Traditional Burkina Faso Wisdom
Folk & Oral Tradition
Who is Traditional Burkina Faso Wisdom?
Traditional Burkina Faso Wisdom gathers the proverbs and sayings passed down orally among the many peoples of Burkina Faso, most prominently the Mossi (who speak Moore), alongside Fulani (Peul), Mamprussi, Bissa, Gourmantché, Dyula, and other communities that make up the nation. These proverbs carry no single named author; they were shaped over generations by farmers, herders, market traders, elders, and griots who condensed hard-won experience into short, memorable lines. Burkinabè proverbs often draw on rural life — marketplaces, livestock, millet and shea harvests, extended family, and respect for elders — reflecting a society historically organized around agriculture, trade caravans, and the Mossi kingdoms centered on Ouagadougou. Many sayings circulate across more than one language or ethnic group and are shared with neighboring Sahelian countries such as Mali, Niger, and Togo, since peoples like the Fulani and Tuareg span national borders; where a proverb is documented across this wider region, it is presented here as shared regional heritage rather than claimed as exclusively Burkinabè. This platform records widely attested forms of these sayings and, in keeping with its accuracy standard, credits them to tradition rather than to any invented individual author.
Sources: Proverbicals, "Burkinabe Proverbs" collection · African Proverbs, Sayings and Stories (afriprov.tangaza.ac.ke), Tangaza University weekly proverb archive · African Heritage (afrolegends.com), Mossi proverb and Burkina Faso proverb collections · Old Folktales, "List of 255 African Proverbs That Speak Universal Truths"