The legend of how the Baoulé got their name is a
tragically beautiful one. An Akan people living on the eastern side of Côte d'Ivoire, the Baoulé
originally came from Ghana, but were forced to flee circa the 18th
c...
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The legend of how the Baoulé got their name is a
tragically beautiful one. An Akan people living on the eastern side of Côte d'Ivoire, the Baoulé
originally came from Ghana, but were forced to flee circa the 18th
century when the Ashanti rose to power. Led by Queen Pokou, the people headed
west until they came to the banks of the un-crossable Comoe River. As legend
has it, they began tossing their most prized possessions into the river in the
hopes that some spirit would take mercy. Realizing that their most valuable asset was her own son, Queen Pokou sacrificed the
boy, at which point a great hippopotamus rose up from the water and allowed
them safe passage on its back. Having saved her people, but lost her baby, the
queen was so distraught, that all she could utter, over and over again, was the
word baouli, meaning, “the child has
died,” and that is what her people have been called ever since.
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