Classroom lesson · Bwebwenato · 🇲🇭 Marshall Islands

Bwebwenato

The Marshallese art of storytelling that keeps history alive

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Bwebwenato is the Marshallese word for storytelling. For hundreds of years, stories have been the way Marshallese people passed on knowledge, history, and values from grandparents to grandchildren. These stories include tales of brave navigators, clever animals, how islands were formed, and why the stars move across the sky.

Tell me more

Before writing was widely used, everything important had to be remembered and spoken aloud. Bwebwenato kept track of family histories, navigation routes, fishing spots, weather signs, and lessons about how to live well together on a small island. A skilled storyteller was one of the most respected people in a community.

Marshallese stories often feature the ocean, stars, and animals of the atoll. Turtles, frigatebirds, coconut crabs, and fish all appear as characters, sometimes with human-like wisdom. The stories are usually told in the evening, when families gather together after the work of the day is done.

Storytelling is still very much alive in the Marshall Islands today. Grandparents tell grandchildren the same stories they heard when they were young. Schools teach traditional tales alongside reading and writing. There are also community events where storytellers perform for larger audiences, weaving in songs and gestures to bring the stories to life.

One famous type of bwebwenato explains the origin of stick charts and the first great navigators. These stories honour the clever ancestors who figured out how to read the ocean and sail safely between the atolls, a skill that made the whole island nation possible.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think telling stories out loud is a good way to pass on important information?
  2. 02What is a story that someone older than you has told you that you will always remember?
  3. 03If you were going to create a Marshallese-style story, which animal would you choose as your main character and why?
  4. 04What might be lost if people stopped telling traditional stories?
Try this

Classroom activity

Write a short bwebwenato! Choose one animal from the Marshall Islands lessons (turtle, frigatebird, coconut crab or manta ray). Write a 3-5 sentence story explaining something about that animal - why it has the colours it has, how it learned a special skill, or why it lives where it does. Read your story aloud to the class.