Classroom lesson · Letlhafula Harvest Festival · 🇧🇼 Botswana

Letlhafula Harvest Festival

A joyful celebration of crops, community and gratitude

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Letlhafula is a traditional harvest festival celebrated in Botswana when the crops are gathered at the end of the growing season. Communities come together to give thanks for the food they have grown, to share the harvest with neighbours, and to celebrate with music, dancing, food and storytelling.

Tell me more

In Botswana, farming has always been closely connected to the rhythms of nature - the rains, the dry seasons, and the changing of the year. When the sorghum, maize and other crops are finally ready to harvest, it is a moment of relief and celebration. Letlhafula brings people together to mark that moment with gratitude and joy.

At Letlhafula celebrations, families bring their finest foods to share. Bogobe porridge, seswaa, fresh vegetables, roasted corn and sweet sorghum beer (for adults) are all enjoyed together. There is traditional music, including dikgafela - special harvest songs sung to accompany the reaping. Young and old dance together on the village ground.

The festival also involves giving. Part of the harvest is traditionally set aside for those in the community who were unable to grow their own food - elderly people, those who were sick, or families who had a bad season. This sharing is considered a duty and an honour, not just an act of charity.

Letlhafula connects people to the land and to each other. Even as Botswana has become more urban, many families still celebrate the harvest in some form, cooking traditional dishes and gathering with extended family. Schools sometimes hold their own harvest festivals where children bring home-grown produce to share.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Letlhafula involves sharing part of the harvest with those who need it. Why do you think communities decided this was an important tradition?
  2. 02Many cultures around the world have harvest festivals - Thanksgiving, Sukkot, Pongal. What do they all have in common?
  3. 03If your class held a harvest festival, what would you contribute and what would you celebrate?
Try this

Classroom activity

Research harvest festivals from three different countries (include Letlhafula from Botswana). Create a comparison chart showing: the name of the festival, when it happens, what food is shared, and one special tradition. Present your findings to the class.