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Sjambok

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Sjambok
A 90 cm (3 ft) plastic sjambok used by South African police
TypeWhip
Place of originAfrica
Specifications
Length90 to 150 centimetres (35 to 59 in)

The sjambok (/ˈʃæmbʌk, -bɒk/),[1] or litupa, is a heavy leather whip. It is traditionally made from adult hippopotamus or rhinoceros hide, but it is also commonly made out of plastic.

A strip of the animal's hide is cut and carved into a strip 0.9 to 1.5 metres (3 to 5 ft) long, tapering from about 25 mm (1 in) thick at the handle to about 10 mm (38 in) at the tip. This strip is then rolled until reaching a tapered-cylindrical form. The resulting whip is both flexible and durable. A plastic version was made for the apartheid era South African Police, and used for riot control.

Peter Hathaway Capstick describes a sjambok as a short swordlike whip made from rhino pizzle leather that could lay a man open like a straight razor.[2]

The sjambok was heavily used by the Voortrekkers driving their oxen while migrating from the Cape of Good Hope, and remains in use by herdsmen to drive cattle. They are widely available in South Africa from informal traders to regular stores from a variety of materials, lengths and thicknesses.

Use by police

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South Africa

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In South Africa, use of the sjambok by police is sometimes seen as synonymous with the apartheid era, but its use on people started much earlier. It is sometimes used outside the official judiciary by people who carry out punishments imposed by extralegal courts.[3] South African police officers favoured the sjambok, with the South African Police stating that they inflicted less injury as compared to the wooden baton. Despite this, public perception of the sjambok was poor, both domestically and internationally. Allegations of police brutality concerning the sjambok were widespread, which eventually led to the sjambok being effectively banned for riot control in September 1989.[4]

United Kingdom

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In 1963, an enquiry into the police force of Sheffield in the United Kingdom found that rhino whips had been used on suspects.[5]

Other types

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The name seems to have originated as cambuk in Indonesia, where it was the name of a wooden rod for punishing slaves, where it was possibly derived from the Persian chabouk or chabuk. When Malay slaves arrived in South Africa in the 1800s, the instrument and its name were imported with them, the material was changed to hide, and the name was finally incorporated into Afrikaans, spelled as sambok. It is known in Bengali as chabuk.

The instrument is also known as imvubu (hippopotamus in Zulu), kiboko (hippopotamus in Swahili) and as mnigolo (hippopotamus in Malinké). In the Portuguese African colonies, the Congo Free State and the Belgian Congo, it was called a chicote, from the Portuguese word for whip, or fimbo and was used to force labour from local people through flogging, sometimes to death. The official tariff for punishment in this case was lowered in time from twenty strokes to eight, then (in 1949) six, and progressively four and two, until flogging was outlawed completely in 1955. In North Africa, particularly Egypt, the whip was called a kurbash, Arabic for whip. The term shaabuug is used in the Somali language; it can also refer to a generic leather whip.

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In the film Would You Rather, players are given the option to stab a fellow contestant with an ice pick or whip another contestant with a sjambok.[6]

In Willard Price's Elephant Adventure, the cruel Arab slaver known as the Thunder Man enjoys flogging captives with a sjambok made from hippopotamus hide.

References

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  1. ^ "Sjambok". Freedictionary.com.
  2. ^ Peter Capstick, Death in the Long Grass, p. 243
  3. ^ Aitkenhead, Decca (28 May 2000). "Rough justice". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 23 May 2010.
  4. ^ Wren, Christopher (12 September 1989). "South African Police to End the Use of Whips". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  5. ^ "MIDWEEK RETRO - Power, corruption and lies..." The Star. Sheffield. 6 November 2013. Archived from the original on 30 April 2016. Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  6. ^ Catsoulis, Jeannette (8 February 2013). "Torture on the One Hand, Abuse on the Other". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 24 May 2022.