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Luchazi people and their heritage.

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Luchazi people The Luchazi (Lucazi) are a Bantu ethnic people of the southern central Africa who are found in Angola, Congo (DRC), Namibia and Zambia. KaLuchazi (the plural being VaLuchazi) is a term used to indicate member of a Luchazi people. Luchazi is a name of a river, and it was used to refer to early communities that settled along the Luchazi River in eastern Angola. The Luchazi River is a tributary of Luena River. In eastern Angola, names of ethnic groups are based on the names of the rivers or some other characteristic feature of the ecology. Sometimes the name of an ethnic or sub-ethnic group is derived from the clan's name or personality of a famous chief. In 1923, Emil Pearson collected an oral tradition among the Lwimbi in the Kwanza valley that claimed that the Lwimbi are part of the Luchazi people. It is reported that their chief called Lwimbi had a quarrel with a Luchazi Chief called Muangana Mueni Ngongola. After that bitter quarrel, Chief Lwimbi with his follow