Father Jean Jacques
Corbeil gave the name Moto Moto (fire fire) in honour of Bishop Joseph
Dupont, nicknamed “moto moto” by his African friends. Bishop Dupont
opened up missionary work of the Missionaries of Africa (White Fathers)
in northern Zambia where he worked from 1885 to 1911.

The official
opening of the museum took place in 1974, when it became one of the
National Museums of Zambia run by the National Museums Board of Zambia.
As a collection, however, its history dates back to the 1940s when the
late catholic priest, Father Jean Jaques Corbeil from Canada, came to do
missionary work as a white father in 1943. Over the years, Father
Corbeil collected cultural artefacts from the northern part of Zambia
for study and posterity.

The growing
collections were stored at Mulilansolo Mission up to 1964, then it was
moved to Serenje up to 1969 and then to Isoka. In 1972 the Diocese of
Mbala donated a plot of land and a former carpentry and bricklaying
workshop at St. Paul’s School-Mbala to serve as a museum. The National
Museums Board established through Parliament, cap. 267 of 1966 of the
laws of Zambia, manages the museum. NORAD, DANIDA, German government and
others not mentioned have financed the building of extensions at the
museum.
MISSION
a) National Museums Board
To establish, manage and develop
national museums on sustainable basis for the preservation and
interpretation of movable heritage for the benefit of the present and
future generations.
b) Moto Moto Museum
To collect and preserve Zambia’s
cultural and natural heritage for posterity, to study and correctly
interpret the heritage for enjoyment, public awareness and education
through exhibitions and publications.
COLLECTIONS’
COMPOSITION.
The bulk collection of the museum is in
the fields of Ethnography and Art, Prehistory (Archaeology), History and
Natural History. Most of the collection is of cultural nature from the
Northern and part of Central Zambia due to the history of the museum.
The Prehistory collection provides a record of Kalambo Falls’ findings,
a place of archaeological interest. It was there that the oldest
evidence of the use of fire by man, south of the Sahara was found.