Khangas From Kenya


Yellow Khanga
I bought this khanga in Naivasha. It's the first and only khanga I bought while I was in Kenya. I used it as a curtain, over my skirts, and sometimes to carry things in. I really wish I had bought more khangas while I was in Kenya.

Peace Corps Khanga
This khanga is known as the "Peace Corps Khanga". The U.S. Peace Corps volunteers have adopted it as their khanga since the proverb on the bottom is "Watu Wa Amani" which means "People of Peace" in Kiswahili. There is also a dove holding an olive branch on the khanga, another symbol of peace, which the U.S. Peace Corps uses.

Vintage Khanga
This khanga is from the late 1960's or early 1970's. This was given to me by a relative. You can seen how the design and colors vary from the yellow khanga above.
A khanga is a brightly colored piece of cloth that many East African women wear. Many wear khangas over their skirts while working in the fields to keep the dust of their skirts. Khangas are also worn as head wraps.

A khanga is roughly 5 feet by 3 feet which makes it perfect for wrapping it around one's self. Generally, there is a border pattern around all four sides of the khanga with a central design in the middle. There is always a proverb - usually in Swahili - at the bottom of a khanga.

The word khanga is Kiswahili for guinea fowl. This came to be because khangas were originally several brightly colored Portuguese handkerchiefs, intended for gentlemen, sewn together to make a piece of cloth large enough to be worn around the body. These cloths were called khangas because the bright colors reminded people of guinea fowl. Later on, when the khanga began to be mass produced, some had a guinea fowl motif which reinforced the name khanga. The khanga cloth is a very lightweight loose weave fabric.

Khangas have been around for 80-plus years now. However, they are starting to fall out of favor as younger women prefer to dress in a more westernized style when they go out on the town.

Similar cloths are worn much the same way throughout Africa. One such cloth is called a kikoy.




The content on AllThingsKenyan.com was written about my experiences in Kenya in the early 1990's therefore some articles may seem out of date. They are left here for historical reasons. For more up to date content please go to the African Culture topic at BellaOnline.com.

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