Representatives present were from Ghana, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Swaziland and Namibia.
Women from various ethnic backgrounds, including those of Zulu, Venda, Khoisan, Afrikaans, Sotho, Northern Sotho, Ndebele, Tsonga, Venda and Xhosa descent, showcased the traditional cuisine of their respective ethnic groups.
According to Kgaladi Thema, managing director of IndiZA Foods, the event was an effort to improve indigenous knowledge (IK), which provided the basis for problem-solving strategies for local communities, especially the poor.
IK was an underutilised resource in Africa’s development, Thema said. She added that learning from local communities created an understanding of local conditions, and provided an important context for activities designed to help them.
The project objectives included:
- Sharing knowledge and attracting rural communities to be intimately involved in IK development and African foods;
- Celebrating the diversity of Africa’s people through their traditional cuisines;
- Celebrating the unity of Africans by bringing Africans together;
- Celebrating African cuisine, its heritage, and its knowledge.