Queen Modjadji, or the Rain Queen, is the hereditary Queen regnant of Lobedu people, a people of the Limpopo Province of South Africa. The Rain Queen is believed to have special powers, including the ability to control the clouds and rainfall. She is known as a mystical and historic figure who brought rain to her allies and drought to her enemies. She is not a ruler as such, but a powerful Rainmaking and a traditional healer (ngaka).
The traditional installation of a male factional claimant to the title, Prince Lekukela Modjadji, as the king of the Balobedu took place in October 2022 at Khetlhakoni Royal Palace in Modjadjiskloof outside Tzaneen in Limpopo. Princess Masalanabo, who was expected to be the next Rain Queen prior to this event, was said by the faction of the Modjadji Royal Council that installed him to be expected to take a position reserved for her and become the Khadikholo (or great aunt) of Balobedu.Njanji, Susan. "SA's pre-teen queen with 'rainmaking' powers" , The Citizen (November 6, 2017).
Masalanabo, Lekukela's half-sister, who is known to her loyalists as Masalanabo II Modjadji VII, served as a rival factional claimant to the title. She was the daughter of the last Rain Queen, Makobo Modjadji VI. A ceremony to celebrate her 18th birthday was held in April 2023 at the Kara Heritage Institute in Pretoria; it was organized by the Balobedu Heritage Society, which was founded by her great grandmother Mokope Modjadji V. The event was used to launch her history booklet "Masalanabo Modjadji VII: Daughter Of The Sun". She was supported at this event by a faction of the Modjadji Royal Council. Originally planned for April 2024, her coronation was postponed to September 2024 and later March 2025. Following the recognition of her holding of the monarchical title by the Cyril Ramaphosa, her coronation date was once again rescheduled to August 2025.
The village she established with her loyal followers was ruled by a Mokoto, a male leader, but the peace and harmony of the village were disrupted by rivalries between different families; therefore, to pacify the land, Mokoto impregnated his own daughter in order to restore the tribe's matrilineal tradition. In another version, Mokoto had a vision that he had to marry his daughter in order to create a matrilineal dynasty. She gave birth to the first Rain Queen, known as Modjadji, which means: "ruler of the day".
Oral histories recount that the Rain Queens are originally from ancient Ethiopia and built the fortress of Great Zimbabwe.
During the 1930s, social anthropologists Eileen Krige and Jack Krige carried out fieldwork on the society of the Rain Queens. Their work was published in 1943 as The Realm of a Rain-Queen. A Study of the Pattern of Lovedu Society,Krige, E.J., Krige, J.D., 1943. The Realm of a Rain-Queen: A Study of the Pattern of Lovedu Society. London: Oxford University Press. and remains one of the standard anthropological works.
Every November she presides over the annual rainmaking ceremony at her royal compound in Khetlhakone Village.
She is not supposed to marry, but has many "wives", as they are referred to in the Balobedu language. These are not spouses in the usual sense of the word; as a queen regnant, she has the equivalent of royal court servants, or lady-in-waiting, sent from many villages all over the Balobedu Kingdom. These wives were selected by Privy Council and in general are from the households of the subject chiefs. This ritual of "bride giving" is strictly a form of diplomacy to ensure loyalty to the Queen.
The Rain Queen's mystical rain-making powers are believed to be reflected in the lush garden which surrounds her royal compound. Surrounded by parched land, her garden contains the world's largest cycad trees which are in abundance under a spectacular rain belt. One species of cycad, the Modjadji cycad, is named after the Rain Queen. The rain-making powers are also believed to be transmitted through matriarchal mitochondrial DNA. Therefore, the Queenship is inherited through matrilineal lineage by the daughters of the Rain queen.
The Rain Queen is a prominent figure in South Africa, many communities respecting her position and, historically, attempting to avoid conflict in deference thereto. The fifth Rain Queen, Mokope Modjadji, maintained cordial relations with Nelson Mandela. Even presidents of South Africa during apartheid visited the Rain Queens.
The Rain Queen has become a figure of interest; she and the royal institution have become a significant tourist attraction contributing to the South African economy. The Rain Queen was offered an annual government civil list as a result. The was also expected to help defray the costs of preserving the cycad trees found in the Rain Queen's gardens.
Makobo was admitted into the Limpopo Medi-Clinic for an undisclosed illness on 10 June 2005 and died two days later, at the age of 27. The official cause of death was listed as chronic meningitis. She is survived by a son, Prince Lekukela Hex Modjadji (b. 1997), and a daughter, Masalanabo Modjadji VII (b. 20 January 2005), the latter of whom became qualified to succeed her in 2023 when she turned 18. Prince Lekukela Modjadji has voiced strong opposition to the recognition of his sister as the queen, which has caused deep discontent between the Modjadji royal family and the Motshekga family that helped raise Masalanabo. Despite this royal drama, President Cyril Ramaphosa legally recognised her as queen of the Balobedu.
Perhaps uniquely, the Balobedu crown descends according to matrilineal primogeniture: her eldest daughter is always her , so the title of Rain Queen is normally passed from mother to daughter. It is said that she ingests poison when she is near death so that her daughter will assume the crown more quickly. Lately, however, many traditions have been abandoned, influenced by Christian missionaries.
The government of South Africa recognized Princess Masalanabo as the future Rain Queen in a 2016 memorandum and she was expected to officially receive her certificate in 2021, when she turned 18, as minors are not allowed to be traditional leaders. Makobo's brother Prince Mpapatla was designated regent for Princess Masalanabo. However, Mpapatla himself has a daughter by his cousin, a woman from the royal Modjadji line. Mpapatla, however, has insisted that his late sister's daughter, Princess Masalanabo, will be enthroned as the queen when she turns 18.
However, in May 2021, a faction of the Modjadji Royal Council appointed Masalanabo's older half-brother, Prince Lekukela, as king of the Balobedu nation with the support of Prince Regent Mpapatla, citing Masalanabo's lack of preparation on divine processes traditionally assumed by Rain Queens, as she lived in Gauteng with the family of Mathole Motshekga, a former advisor to the Balobedu Royal Council. Mpapatla claimed there was a 2006 Royal Council resolution appointing Lekukela as heir to the Balobedu throne, which was allegedly kept secret due to security concerns. The Royal Council planned for Princess Masalanabo to instead assume the position of khadi-kholo (great aunt, or Princess Royal) of the Balobedu kingdom. Lekukela was installed as king-elect by the Modjadji royal council in October 2022, although his coronation was still pending judicial approval after a court application was submitted by Princess Masalanabo's legal team in order to challenge the Royal Council's decision, which they claimed to be illegal under the Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Act and to ignore the prior recognition of Masalanabo as Rain Queen by President Cyril Ramaphosa. An online petition against Lekukela's appointment was launched in May 2021, even though the Royal Council stated the their decision was irreversible.
A male branch of the extended royal clan has also petitioned the South African president to restore the male line of the Balobedu royal house, which reigned before 1800. This request is considered unlikely to be granted, since the Rain Queen heritage is recognised as a national cultural legacy and interest in it has stimulated significant tourist trade. This male branch is reportedly considered by some to be a faction that promotes division within the royal clan of the Balobedu people.
The Marvel Comics character Storm is a fictional descendant of the dynasty that produces the Rain Queens through the line of the Sorceress Supreme Ayesha from the Hyborian Age. Mujaji is also the name of the goddess of sustenance in The Orisha, the pantheon of Wakanda. In Wakanda, Storm is called Hadari-Yao ("Walker of Clouds" in ancient Alkamite), a goddess who preserves the balance of natural things.
In the 2018 animated television series DuckTales, the character Scrooge McDuck states that he convinced the Rain Queen of Balobedu to make the Sahara Desert less dry in the episode "The Ballad of Duke Baloney".
Makobo Modjadji
Succession
List of Rulers of Balobedu
In popular culture
See also
External links
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