
Why Add African-Themed Activities?
Cultural Value
Creative Learning
10 African-Themed Holiday Activities
Ready to get started? We have compiled a list of fun African culture holiday activities for families that range from artsy crafts to energetic games. The best part? You likely have most of the materials in your kitchen or recycling bin right now.
Crafts: Unleashing Creativity
- What you need: Brown craft paper (or the inside of grocery bags), potatoes, acrylic paint, and a knife (for parents).
- How to do it: Cut a potato in half, then carve triangles, circles, and diamonds into the flat side of the potato. Allow the children to stamp repeating designs on the paper by dipping the potato "stamps" into vibrant paints, such as yellow, red, indigo, and green.
- The lesson: Talk about how African textile patterns frequently convey proverbs or tell stories.
- What you need: An empty 12-hole egg carton, two small bowls (for the "banks" at the ends), and 48 small stones, dried beans, or beads.
- How to do it: Cut the lid off the egg carton. Paint the carton in earthy tones or bright Ndebele-inspired colors. Place a bowl at each end of the carton.
- The Lesson: Once the paint dries, teach them the strategy of the game. It’s a fantastic way to boost math skills during the break.
- What you need: Cardboard tubes (toilet paper rolls work perfectly), paint (red, black, green), tissue paper, and a base (a long strip of cardboard).
- How to do it: Paint three tubes red, three green, and one black. Glue them to the base with the black candle in the justify, red on the left, and green on the right. Use yellow or orange tissue paper to "light" the candles each day.
- The Lesson: Discuss the meaning of the seven candles, such as Unity (Umoja) and Creativity (Kuumba).
- What you need: An empty plastic milk jug (handle kept on), glue, string/yarn, and dried beans or popcorn kernels.
- How to do it: Put a handful of beans inside the clean milk jug and screw the cap on tight. Tie strings around the handle and neck, draping them down the sides. You can glue beads onto the strings or just paint the jug itself.
- The Lesson: Shake it to the beat! This is perfect for an impromptu family dance party.
- What you need: Rigatoni or penne pasta, paint, and string.
- How to do it: Paint the dry pasta in vivid colours; red, blue, orange, and white are traditional Maasai favourites. Once dry, thread them onto the string to create bold, collar-style necklaces.
- The Lesson: Show them photos of real Maasai beadwork and talk about how clothes and jewelry can send messages about who we are.
Games: Moving and Storytelling
- The Activity: Gather the family in a circle with blankets and pillows. Turn off the TV. Designate one person as the "Griot." Their job is to tell a story about the family’s history, maybe a funny story about a grandparent or the day the child was born.
- The Twist: Encourage the kids to make up a legend about a made-up African kingdom where they are the heroes.
- The Activity: It’s traditionally a leader-follower game where two people jump at the same time, landing with one foot forward. The goal involves predicting or matching the foot placement of your opponent.
- Why it works: It requires zero equipment, just a little bit of space and a lot of energy. It’s perfect for burning off those holiday cookies.
- The Activity: Write down names of African animals (lion, elephant, meerkat, giraffe, hippo) on slips of paper.
- How to play: Family members take turns acting out the animal without making sounds while the others guess.
- Level Up: Once the animal is guessed, the actor has to share one fact about that animal or where it lives on the continent.
- The Activity: Involve the kids in making a simple African dish. It could be helping wash the rice for Jollof, mashing yams for Fufu (or using potato flakes), or sprinkling cinnamon on South African Melktert.
- The Lesson: Food is culture. As you cook, talk about the spices and smells. It engages their senses and makes the dinner table a place of learning.
- The Activity: If the weather permits and you have a driveway, use sidewalk chalk. If you are stuck indoors, use a large cardboard box.
- How to do it: Tape off sections using painter's tape to create straight lines and geometric shapes. Let the kids colour in the shapes with bold, solid colours. Peel the tape off to reveal crisp, Ndebele-style lines.
Tips for Parents
Set Up for Success
- The "Mess Zone": If you are doing the painted wrapping paper or the pasta necklaces, lay down a plastic tablecloth or an old shower curtain first. It makes cleanup a two-minute job.
- Pre-Cut Materials: If you have younger toddlers, do the cutting (for the masks or cardboard rolls) the night before. Their attention spans are short; you want to get right to the decorating.
Variations for Different Ages
- Toddlers: Focus on sensory experiences. The Shekere shaker is perfect for them. Let them paint with their fingers rather than brushes.
- School-Age: Focus on the "Why." They will enjoy the strategy of Mancala or the storytelling aspect of the Griot circle.
- Teens: Challenge them to research. Ask them to look up what the colours of the Kente cloth represent and design a pattern that matches their own personality.
Conclusion

