Kwanzaa is organized around five fundamental activities common to other African first-fruit celebrations:
(1) the ingathering of family, friends, and community;
(2) reverence for the creator and creation (including thanksgiving and recommitment to respect the environment and heal the world);
(3) commemoration of the past (honoring ancestors, learning lessons and emulating achievements of African history);
(4) recommitment to the highest cultural ideals of the African community (for example, truth, justice, respect for people and nature, care for the vulnerable, and respect for elders); and
(5) celebration of the “Good of Life” (for example, life, struggle, achievement, family, community, and culture).
Kwanzaa is celebrated through rituals, dialogue, narratives, poetry, dancing, singing, drumming and other music, and feasting. A central practice is the lighting of the mishumaa (seven candles) of Kwanzaa. A candle is lit each day for each of the Nguzo Saba (Seven Principles).
These principles are:
- Umoja (unity);
- Kujichagulia (self-determination);
- Ujima (collective work and responsibility);
- Ujamaa (cooperative economics);
- Nia (purpose);
- kuumba (creativity);
- Imani (faith).
Kwanzaa ends with a day of assessment on which celebrants raise and answer questions of cultural and moral grounding and consider their worthiness in family, community, and culture.
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