In Ghana, in West Africa, there is a cloth that does not just cover the body. It speaks. Each pattern has a name. Each colour carries a meaning. Each cloth tells a story — about wisdom, about leaders, about love, about loss, about the proverbs that have been passed down for generations. The cloth is called kente. It is woven by skilled craftsmen on narrow wooden looms, in strips about as wide as a hand. The strips are then sewn together to make wide robes, scarves, and ceremonial cloth. The most famous kente is woven by the Asante people, in a town called Bonwire, where the tradition stretches back at least 400 years. Other Akan groups, especially the Ewe, have their own kente traditions. Today, kente is worn at weddings, funerals, festivals, and government ceremonies. It is also worn by people of African descent around the world, as a sign of pride in their roots. And it is sold — sometimes faithfully, sometimes carelessly — by people far from Ghana. This lesson asks how a piece of cloth can carry so much meaning, and what happens to that meaning when the cloth travels far from where it was made.
This is the heart of the kente tradition. The cloth is a kind of writing, but it is not letters. Each named pattern carries a proverb or a piece of history. For example, the pattern called 'Sika Futuro' means 'gold dust' and stands for wealth and royalty. The pattern called 'Obi Nkye Obi Kwan Mu Si' means 'one cannot block another's path forever' — a proverb about freedom. The pattern called 'Kɔrɔnti' is woven to honour those who fight for what is right. A skilled wearer chooses cloth the way a writer chooses words. People who can read kente — and many people in Ghana can — see a person's outfit and know something about the wearer's status, mood, and intentions. The cloth is not silent decoration. It is loud, careful speech. Students should see that 'meaning in cloth' is not vague or symbolic. It is precise. The names are real. The proverbs are specific. The cloth carries actual content.
A great deal. The weaver must know hundreds of patterns by heart. They must be able to count the threads precisely as they weave — the patterns are made by lifting specific groups of threads at specific moments, with no diagram in front of them. They must keep the tension of every thread even, or the cloth will pucker. They must plan the strips so that when they are sewn together, the patterns align. And they must know which patterns are appropriate for which occasions and customers. Becoming a master kente weaver takes many years of apprenticeship, usually starting in childhood. The narrow loom is itself part of the tradition. Other West African weaving traditions use wider looms, but kente's narrow strips are what give it its distinctive look. Students should see that the cloth is not just a craft. It is a body of knowledge — patterns, proverbs, customs, mathematics — held in the hands and mind of the weaver. When a master weaver dies, a small library dies with them, unless they have taught well.
Because cloth, in many cultures, is a way of marking who someone is. In medieval Europe, certain colours of cloth were reserved for royalty by law — purple in particular. In Imperial China, only the emperor could wear yellow dragons. In Asante society, kente was part of a larger system of visual rank, including jewellery, hairstyles, and the design of stools. By controlling who could wear what, the kingdom controlled how status was displayed. This is not unique to Africa. It is a common feature of complex societies. The Asantehene today still has special kente cloth, and his court continues to honour the old patterns. But ordinary Ghanaians also wear kente at important life events — weddings, funerals, naming ceremonies, graduations. The cloth is now both royal and democratic, depending on which pattern and who is wearing it. Students should see that 'who can wear what' is a real social question, with real history. Kente is a particularly clear example, but the principle applies to many kinds of clothing across the world.
Both, depending on how it is done. On one hand, the global spread of kente has brought attention, respect, and pride to a Ghanaian tradition. Many Ghanaian weavers now have international customers. The cloth has become a worldwide symbol of African heritage, which the original makers can take pride in. On the other hand, much of what is sold internationally as 'kente' is mass-produced 'kente print' — printed fabric made in factories, often outside Ghana, that imitates the patterns without using the loom or the meaning. Ghanaian hand-weavers struggle to compete on price. Some patterns reserved for royalty are worn casually by people who do not know the rules. Some uses border on caricature. The honest answer is that the cloth's spread has been mixed: a real gain in visibility and pride, but a real loss in tradition and income for the original makers. Students should see that 'global' is not the same as 'good'. Whether kente has been treated well by the world depends on who is wearing it, what they know, and what they have given back to its origins.
Kente cloth is a hand-woven textile from Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, made by Akan peoples — especially the Asante and Ewe. It is woven on narrow wooden looms in strips about 10 cm wide, which are then sewn together edge to edge to make robes, wraps, and ceremonial cloths. Each pattern has a name. Each colour carries meaning. A skilled wearer can choose kente to express status, mood, or message. The most famous tradition is from the town of Bonwire in the Ashanti region, where weaving has continued for at least 400 years. Originally reserved for royalty and the wealthy, kente is now worn at weddings, funerals, graduations, and political events across Ghana and the African diaspora. In the 1950s and 1960s, kente became a worldwide symbol of African pride. Today, hand-woven kente still comes from Ghanaian master weavers, but mass-produced 'kente print' factory fabric — often made outside Ghana — has spread far beyond, raising questions about authenticity, livelihood, and respect.
| Question | What many people assume | What is actually true |
|---|---|---|
| Is kente just a colourful African fabric? | Yes | No — it is a specific tradition from specific peoples, with named patterns and precise meanings |
| Where does kente come from? | Africa, generally | Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, especially Akan peoples like the Asante and Ewe |
| How is it made? | On a wide loom or by machine | By hand, on a narrow wooden loom, in 10 cm strips that are then sewn together |
| Do the patterns mean anything? | They are decorative | Each pattern has a name and a meaning, often connected to a proverb or piece of history |
| Is all 'kente' sold worldwide authentic? | Yes | Most is mass-produced 'kente print' from factories, often made outside Ghana, with no benefit to the original makers |
Kente is just a colourful African fabric.
It is a specific tradition from specific peoples in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. Each pattern has a name. Each colour carries meaning. It is closer to a written language than to a generic fabric.
Lumping all African cultures together is one of the most common mistakes. Kente is one specific tradition among hundreds across Africa.
Anyone in Ghana has always been allowed to wear any kente.
Originally, certain patterns were reserved for royalty. Some still are. The cloth was — and to some extent remains — part of a system of visual rank in Akan societies.
This shows how cloth can be regulated by law and custom, just as it has been in many other complex societies (medieval Europe, imperial China, and elsewhere).
Mass-produced kente-print fabric is the same as hand-woven kente.
Hand-woven kente is made on a narrow loom by a master weaver, with each pattern carrying a name and meaning. Mass-produced kente print is factory cloth that imitates the look without the loom, the patterns' specific meanings, or the connection to the makers. The economic and cultural effects are very different.
This matters because real Ghanaian weavers lose income, recognition, and control over their tradition when imitations dominate the market.
Kente is something only old people in Ghana wear.
Kente is alive and worn today by people of all ages — at weddings, funerals, festivals, graduations, and political events. It is also worn worldwide, especially in the African diaspora. The tradition is changing, not dying.
'Old people only' is what we say when we have not looked. Kente is an active, evolving tradition with weavers, designers, and customers in their twenties and thirties as well as their seventies.
Kente is a living tradition belonging to specific Ghanaian and Ivorian communities. Treat it that way. Use the proper terms — Akan, Asante (or Ashanti), Ewe, Bonwire — and pronounce them as best you can. Do not call kente 'African fabric' as if Africa were one place; it is a specific Akan tradition. Do not present kente weaving as 'simple' or 'primitive'; it is a complex craft that takes many years to master. Be honest about cultural appropriation but do not shame students who have worn or used kente without knowing — focus on what 'respectful use' looks like going forward. Be aware of the difference between hand-woven kente (made by Ghanaian master weavers) and mass-produced kente-print (made in factories often outside Ghana). The economic stakes for Ghanaian weavers are real. When discussing the spread of kente in the African diaspora, treat that diaspora as part of the kente story today, not as inauthentic. African Americans wearing kente at graduations are not appropriating; they are claiming a heritage. Outsiders wearing kente without acknowledgement are a different case. Do not present pre-colonial Ghana as 'simple'; the Asante kingdom was one of the most powerful and well-organised states in West Africa for centuries. If you have students of Ghanaian or African descent, give them space without putting them on the spot to speak for the whole tradition.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about kente cloth.
Where does kente cloth come from, and which peoples make it?
How is kente cloth made?
What kinds of meaning can kente patterns and colours carry?
Why was kente originally regulated by who could wear it?
What is the difference between hand-woven kente and 'kente print' fabric?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
Is it different when an African American wears kente at a graduation, compared to when a non-African person wears it as fashion?
If a hand-woven kente cloth costs $300 and a printed kente fabric costs $20, which should you buy?
What objects from your own culture or family carry meaning that outsiders might not see?
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