Boubou (clothing)

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Niger President Mamadou Tandja wearing a grand boubou

The boubou or grand boubou is a flowing wide-sleeved robe worn across West Africa, and to a lesser extent in North Africa, related to the dashiki suit.[1]

The garments and its variations are known by various names in different ethnic groups and languages. It is called agbádá in

French-speaking
West African countries and the English term gown.

The

Senegalese boubou, also called grand boubou in French described below, is also known as the Senegalese kaftan
. The female version worn in some communities is also known as a m'boubou or kaftan.

History

Its origin lies with the clothing style of the

long-distance traders and Islamic preachers in and around Muslim regions of West Africa in the 1400s and even more rapidly in less Islamized areas after the Fulani Jihads of the 19th century and subsequent French and British colonization.

Use

Boubou is usually decorated with intricate embroidery, and is worn on special religious or ceremonial occasions, such as the two Islamic

Eid festivals, weddings, funerals or for attending the Mosque for Friday prayer
. It has become the formal attire of many countries in West Africa. Older robes have become family heirlooms passed on from father to son and are worn as status symbols.

There are female versions of the boubou style in

and many other West African countries. M

Clothing

Boubou as a full formal attire consists of three pieces of clothing: a pair of tie-up trousers that narrow towards the ankles (known as a ṣòkòtò pronounced "shokoto" in Yoruba), a long-sleeved shirt and a wide, open-stitched sleeveless gown worn over these. The three pieces are generally of the same colour. It is made from cotton and richly embroidered in traditional patterns. Yoruba Agbada comes in different styles including Asooke to Lace and silk and the design is typically distinct from the Babaringa and Grand Boubou.

Method of wearing

There is a set etiquette to wearing the grand boubou, primarily in place to keep the over-gown above the ankles at any one time, in keeping with Islamic traditions of avoiding impurity (see Najis). This can include folding the open sleeves of the boubou over one's shoulders, normally done while walking or before sitting down, to ensure the over-gown does not rub against the ground, or by folding/wrapping each side over the other with the hand, narrowing the gown's space toward the ankles (as done by the Tuareg people). Thus, it is rare to see the grand boubou's square-shaped gown completely unwrapped.

Popularity

The use of the boubou was historically limited to various Islamised Sahelian and Saharan peoples of West Africa, but through increased trade and the spread of Islam throughout the region, it gained use among peoples in the savanna and forested regions of West Africa. Through this, the boubou was historically worn by chiefs of the Songhai of Niger and Mali, Hausa and Yoruba of Nigeria, Dagomba of Ghana, the Mandinka of the Gambia, the Susu of Guinea and the Temnes of Sierra Leone.

Today, Boubou has gained popularity as a fashionable form of attire among wide classes of people in West Africa, the African diaspora, and very recently, even among Bantu people in East, Southern and Central Africa.

Gender differences

Although usually a form of men's clothing, women's traditional clothing in much of Sahelian West Africa is of similar construction, though usually worn differently. In some places these are called the m'boubou. In other regions of West Africa, the female formal clothing has been a boubou variant, called a kaftan, and in other places it is the wrapper and headscarf.

See also

  • Aso Oke hat

References

  1. ^ Africa, Teller (2019-10-11). "AFRICAN FASHION FRIDAY: Agbada". TellerAfrica.com. Retrieved 2020-05-20.