Category Archives: Botswana

A Wedding Realized..with a few hiccups Tswana style

In my previous post, I laid out the scene for an interesting ceremony in the Botswana tradition of weddings and the days leading up to such an event.  You can read up on this here if you have not already: http://wp.me/p4e2Bz-1C

After several sessions of Patlo over the course of a few days the groom, B, was getting weary but he was putting on a brave face.  All the younger ones who were not old enough to attend the elders’ wedding meetings or be a part of the Patlo process had either been hiking (I use the term loosely) around Gaborone or jumping in the local watering hole at the lodge.  The swimming pool was usually peopled with a few bold and tan Setswana splashing around, having a grand time.  Then, there were the Irish young ‘uns basking in the hopes of a quiet bronze over the European pastels (Myself included as an honorary plus one).  It was difficult but I was slowly making my skin’s Parisian ivory disappear.  There was only one respite from our sun’s glowing attraction – the hope of adventure.  Three of us decided we were going to hunt a wild animal.  So, we made our way to the Mokolodi Nature Reserve to go on a trek.  The local game reserve is a wildlife sanctuary and they were teaching know-very-littles to track the creatures over a course of a few hours.  This sounded like an exciting prospect, so we departed just after 7:15am, barely making our initiation to the outdoors after dawn.  Sixty minutes passed, and a few Rhino jokes later…

Tour guide: “The Southern White Rhino male can weigh up to 2,000-3,600 kilograms.”

Trouble-maker 1: “Rhino what you’re thinking.”

Tour guide: “You can follow the rhino by carefully noting its scent.  This is how the males find their mates, which they may keep for twenty years.”

Trouble-maker 2: “Darn.  I forgot my female rhino perfume today.”

Tour Guide: (Pulls up to small lake) ” Aha. See? The rhino have been here.  But these tracks are not fresh as you can trace how old the tracks are by looking at the marks of the wrinkled skin…”

Me: “Somebody’s poisoned the water hole!”

What!? I saw it on a Disney movie once? It was the best I could come up with.  There were a few chuckles, I promise.  Almost two hours of more safari driving in the reserve than actual rhino trekking and the humor was starting to take pace with the jeep’s bumps and grinds along the dirt road.

The jokes were getting better…Or worse.  However you look at it, we were getting tired, especially since the thunderclouds had made rain appear on again, then off again for the last 40 minutes. Finally we got out of the jeep and the guide at last said the words we longed to hear: “These are fresh!   It is time to go trekking.”  Not even five minutes later, and the glorious creatures were in front of us.  We definitely thought it was time to take some important photographs so we measured exactly how close the white rhino was behind us with composed faces and length of arm.  See?

That's right. Serious look at the wildlife.
Having a serious look.  That’s right. A serious look at the wildlife.

After our precise documentation, we stealthily got back into the vehicle between whispers of “There’s a stick in my boots!” and “Pull my string?  The birthday party’s today!”  (Still the wrong movie for an African safari but oh well.  They should put a rhino in, next time.)  After a swift drive, our guide pulled off the main road in front of a large lagoon.  The sun was finally high at midday and as many of the Gaborone days had been filled with rain and lightning, it was a delightful change.  We all presumed that we were going back to the gift shop after our brief dearth with the dangerous and great rhino.  We were surprised to discover that the guide simply wanted to feed us!  It was very unexpected and so the sandwiches were devoured perhaps even faster because of our hard work becoming zoologist explorers.  As we made our way back to Gaborone a few moments later, I couldn’t help thinking that the venture’s highlight was hearing comments about wildlife and their particular perfume.  *Snicker.  Call me sentimental, but I find the less profound moments are often the best ones!

The next few days flew by and it is safe to say that even Christmas was a brief spot of holiday cheer in an otherwise quick blur of meetings and dinners.  The night before the wedding, which was to be a two-day affair, a few of us were up late sharing wine by the pool under a star-filled evening sky.  Thunderclouds rolled in the distance and occasionally our pet peacock would strut by screeching but otherwise, it was a quiet and serene evening.  The night was soon punctuated with an unexpected amount of drama.

The first day of the wedding was supposed to begin at 5:00am the next morning, and as four of us could only attend day two because we were unmarried, as was custom in Botswana, we were enjoying a night as young as we were.  B’s mom came home to the lodge after the final elder meeting with an insistence that all of us were attending both days.  As the wedding would begin in four hours, it was a not a small shock!  Everyone promptly rushed to take a quick nap before dawn.

Sleepily rustling up courage to get up, all the women pulled on scarves and secured them around their heads along with trousers or dresses for the ceremony.   As is customary in Gaborone, the Tswana family unit is divided into male and female domains.  The men own the kraal while the women dominate the home.  As we approached the home, there was a large circle of females singing and clapping, which could be heard for miles around the homestead.  All the women were dressed in royal blue, and a homestead dresses its community in a color that symbolizes where they are from.

Women walk through the homestead in Gaborone, Botswana.
Women walk through the homestead in Gaborone, Botswana.

Most women were adorned with a similar dark headscarf with an argyle-like pattern and azure skirts that matched.  The few exceptions were women who had married into Gaborone and represented the homestead their parents were from.  Most of the women who did not wear the azul dresses were wearing pearl white. The bride was conspicuously absent and she appeared later as a strange ghost-like figured dressed in a large pink blanket that covered her entirely head to toe.  From my understanding, the bride is to be a hidden gift the husband needs to find simply by guessing who she is.  She is placed next to at least two other girls who are also adorned in similar attire as a test for her husband-to-be.  B was supposed to choose which of the women is his betrothed.  Interestingly enough, one of the Patlo negotiations seems to have given B the right not to choose.  There was only one covered woman at this ceremony. As an observer, I think it makes it more special not to choose as this means there is only man and woman potentially getting married.

So for all rights and purposes, this was a very modern Botswana wedding.

My favourite aspect of the first day was the singing.  The women made a strong, courageous yell with their tongues for an hour-long singing session where they screamed in an undecipherable dialogue to my ears.  The best part was that their mouths were shaped in this oval shape, identical to each female while the tongue wagged back and forth so quickly left and right, their jaws vibrating in simultaneous succession while they jumped and danced in a circle around the porch of the house.  Just inside the short, stone walls of the front veranda, three of us stood and watched as we were within the confines of the house but outside the dancing.  We stood with our colourful scarves covering our heads and smiling, laughing, clapping.  None of us could speak Setswana, so we just listened to the sounds and could not stop grinning.  Every moment, one of the Tswana women would lean over and translate in whispers to us as they again lifted their voices high: “They are saying, ‘She must sweep his floors/ She must sweep her mother’s floors/ She must be afraid of Ireland/ She must go with her husband to Ireland/ She must bear a child for him / She will carry the child/ She will carry the child on her back.’”  It was magic.

The kraal was situated under the shade of a large tree where the men sat and talked.
The kraal was situated under the shade of a large tree where the men sat and talked.

Where were the men all this time? The men were at the kraal, speaking of the ritual slaughtering of the cattle which had been purchased for the appointed time at the wedding.  As the women were separated for several hours during the ceremony, I did not have the opportunity to observe how this discussion was carried but it did go on for more than two hours around a bonfire.  The fire and smoke was still elegantly petering off the trees when the women made their way across the homestead to greet the men at the end of the ceremony.  This is an interesting tradition considering that the fire is begun even as the sun rises at dawn.  Besides the fact that there is no actual need for the fire to make things visible in darkness, it is also stifling hot during this time of year.  After the conversation about the ritual bulls, the most important part of the discussion commenced.  All the married men and elders gave B advice on how to be a good husband.  As one who is naïve in the ways of marriage, I found this romantic in spite of its old origins, even though the bride was absent during this time.  The women mirrored this aspect of the ceremony during the blanket presentation of the bride, P, and told her the ways in which she must treat her husband well and what to expect throughout her marriage.

After the singing, the bride entered, her face now visible and fresh.  She was uncovered and serving women came to hand tea and biscuits to each of the ladies while the transformation happened so the bride could be ‘handed’ to her husband.  Firstly, the men came to the front of the bride’s house and stamped defiantly on the entrance with their boots, as if to show that they were now entering the female domain for the first time.  Only B, his father and the two representatives of the bride’s male family came. The rest of the men watched from afar as the men came and gave greetings and blessings to each female.  They numbered close to 100 women.  It was a sight to see as both the men and women demonstrably smiled from ear to ear, finally able to unite even if in a gesture of a handshake.  The entire ceremony was as if a dance, carefully choreographed to mimic the movements of how a husband and wife can and will act in a marriage when the wedding is over.

The men then walked solemnly back to the kraal, and the women began another song as they paraded back to a second house which was a few kilometres away in another homestead.  At this point, the sun had been high for over an hour and I was dressed in my conservative long-sleeved blouse and skirt in order to respect the Tswana traditions that were being held that morning.  I was longing for some of that delicious gelato I’d had just one year ago.   What is better to make things cool when it is hot?

Gelato in Athens, Greece on a hot Spring day.
Gelato in Athens, Greece on a hot Spring day.

The end of the ceremony was at 9:30 am and several of us returned to the lodge for a swim or a nap.  Seeing as most holiday-makers don’t need to wake up at 4:30 for a 5:00 am wedding during their Christmas vacation, a few of us opted for the former rather than the latter choice knowing there was another ceremony tomorrow.  My partner in crime, D, got the call for assistance from the groom as another Patlo meeting was called last minute asking B to come back to the Botswana homestead once more.  This meeting lasted a few hours as there was a final request for B to stay in the village the night before the next ceremony.  While the rest of the Irish family went to an elegant Chinese dinner at the local Grand Palms, Patlo lasted a while and eventually ended with B sneaking out the window and driving away in his car to join his family at the lodge.  Exciting!

Two new members of the Irish crew flew in from Canada to join us for evening drinks but none of us could stay up much beyond 9:00 pm as the new day awaited.  Specifically, all the ladies went to sleep early as we were waking up for another meeting just after dawn with the bride, P, at her house to “do hair”, wedding preparations and photographs. Knowing that something might go amiss, I woke up at 4:45 am to take a shower then met with B’s sister and the bride.  The photographer arrived at the same time as we did.  He must have been quite accustomed to the chaos because he did not bat an eyelash while girls aged five to thirty-five walked around in various states of undress in the bride’s room, (B’s sister and myself not included) trying to find hairbands for flower girls, tying bows, and curling hair while balancing bare feet against a messy floor with wedding silk, white pearls, rose votives and ivory berets strewn decoratively across.   Even better, aunts, mothers and honorary mums kept walking in and out of pictures that were meant to showcase the maid of honour and the bride’s flower girls.  I never tired of hearing the photographer politely move from dulcet tones to harsher notes as he said,

“M’am, could you please move to the right?  You are in the photo.”

(Lady walks back to pick up a box she left behind) “M’am, could you please leave?”

(Door shuts, then opens. In she walks, slowly now and looking down at her cell phone without a care in the world.)

“M’am! Are you one of the bridesmaids? I just told you to stay out of the photograph.”

Disaster.  This went on for a ½ hour.  Finally, we piled into a car where a caravan of ten vehicles made their way to the church.  8:00 am.  After a thirty minute stint inside the chapel, (Is there a theme to this?) the wedding began with a line of men and women who filed through the center aisle singing in a very memorable American Southern gospel style while they toe-tapped back and forth in a very subtle dance before the bridesmaids.  This was the best part of the wedding. Chanting and humming, they continued until both B and P stood at the altar.  Three hours later, B and P were man and wife, minus a few harrowing incidents with a baby who wouldn’t stop screaming during the exchange of the vows.  Poor B.

A few notes on the service:  The Christian ceremony itself had the intention, I’m certain, of uniting a man and woman in love.   These are good intentions.  Unfortunately there was such a strong emphasis on how “ it is not good for a man to be alone” through demonstrations (Indeed the phrase itself was repeated nearly seven times) of his inability to commit actions without sorrow or frustration if he did not have a wife i.e. sewing clothes and cooking in his household.  In a country that has progressed so much in its economic prospects, there is a reason why Botswana is unique.  It unites tradition with modernity in a very strange way and you could readily observe this through its pairing of Christianity with ancient tribal patriarchy.  It was obvious that the wedding was meant to be symbolic of a man as the leader who could take care of his own affairs but the home was the dominion of the woman to support him, rather than traverse life through an equal partnership where man and woman choose a life together not of necessity but commitment.  While there were many Christians in this audience, both Protestant and Catholic alike from Botswana, Ireland, Canada and other countries it was commented on from nearly everyone who knew B that this wedding ceremony was steeped in ancient traditions and indeed that it was actually “hilarious” that “It is not good for a man to be alone.”  Is it possible to get married because it is a choice not just because it is “not good” to be without a partner?  Certainly.

An educated woman myself, there is not doubt that I could not align with the thoughts of the pastor.  Despite the fact that the pastor used Biblical references, he did not properly use them to support his points and there was no mention of unconditional love, patience, or kindness,  These are clearly the Christian virtues one should remember when bringing two people together not just for biological connection and reproduction, as well as “not being lonely.”   Regardless, it was noted from most in the audience that it was an educational experience.  

I, for one, found the ceremony to be a pure African wedding experience that I was able to laugh about just days later on New Year’s eve with a few South Africans, who said we really “got a serious wedding!”   It was hot but we survived a few more hours in an open-air tent after photographs at the Grand Palms Hotel and a celebratory cocktail.

D and myself at The Grand Palms in Gabarone, Botswana.
D and myself at The Grand Palms in Gabarone, Botswana.

The vibe was high with enthusiasm and the Irish even sang a few songs like Patty Works on the Railway in Gaelic and English with a guitarist and solo by my D.  Impressive.  There were a few more hours of the bridal choir and their chants in a be-decked white tent housing 400 Setswana, 15-20 Irish, non-alcoholic champagne which no one drank (ew!) and a few speeches by the groom’s father, G, followed by a few others, who made some lovely comments about how P was already part of the Irish family and that they felt welcomed in Botswana despite their European roots.  Unfortunately the Tswana chaos dissolved into eruptions of chatter through the best man’s quite humorous speech and bride’s father and his words…people walked back and worth, laughing, chortling and picking up their plates for food even though it wasn’t time to eat.  In Botswana culture, though, it isn’t disrespectful it is simply part of the wedding.  Be boisterous, be joyful, be loud, be late!  Be how you want to be.  It is all one big party!  The important thing is that B smiled the whole way through.  He had married the woman he loved and he had survived all the tests of the in-laws from culture, religion, and tradition.  Now that’s a brave one.

It was still blazing hot.  I just wanted some gelato – indeed I’m a simple creature. (Happier days below)

After hours in the sunshine, gelato is the perfect anecdote to a hot day (Athens).
After hours in the sunshine, gelato is the perfect anecdote to a hot day (Athens).

For the rest of us, we waited until 5:00 pm when the second and final wedding reception party began….and in this one the Westerners were now singing and dancing not just for a few minutes, but several hours.  I got roped into the whooping and jumping in Irish dancing which is difficult when you’re an American!  The party went on till it was just D, myself and the best man gazing at the evening sky with empty tables, soiree sparkling-wine flutes next to us and fireflies blinking nearby.  There was also real champagne!  I definitely had a glass.  It never tasted so good.

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If you want to look at the conservation of some of the animals and other wildlife we discovered in Botswana you can discover more by looking at this website on care of the animals in Gaborone: http://www.mokolodi.com/

A Short Setswana Song

Another scorching hot day in Africa.  The past week has been spent mostly dealing with new research findings in international law as well as getting over a vicious flu bug that seems to have nabbed quite a few takers in the immediate vicinity. Therefore, I have had quite a lot of time to go over the Christmas holidays in my mind as I’ve been stuck indoors much more often than I’d care to admit.  Hence there will be some time spent on Botswana and my reflections of the wedding I attended, which should prove to be possible entertainment and insightful if I may. Gaborone, the dusty desert of a capital, proved to be beautiful and hot, hot, hot.  After the first few days of guitar hunting in shops that were closed for Christmas, safari driving in the local wildlife reserve and downing Portuguese chicken, steak (lots of meat offers in Gabs) there was a silent undertaking going on that was soon infiltrating all aspects of the holiday. For Christmas, a number of Northern Europeans had sneakily disturbed the quiet of the city. They were known as the  Irish. (Plus one spy. ME.)

By quiet I mean all the Setswana seem to have gone elsewhere for Christmas. Dead quiet. In preparation for the wedding just days after Christmas, every person over the age of fifty was gone for several hours at a time.

The Tswana family unit is built on a patriarchy that establishes not just the parents as “parents” but the uncle, too.  For example, the groom and his entire family was from Ireland. While the groom was represented by his biological parents in the days leading to the wedding, the bride was represented by her uncle, and secondarily, the biological parents. The maternal uncle is accorded a special place and in the groom’s wedding (Call him B) this was no different. B’ s parents faithfully attended wedding planning meetings four days beforehand.  As B and his family were not familiar with the Tswana family unit traditional meetings, they were often frustrated to discover the meetings did not always start on time and the bride’s uncle, Mr W as we’ll suggest he should be named, was playing the title of negotiator. As Mr W was promising to represent as much as possible the wishes of B and the ‘foreign’ side of this wedding it was easy to see the conflict of interest from the start.

Patlo is known as the seeking ceremony, wherein the groom intends to seek the hand in marriage of the daughter of the Botswana family.  Patlo can apparently continue for weeks before the bride’s family consents to a wedding. In B’ s case, this had been negotiated months before when he invited the family to Gabs from Ireland. Naturally this would not have  been planned without the prior consent of the family. For the sake of tradition, however, Patlo would continue for 3-4 days rather than the usual several weeks. When B’ s parents day in and day out would wake at 5am (or earlier) as the Setswana people usually begin their days at dawn, no matter whether ceremonial, horticultural or business, you can imagine how tired they were.  The Irish are hard working as we know, but this was Christmastime. It did not matter – there was no rest for the weary.

As a clumsy, innocent bystander, I felt shamelessly useless. What could I do? Not much.  This is why you found me either at the mall with a coffee or by the pool… or… well let’s face it, creative candy construction was the epitome of my artistic know how that week. Yes, I made a gingerbread house. So what. (Photos later) Secretly all grown up children want one of those. Back to the seeking ceremony.  In Setswana culture, the boy’s family leads a delegation to the girl’s family.  After the successful first meeting and lots of structured discussions, the bride’s family makes the decision to accept the offer of marriage. Soon after there is another group of females from the groom’s side, in this case B’ s aunt, M, and his mother. They went to the bride’s male side to “wash the words of the men” and finally, to accept the bride and her family’s consent. This to me, shows the extent of how the patriarchal system is still an integral part of Botswanian life. While of course this was mainly tradition, (after all, how can one decide last minute ceremony decisions for a wedding when you have to pay in advance?) It was fascinating how often the men made decisions. Even when the women were involved in decision-making, they were  to “wash the words”. Whose words? The men’s.  After all, the man is the one with the voice.

As mentioned, I felt useless. But I enjoyed seeing what kind of wedding this would turn out to be.  I wasn’t the only bystander though, but approximately four of us in our twenties and thirties who were either not old enough to take part of wedding discussions but we’re simply *gasp* unmarried. Plus one more cousin who arrived the night before the wedding. Oh so fashionable! As stated about being single and unattached… When it comes to a wedding, a bride and groom need counsel.  On the one hand, this makes logical sense. A woman and man who have been married could provide sage advice based on their experiences. Have I mentioned that M was unmarried and so was P, the other uncle of B? Ah yes.  Poor B must live with marriage advice from experienced and wiser family members (both over 60) who are both unmarried. I chuckle because both are lovely people and B is lucky to have them; I just cannot imagine what the Setswana were thinking. So..the four of us stayed out of the elder meetings for several days and ran random errands when we were asked. But truly our main task was to cheer up B, who came back to the lodge every night exhausted because his new in laws were trying to change something else in the next Patlo meeting.

Needless to say we had an important job. Poor B looked like one of those cute animals I kept seeing try to cross the road who obviously have good intentions but have a sad look in their eyes.  Poor guy just wanted to get married. Elopement was looking pretty good.

To be c o n t i n u e d . . .

One of the many creatures used for labour in Africa. This photo was snapped in Marrakech but you find hundreds of these in Southern Africa, like Botswana.
One of the many creatures used for labour in Africa. This photo was snapped in Marrakech but you find hundreds of these in Southern Africa, like Botswana.