Homowo

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A street in Accra. Many people from nearby neighborhoods and the surrounding area flock to the city center in order to attend the celebration of the Homowo Festival, the annual main festival of the Ga, around 1900

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Bicycle race in Teshie during the Homowo Festival in 2009

Homowo is a festival celebrated by Ga people of Ghana. The festival starts in the month of May with the planting of crops before the rainy season starts. During the festival, they perform a dance called Kpanlogo. The Ga people celebrate Homowo in the remembrance of the famine that once happened in their history in precolonial Ghana.

Etymology

The word homowo (Homo - hunger, wo - hoot) can mean to hoot or jeer at hunger. It is in the Ga language. [1] The tradition of Homowo started with a period of hunger leading to famine due to failure of the seasonal rains needed by crops in the Greater Accra Region, where the Ga people predominantly dwell. When the rains returned to normal, the Ga people celebrated by creating the Homowo festival hence it name and meaning. Homowo is greatly celebrated in all the towns in the Ga state with celebrations climaxing in Gamashie, Celebration includes marching down roads and streets beating drums, chanting, face painting, singing and traditional dances. On this day there is usually a lot of traffic and roads are usually blocked off to accommodate the festival. Even though it is a Ga tradition, many other ethnic groups are welcomed and also join to celebrate.During this time there is no noise making because it is believed that the noise would hinder the maturity of the crops.

See also

References

  1. ^ The library of congress's article on Homowo. Retrieved 08 September 07

External links