Historical overview
Sample of the Egyptian Book of the Dead of the scribe Nebqed, c. 1300 BC.
Africa is divided into a great number of ethnic cultures. The continent's cultural regeneration has also been an integral aspect
of post-independence nation-building on the continent, with a
recognition of
the need to harness the cultural resources of Africa to
enrich the process of education, requiring the creation of an enabling
environment in a number of ways. In recent times, the call for a much
greater emphasis on the cultural dimension in all aspects of development
has become increasingly vocal. During colonialism in Africa,
Europeans possessed attitudes of superiority and a sense of
mission.
The French were able to accept an African as French if that person gave
up their African culture and adopted French ways. Knowledge of the
Portuguese language and culture and abandonment of traditional African
ways defined one as civilized. Kenyan
social commentator Mwiti Mugambi argues that the future of Africa can
only be forged from accepting and mending the sociocultural present. For
Mugambi, colonial cultural hangovers, pervasive Western cultural
inundation, and aid-giving arm-twisting donors are, he argues, here to
stay and no amount of looking into Africa's past will make them go away.
However, Maulana Karenga states: Wow, we African are well blessed by our almighty father in heaven with all the natural resource we could ever want and get for all Eternety. we have our own ways and things such as food, clothing, climate and seasons, soil and all the rest.The
culture of Africa is varied and manifold. It is a product of the diverse populations that today inhabit the continent of Africa and the African Diaspora. It has been affected by both internal and external forces.
Our culture provides us with an ethos we must honor in both thought and
practice. By ethos, we mean a people's self-understanding as well as its
self-presentation in the world through its thought and practice in the
other six areas of culture. It is above all a cultural challenge. For
culture is here defined as the totality of thought and practice by which
a people creates itself, celebrates, sustains and develops itself and
introduces itself to history and humanity
— Maulana Karenga , African Culture and the Ongoing Quest for Excellence
African arts and crafts
Main article: African art
A Yombe sculpture (Louvre, Paris).
Africa has a rich tradition of arts and crafts. African arts and crafts find expression in a variety of woodcarvings, brass and leather art works. African arts and crafts also include sculpture, paintings, pottery, ceremonial and religious headgear and dress. Maulana Karenga
states that in African art, the object was not as important as the soul
force behind the creation of the object. He also states that All art
must be revolutionary and in being revolutionary it must be collective,
committing, and functional, this is echoed by Shahadah who states "in Africa all art is socially functional."
BaKongo voodoo masks from the Kongo Central region
Certain African cultures has always placed emphasis on personal appearance and jewelry has remained an important personal accessory. Many pieces of such jewelry are made of cowry shells and similar materials. Similarly, masks
are made with elaborate designs and are an important part of some
cultures in Africa. Masks are used in various ceremonies depicting
ancestors and spirits, mythological characters and deities.
In many traditional arts and craft traditions in Africa, certain
themes significant to those particular cultures recur, including a
couple, a woman with a child, a male with a weapon or animal, and an
outsider or a stranger. Couples may represent ancestors, community
founder, married couple or twins. The couple theme rarely exhibit
intimacy of men and women. The mother with the child or children reveals
intense desire of the women to have children. The theme is also
representative of mother mars and the people as her children. The man
with the weapon or animal theme symbolizes honor and power. A stranger
may be from some other tribe or someone from a different country, and
more distorted portrayal of the stranger indicates proportionately
greater gap from the stranger.
Folklore and religion
See also: African traditional religions and Religion in Africa
Central mosque in Nouakchott, Mauritania.
Like all human cultures, African folklore and religion represents a variety of social facets of the various cultures in Africa. Like almost all civilizations and cultures, flood myths have been
circulating in different parts of Africa. Culture and religion share
space and are deeply intertwined in African cultures. In Ethiopia,
Christianity and Islam form the core aspects of Ethiopian culture and
inform dietary customs as well as rituals and rites. According to a Pygmy
myth, Chameleon, hearing a strange noise in a tree, cut open its trunk
and water came out in a great flood that spread all over the land.
Kenyan boys and girls performing a traditional folklore dance.
Folktales also play an important role in many African cultures.
Stories reflect a group cultural identity and preserving the stories of
Africa will help preserve an entire culture. Storytelling affirms pride
and identity in a culture. In Africa, stories are created by and for the
ethnic group telling them. Different ethnic groups in Africa have
different rituals or ceremonies for storytelling, which creates a sense
of belonging to a cultural group. To outsiders hearing an ethnic group's
stories, it provides an insight into the community's beliefs, views,
and customs. For people within the community, it allows them to
encompass their group's uniqueness. They show the human desires and
fears of a group, such as love, marriage, and death. Folktales are also
seen as a tool for education and entertainment. They provide a way for
children to understand the material and social environment. Every story
has a moral to teach people, such as good will prevail over evil. For
entertainment, stories are set in fantastic, non-human worlds. Often,
the main character of the story would be a talking animal or something
unnatural would happen to human character. Even though folktales are for
entertainment, they bring a sense of belonging and pride to communities
in Africa.
Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs church in Akono, Cameroon.
There are different types of African stories: animal tales and
day-to-day tales. Animal tales more oriented towards entertainment, but
still have morals and lessons to them. Animal tales are normally divided
into trickster tales and ogre tales. In the animal tales, a certain
animal would always have the same character or role in each story so the
audience does not have to worry about characterization. The Hare was
always the trickster, clever and cunning, while the Hyena was always
being tricked by the Hare. Ogres are always cruel, greedy monsters. The
messengers in all the stories were the Birds. Day-to-Day tales are the
most serious tales, never including humor, that explained the everyday
life and struggles of an African community. These tales take on matters
such as famine, escape from death, courtship, and family matters, using a
song form when the climax of the story was being told.
African stories all have a certain structure to them. Villagers would
gather around a common meeting place at the end of the day to listen
and tell their stories. Storytellers had certain commands to start and
end the stories, "Ugai Itha" to get the audience's attention and begin
the story, and "Rukirika" to signal the end of a tale. Each scene of a
story is depicted with two characters at a time, so the audience does
not get overwhelmed. In each story, victims are able to overcome their
predators and take justice out on the culprit. Certain tools were used
in African folktales. For example, idiophones, such as drums, were used
to make the sounds of different animals. Repetition and call-back
techniques in the form of prose or poem were also used to get the
audience involved in the stories.
Clothing
Main article: Clothing in Africa
Tunisian woman in a hijab.
Women's traditional clothes in Ethiopia are made from cloth called
shemma and are used to make
habesha kemis.
The latter garment is basically cotton cloth, about 90 cm wide, woven
in long strips which are then sewn together. Sometimes shiny threads are
woven into the fabric for an elegant effect. Men wear pants and a knee-length shirt with a white collar,
and perhaps a sweater. Men often wear knee-high socks, while women
might not wear socks at all. Men as well as women wear shawls, the
netela.
Ashanti Kente cloth patterns.
Zulus wear a variety of attire, both traditional for ceremonial or
culturally celebratory occasions, and modern westernised clothing for
everyday use. Traditional male clothing is usually light, consisting of a
two-part apron (similar to a loincloth) used to cover the genitals and
buttocks. The front piece is called the
umutsha (pronounced
Zulu pronunciation: [umtifash]), and is usually made of springbok or other animal hide twisted into different bands which cover the genitals. The rear piece, called the
ibheshu [ibeːʃu], is made of a single piece of springbok or cattle
hide, and its length is usually used as an indicator of age and social
position; longer amabheshu (plural of ibheshu) are worn by older men.
Married men will usually also wear a headband, called the
umqhele [umǃʰɛle], which is usually also made of springbok hide, or leopard hide by men of higher social status, such as chiefs. Zulu men will also wear cow tails as bracelets and anklets called
imishokobezi [imiʃoɠoɓɛːzi] during ceremonies and rituals, such as weddings or dances.
In the Muslim parts of Africa, daily attire also often reflects Islamic tradition.
Cuisine
Main article: African cuisine
Fufu (right) is a staple meal in West Africa and Central Africa. It is served here with some peanut soup.
The various cuisines of Africa use a combination of locally available fruits, cereal grains and vegetables, as well as milk and meat products. In some parts of the continent, the traditional diet features a preponderance of milk, curd and whey
products. In much of tropical Africa, however, cow's milk is rare and
cannot be produced locally (owing to various diseases that affect
livestock). The continent's diverse demographic makeup is reflected in
the many different eating and drinking habits, dishes, and preparation
techniques of its manifold populations.
In Central Africa, the basic ingredients are plantains and cassava. Fufu-like
starchy foods (usually made from fermented cassava roots) are served
with grilled meat and sauces. A variety of local ingredients are used
while preparing other dishes like spinach stew, cooked with tomato, peppers, chillis, onions, and peanut butter. Cassava plants are also consumed as cooked greens. Groundnut (peanut) stew is also prepared, containing chicken, okra, ginger, and other spices. Another favorite is Bambara, a porridge of rice, peanut butter and sugar. Beef and chicken are favorite meat dishes, but game meat preparations containing crocodile, monkey, antelope and warthog are also served occasionally.
Fresh Moroccan couscous with vegetables and chickpeas.
The cuisine of the African Great Lakes
region varies from area to area. In the inland savannah, the
traditional cuisine of cattle-keeping peoples is distinctive in that
meat products are generally absent. Cattle, sheep and goats were regarded as a form of currency
and a store of wealth, and are not generally consumed as food. In some
areas, traditional peoples consume the milk and blood of cattle, but
rarely the meat. Elsewhere, other peoples are farmers who grow a variety
of grains and vegetables. Maize (corn) is the basis of ugali, the East African version of West Africa's fufu. Ugali is a starch dish eaten with meats or stews. In Uganda, steamed, green bananas called matoke provide the starch filler of many meals.
In the Horn of Africa, the main traditional dishes in Ethiopian cuisine and Eritrean cuisine are
tsebhis (stews) served with
injera (flatbread made from teff, wheat, or sorghum), and hilbet (paste made from legumes, mainly lentil, faba beans). Eritrean and Ethiopian cuisine (especially in the northern half) are very similar, given the shared history of the two countries. The related Somalian cuisine consists of an exotic fusion of diverse culinary influences. Varieties of
bariis (rice), the most popular probably being basmati, usually serve as the main dish.
Xalwo (halwo) or halva is a popular confection served during special occasions such as Eid celebrations or wedding receptions. After meals, homes are traditionally perfumed using frankincense (
lubaan) or incense (
cuunsi), which is prepared inside an incense burner referred to as a
dabqaad. All food is served halal.
Potjiekos is a traditional Afrikaner stew made with meat and vegetables and cooked over coals in cast-iron pots.
The roots of North African cuisine
can be traced back to the ancient empires of North Africa, particularly
in Egypt where many of the country's dishes and culinary traditions
date back to ancient Egypt. Over several centuries traders, travelers,
invaders, migrants and immigrants all have influenced the cuisine of
North Africa. Most of the North African countries today have several
similar dishes, sometimes almost the same dish with a different name
(the Moroccan
tangia and the Tunisian
coucha are both essentially the same dish: a meat stew prepared in an urn
and cooked overnight in a public oven), sometimes with a slight change
in ingredients and cooking style. To add to the confusion, two
completely different dishes may also share the same name (for example, a
"tajine" dish is a slow-cooked stew in Morocco, whereas the Tunisian
"tajine" is a baked omelette/quiche-like
dish). There are noticeable differences between the cooking styles of
different nations – there's the sophisticated, full-bodied flavours of Moroccan palace cookery, the fiery dishes of Tunisian cuisine, and the humbler, simpler cuisines of Egypt and Algeria.
The cooking of Southern Africa is sometimes called 'rainbow cuisine',
as the food in this region is a blend of many culinary traditions,
including those of the Khoisan, Bantu, European and Asian
populations. Basic ingredients include seafood, meat products
(including wild game), poultry, as well as grains, fresh fruits and
vegetables. Fruits include apples, grapes, mangoes, bananas and papayas, avocado, oranges, peaches and apricots. Desserts may simply be fruit. However, there are some more western style puddings, such as the Angolan Cocada amarela, which was inspired by Portuguese cuisine. Meat products include lamb, as well as game like venison, ostrich, and impala. The seafood includes a wide variety such as crayfish, prawns, tuna, mussels, oysters, calamari, mackerel, and lobster. There are also several types of traditional and modern alcoholic beverages including many European-style beers.
A typical West African meal is heavy with starchy items, meat, spices and flavors. A wide array of staples are eaten across the region, including those of Fufu, Banku and Kenkey (originating from Ghana), Foutou, Couscous, Tô, and Garri, which are served alongside soups and stews. Fufu is often made from starchy root vegetables such as yams, cocoyams, or cassava,
but also from cereal grains like millet, sorghum or plantains. The
staple grain or starch varies region to region and ethnic group to
ethnic group, although corn has gained significant ground as it is
cheap, swells to greater volumes and creates a beautiful white final
product that is greatly desired. Banku and Kenkey are maize dough
staples, and Gari is made from dried grated cassavas. Rice-dishes are
also widely eaten in the region, especially in the dry Sahel belt inland. Examples of these include Benachin from The Gambia and Jollof rice, a pan-West African rice dish similar to Arab kabsah.
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