By early light in a courtyard compound, the day arranges itself around familiar rhythms. A kettle hisses over coals, and steam lifts the scent of mint tea into the air while women move between basins and folding mats with practiced ease. Clothes hang in bright arcs on a line, the colours of indigo and wax prints softened by dust; a child’s laughter threads through the clack of beads being strung. Roles here are learned in small gestures—who brings the tea, who sweeps the entrance, who greets the visitor—and those gestures are as much about respect and relationship as about practical tasks. Markets are another kind of stage for gendered work, where voices and scales set the pace. Women often run stalls that bloom with vegetables, fabrics, and household goods, bartering and remembering the faces of regular customers.
Men are visible in other trades—repairing motors, driving shared taxis, tailoring boubous—but there’s overlap too: neighbors hurry to help unload a crate, apprentices of any gender watch a skilled hand and copy it. The textures of the place—the scratch of woven baskets, the bark of a trader calling out prices, the sun warming an iron on a sidewalk—make clear how labour and livelihood are woven into daily life. Authority and decision-making can take quieter forms than the outward bustle suggests. Grandmothers and older sisters often carry a kind of moral weight in the compound, advising on disputes, arranging introductions, or directing the preparation for a celebration; their words, told as stories or proverbs, carry far. Teatime can become a forum where futures are negotiated gently, where questions about schooling or migration are weighed between sips and laughter. In some families the elder women’s counsel shapes choices as decisively as any public pronouncement, and bargaining and compromise are performed with the same care as any household ritual.
At the edges of towns and in the classrooms of the city, patterns are being rearranged in ways that make everyday life less predictable. Young people study late into the night, apprentices learn trades in workshops, and some women appear in professions that would have been uncommon a generation ago. At weddings and naming ceremonies, traditional roles are still joyfully performed—songs are sung, drums are beaten, fabrics dazzled—but there are also moments when someone fresh from school or a relative who returned from work away subtly upends expectations. The result is a living fabric that keeps its ancestral threads while accepting new stitches, warm to touch and always responsive to the next day’s weather.