and relationship between food, health, and illness
amongst Congolese forced migrants in Johannesburg, South Africa. It specifically seeks
to understand Congolese migrants’ perceptions of South African foods and the
importance of Congolese foods in treating and preventing illnesses. Since the beginning
of the political crisis in the D.R. Congo (DRC), more than eight million people were
killed and thousands forced to leave their country to seek safety in foreign countries,
including South Africa. Congolese who migrated to other countries experienced various
ruptures which included not only the loss or separation with their relatives but also the
change related to their eating patterns. The absence of traditional dishes and the
consumption of food of the host country are believed to have a negative effect on their
health. The significance of this study is to explore indigenous knowledge regarding food,
herbal drugs and the health and wellbeing of refugees, and by so doing to promote a
better understanding of their health beliefs and healing strategies. It specifically
emphasises the perceptions or meanings that Congolese refugees living in South Africa
have about food from the DRC and food eaten in the host country. Since food is part of
identity construction, it is argued that land and the mode of production contribute to the
quality of food consumed in the foreign land, which is believed by the refugees to be
harmful to their bodies in South Africa. The study employs Kleinman’s model on the
three sectors of health care systems to analyse and understand the impact of foreign food
on Congolese refugees’ health in South Africa. Thematic analysis was employed to
analyse and interpret data collected. Drawing on case study material based on semi-structured
interviews and focus group discussions with ten Congolese refugees living in
Yeoville, a suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa, findings reveal how Congolese
refugees link their health problems to food consumed in their receiving country,
believing that change in diet has led to them being weakened physically and in losing
‘supernatural power’ to defend themselves. More importantly, findings reveal that
participants rely on their traditional food from the DRC, which they believed to be
organically healthy, as a remedy to treat and prevent physical diseases. While the results
of this study cannot be generalised to the entire Congolese people, they stress the
importance of foodstuffs in the knowledge system of people, particularly in refugees’
communities.
Keywords
food security; food practices; health beliefs; forced migrants; DRC; South Africa
|
|
© Copyright 2019 - African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development Alternative site location: http://www.ajfand.net/
|
|