
African Culture – 16 most interesting traditions
Kidnapping your bride
In the Sudanese Latuka tribe, when a man wants to marry a woman, he
kidnaps her. Elderly members of his family go and ask the girl’s father
for her hand in marriage, and if dad agrees, he beats the suitor as a
sign of his acceptance of the union. If the father disagrees, however,
the man might forcefully marry the woman anyway.

Khweta Ceremony
This Southern African ceremony is practiced by several tribes and is
how a young boy proves his manhood. When they are of age, boys are sent
to spend several days or weeks in a circumcision lodge during winter,
where they’re put through rigorous and often dangerous tests and rituals
such as continuous dancing until exhaustion, and circumcision.
Putting a price on the bride
Lobola is an ancient and controversial Southern African tradition in
which the families of a bride and groom negotiate how much the groom
must pay for the bride. All negotiations must be done in writing — never
by phone or in person. The two families cannot even speak until
negotiations are complete.
Spitting your blessings
Members of the Maasai tribe in Kenya and Tanzania spit as a way of
blessing. Men spit on newborns and say they are bad in the belief that
if they praise a baby, it will be cursed. Maasai warriors will also spit
in their hands before shaking the hand of an elder.
Bull jumping
In order to prove their manhood in the Ethiopian Hamer tribe, young
boys must run, jump and land on the back of a bull before then
attempting to run across the backs of several bulls. They do this
multiple times, and usually in the nude.
The groom wears a veil
The Ahaggaren Tuaregs of Algeria are part of a larger group of
Berber-speaking Tuaregs. In their culture, the men wear veils almost all
the time. However, they can take their veils off when inside family
camps or while traveling.
Women have their own houses
In the Gio tribe in Ivory Coast, each wife has her own small house
that she lives in with her children until they are old enough to move
out. The children never live with their fathers.
Women can’t grieve elders
In the Southwestern Congo, the Suku tribe honors ancestors and
elders, when they die, with a ceremony held in the clearing of a forest.
Here, gifts and offerings are brought, but outsiders and all women are
forbidden to attend.
Sons are raised by their uncles
When male children reach age 5 or 6 in the Northern Angolan Songo
tribe, they are sent to live with their uncles on their mother’s side.
This is because chiefs inherit their position through matrilineal lines.
Wealth is measured by cows
In the Pokot tribe in Kenya, wealth is measured by how many cows a
family has. Most Pokot people are either “corn people” or “cow people”—
meaning that’s what they cultivate on their land — but all Pokot people
measure their wealth by cows. The number of women a man can marry is
determined by how many cows he has.
Living with animals
The Maasai people of Kenya and Tanzania have strict policies against
killing wild animals. They keep cattle and livestock, but leave wild
animals untouched. In fact, each clan is associated with a specific wild
species, which they often keep close to them and treat as a clan
member.
Red sun block
The Himba people of Northern Namibia cover their skin with a mixture
of butter fat and ochre — a natural earth pigment containing iron oxide —
to protect themselves from the sun. For that reason, the Himba people
often appear to have a red skin tone.
Hunter-gatherers
The San People of Botswana, also called Bushmen, are hunter gatherers
who were evicted from their ancestral land in the 1950s. They were
forbidden to hunt and forced to apply for permits to enter reserves. The
San switched to farming but they continued to gather herbs for
medication and plants for food. Deprived of the ability to hunt, San
numbers dwindled.
Beating the suitor
The Fulani tribe live in many countries in West Africa and follow a
tradition called Sharo. Sharo happens when two young men want to marry
the same woman. To compete for her hand, they beat one another up. The
men must suppress signs of pain and the one who takes the beating
without showing signs of pain can take the wife.

A thorough cleansing
The Chewa people are one of the largest indigenous groups of Malawi
but live throughout Central and Southern Africa. When a person dies, one
family tradition involves taking the body into the woods, slitting the
throat, and forcing water through the body to cleanse it. They do this
by squeezing the corpse’s stomach until what comes out the rear end runs
clear.
Lip stretching
When a girl becomes a teenager in the Surma tribe of Southern Sudan,
she begins the process of lip stretching. The girl has her bottom teeth
removed to make space for a lip plate, which is increased in size
annually.
Leave a Comment