Via Nostalgia
  • Chat
  • Trips
  • Explore
  • Saved
  • Themes
  • Routes
  • Essays
  • Books
  • Works
  • Heritage
  • Lists
  • Subscribe
Appearance
Sign In
Via Nostalgia
Ingoma Ya Mapiko 1
Ingoma Ya Mapiko 2
Ingoma Ya Mapiko 3
Ingoma Ya Mapiko 4
Ingoma Ya Mapiko 5
© UNESCO · Wikimedia Commons
UNESCO ICHUrgent Safeguarding ListInscribed 2023

Ingoma Ya Mapiko

⚠️ This element is on the Urgent Safeguarding List — immediate measures are needed to ensure its survival.

Practised In

Overview

The mapiko dance is a celebratory dance practiced by the Makonde people of Mozambique. A part of the traditional rite of passage from puberty to adulthood, the dance is performed in an enclosure, usually under mango trees, with dancers, musicians and the public coming together to celebrate the initiation rite. The dance may also be performed for the funeral of a group member or for entertainment. It is a theatrical performance involving several dancers who perform alone or as a group, wearing masks that represent animals or people. They are accompanied by drums and a choir of women and men standing opposite each other. In between the dances, the choir also dances and sings provocative songs, challenging and provoking the masked men and people from neighbouring villages. The mapiko dance is transmitted during initiation rites. It symbolizes human spirit, harmony with the cosmos, and the fight between good and evil, and is viewed as a means of overcoming fear. It also seeks to restore a balance between the masculine and the feminine. For the practising communities, mapiko is a means of transmitting ancestral values, beliefs and customs and of helping youth familiarize themselves with the transformations of their bodies as they reach maturity.

Domains

Details

Country
Mozambique
Inscribed
2023
Register
Urgent Safeguarding List
Reference
1996
View on UNESCO ICH website
← All UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage