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Presents adaptations and retelling of 17 African folk tales, most of which are Bantu tales of southern and central Africa set against a background of Zulu family life and customs.
When the people in his diverse urban neighborhood celebrate a festive street fair, Mischa shares in the excitement. Includes child-friendly recipes for each of the ethnic foods featured in the story. Full color.
" . . . a major addition to the literature on oral traditions." —Journal of Religion in Africa This 750-year-old epic celebrates the exploits of the legendary founder of the Empire of Old Mali. It constitutes a virtual social, political, and cultural charter and embodies deep-rooted aspects of Mande cosmology. The fully annotated translation is accompanied by an introduction that provides a historical and contextual framework for understanding the recitation of this African epic.
The extraordinary book Universal Child vividly recounts the true story of "every" growing child, and his early childhood indoctrination through social education. Universal Child confronts his confusion, anger, unanswered questions in a bid to find the true meaning of life, and what's in it for him here and beyond, now and after. The book is the first of a series and is just the beginning of the endless story of the real life of a boy named Amy. In his story, it personifies the joys and toils of all the children in this rich world. Amy was born into a wealthy family in Ugbelle, an obscure village in the eastern part of Nigeria. Unknown to him and his parents, his birth was predestined by divine forces. He was a chosen one, and like Jesus Christ, he had in abundance everything any human could possibly desire. His early years were marked by blind earthly adventures, deep questions and open confrontations between him, society, and the Holy and devilish spirits ever residing in him. He decided to choose the teachings of the Holy Spirit, because Amy discovered that His teachings and wisdom far excels every other form of learning. This decision took Amy to places around the world, providing adventures upon adventures. Universal Child will inspire you.
An African Tree of Life demonstrates how mission involves not only a "bringing-to" a people, but a "discovering-of" those deep symbols in human culture and God's creation that, in the light of the gospel, draw humanity to Christ. This book, in a scholarly yet intriguing way, explores the stories and rituals of the Gbaya people of the Cameroon and the Central African Republic. These deep symbols are typically centered not in the esoteric or exotic but in the familiar and everyday. Christensen focuses on the especial importance of the peace-bringing tree of life--the sore tree--central to the lives and worship of the Gbaya. "Gbaya Christians," says Christensen, "offer to North American Christians fresh and hope-filled images, rich metaphors, new and yet familiar to us." Thus, An African Tree of Life is an important book not only for theologians, missiologists, and Africanists but for all those concerned with issues of contextualization and seeking life-giving symbols in the quest to communicate the gospel message.
Raouf Mama is widely beloved by children and adults alike for his books and especially for his African and multicultural storytelling, which incorporates poetry, song, music, and dance. In Fortune’s Favored Child, the master storyteller tells his own story, beginning in the West African country of Benin. Through a harrowing experience with sickness, an encounter with a clairvoyant traditional healer, and astonishing twists of fortune, the protagonist struggles to uncover his real identity, to get an education, and to make his own way in the world. His journey takes him to the shores of the United States to attend graduate school at the University of Michigan and begin a new chapter in his life. .
Drawn from all parts of Africa, these stories for children aged ten and over illustrate the fierce sense of justice inherent in African peoples, their powers of patience and endurance, and their supreme ability as story-tellers.
This book is the first to examine the symbolism and design of Southern African fertility dolls. Beautifully illustrated throughout with over 200 colour images, it includes texts from several of the leading experts in the field of African art studies.
Originally published in 1964, this is a detailed ethnographic record and sympathetic study of Ambo beliefs and activities. The significance of the clan and the matrilineage are discussed and the organization of the village and chiefdom analysed. Childhood and puberty, marriage, death, succession and inheritance are covered, along with religious concpets and divination, with its stress on the importance of the high god.