Tuesday, 3 April 2018

The Xhosa bride through my life

As I have briefly mentioned in an earlier post, I have married into a Xhosa family which practices cultural traditions and this has thus put me in a position where I get to have a front row seat to what is a Xhosa bride. In my family, the traditional rules for umakoti were never really that strict as in some families; I remember my late uncle’s wife doing the chores but it was never solely her responsibility, the family all worked together, even my mom, her sisters and even my grandma at times. I never recalled a period where my aunts just sat around doing absolutely nothing and she did everything from morning to dawn. 

Then when it came to big functions in the rural areas (ezilalini), I recall a huge group of women who would pitch up wearing sheshwe print dresses, aprons, towels and a doek on their heads. These women would be in charge of all the cooking and whatever else that needed to be done for the occasion, having help for young girls when it came to distributing food. Now this was just the norm, the very older women, like in the league of my grandmother or so would normally be sitting around in some room or hut, as they had reached the Xhosa status I suppose where they had earned the right not to do work as they were no longer young makotis. There is a specific hierarchy to the whole matter I have come to find out, where the older wives have superiority over the newly married wives, regardless of age.