Tuesday, 3 April 2018

When I became a Xhosa bride…


To describe my personal experience in five words or less, I would describe my experience nothing short of being thrown into the deep end and being expected to swim or drown. So basically when you have become a Xhosa wife, you actually are regarded as a wife from the day the Labola negotiations start, there is no specific order as some families perform this umakoti custom I am about to describe either before you are legally the wife or after.

Now this may differ from family to family, but in essence you would come with the clothes you are dressed in, you are told to take all of your clothes off and you are then dressed in brand new makoti attire which your in-laws provide you with. This whole process marks the stage where you are no longer considered a girl, but a wife; thus the taking off of the old clothes which you will no longer be allowed to wear again, (as these will be given to a female  in your in-laws, this includes everything even shoes.) You are not allowed to dress yourself, as you considered a figurative baby and are instead dressed by one of your sister in-laws; as she explains the sequence you are to follow when wearing each item of clothing.  Once she has finished dressing you up, she would then give you instruction on what you should do next and everything that would follow. To summarize, you would go into the room full with family members, who you are not allowed to look at as you must look down the whole time until you are led to where you will sit down on a straw mat. The naming and ukuyalwa begins, this is when you are given all the rules you are to follow etc.  There are many other things involved, I have just written these to give a general idea about the process.
I have included some pictures of when I was dressed and named.

I do not  have a picture of myself while sitting on the straw mat, so I have included one from the internet.
…10 Things every Makoti wanna be should know…

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