Traditional Mozambique Wisdom
Provérbios moçambicanos
Folk & Oral Tradition
Who is Traditional Mozambique Wisdom?
Traditional Mozambique Wisdom gathers the proverbs and sayings that have been passed down orally among the many peoples of Mozambique for generations, including the Tsonga (Changana), Sena, Ndau, Makhuwa, Manyika, and Ngoni among others. These lines have no single named author; they are the shared inheritance of farmers, fishermen, elders, and storytellers along the Zambezi valley and the Indian Ocean coast, who compressed hard-won experience into short, memorable images. Mozambican proverbs draw heavily on the natural world around them, elephants, rivers, baobabs, drums, and the rhythms of planting and harvest, to teach patience, caution in speech, respect for elders, and the shared responsibility of community life. Much of this folk wisdom survives primarily in oral form and in Portuguese-language and Bantu-language retellings collected over the past century, so small variations exist between regions and tellers rather than one fixed printed source. This platform records the widely recognized forms and, in keeping with its accuracy rule, presents them as traditional rather than attributing them to any one person.
Sources: Traditional Mozambican oral proverb tradition, public-domain folk wisdom · Pan-African proverb collections and archives, public-domain compilations