Wikimanqala:Featured article/ week 48

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Mefuvha ("foggy rain") is a mancala game of the Venda who are living in north-eastern South Africa. It is closely related to moruba played in the same area by the Pedi and to games known by the Tonga in Mozambique, e.g. tchouba and njombwa. The game is played by men only, while women play ndode, a game of dexterity.

Mefuvha is mentioned in old Venda legends such as Sankhambi and the Baboons, which was written down by the British ethnograph Stayt in 1931.

In the rainy season it is strictly tabu to play the game with stones, for fear that the rain will be turned to hail; fruit pips are used instead. Moreover, it is prohibited to play the game after sunset because this would provoke cattle theft. The symbolic meanings of the game are athmospheric conflict and cattle-raiding.

Mefuvha is played on solid wooden boards made from the trunk of a tree that can measure two meters and longer. Stayt observed boards up to 28 holes per row. The game was thus regarded to be the largest mancala game until it was reported in 1971 that nsolo is played on bigger boards (up to 4x36 holes). Since 1995, tchouba is known to be even larger (up to 4x40 holes). [ + ]

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