The Love of Basotho Blankets
written by Tom Kritzinger
Somewhere in the heart of the Senqu river basin, smack in the centre of South Africa lays the best-kept secret gem of Africa – Lesotho the Mountain Kingdom.
It is here in the Maluti Mountains where you find the colourful Basotho people, the blanket wearers of Africa.
The Basotho people have a love for this tradition of wearing their blankets with pride and dignity unequalled anywhere in the world. They have a pre-occupation with blankets throughout their entire life cycle. The baby is received in a blanket. During the journey into adulthood, blankets are used in the initiation process where the facts of life are taught. Blanket gifts are proof that the initiates have successfully completed the mountain school and now have the blanket to accompany them in their adult life journey.
In the next phase of the lifecycle when marriage is on the cards, blankets are pivotal by providing gifts to the bride and groom as they begin their union and to their newly found family. During the traditional wedding ceremony, the bride is wrapped in blankets and then she is handed over to the groom who in turn unwraps the bride from her blanket wrapping.
When the bride falls pregnant, she will keep her tummy wrapped in a blanket. The Basotho people say ‘Kobo ke Bophelo” the blanket is life thus a blanket is symbolic of the new life that is formed within her. In the final chapter of life, when a Mosotho passes on a blanket will wrap around a coffin which is a symbol of warmth in the afterlife.
Origins of the Basotho Blanket Tradition
