To set the stage for this post, and to take you back to 1974,
click on the Tabu Ley link to "Kaful Mayay" above.
(apologies for the commercial, skip to the music)
(apologies for the commercial, skip to the music)
The Muhammad Ali – George Foreman
World Heavyweight Championship, later dubbed the “Rumble in the Jungle”, was
held in Kinshasa October 29, 1974. The match took place in the Stade du 20 Mai
(originally Stade Roi Baudouin, now Stade Tata Raphael) and the fight began at 4:00 am on October
30 to accommodate prime time TV in the US.
Originally scheduled for
September 24, the fight was postponed until the end of October after George
Foreman suffered a cut above his right eye in a training bout with his
sparring partner. As a high school
teacher in Shaba (Katanga Province), I initially wondered if I might be able to
attend the match and report back from vacation a couple weeks late, but when
the event was postponed, I dutifully made my way back to Manono.
Foreman (with bandage), Mobutu and Ali at Stade du 20 Mai |
Ali with the "Bouclier de la Revolution" on Mont Ngaliema |
Foreman at his training camp at Nsele |
The event was a prestige extravaganza
for President Mobutu, organized only months after his momentous speech at the
UN General Assembly, as another way to put Zaire on the map. A music festival called “Zaire 74” was
held in September, featuring the locally popular James Brown, was well as others less
well-known in Zaire, including B.B. King, Miriam Makeba, Bill Withers, Manu Dibango and Celia
Cruz.
A Kinois contemplates a billboard announcing the fight |
One of Kinshasa's taxi-buses gets on board |
Zaireans were solid fans of Ali,
and many still referred to him as “Cassius”. From a technical standpoint, the younger Foreman - the
reigning Heavyweight champ - was favored to win, but Ali pursued a strategy forcing
Foreman to expend a lot of energy in punches that had little effect. Finally in the 8th round,
Ali landed a lightning series of blows that sent Foreman to the mat. Foreman got up, but the referee called
the match. Some observers
speculated that the fans would not have accepted a Foreman victory.
The boxing ring takes shape in the Stade |
The Stade is full on October 29 |
Round 8 ... its over |
Earlier that year, popular
musician Tabu Ley (Rochereau) released a song called “Kaful Mayay” which came
to represent the spirit of the match.
Side two of the record included references to “Beta ye” (hit him) and
Boma ye (kill him) in Lingala, and Zairean listeners across the country found in the tune a personal connection with the historic match. In Manono, the week after the fight, bar patrons would break
into spirited brawls whenever the song was played.
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