As a blogger exploring African legends, myths, and diasporic threads, my recent trip to Baltimore left a powerful imprint on me, not just as a traveller, but as someone seeking to tell connecting stories. The first people in Baltimore Long before the city’s skyline rose over the Inner Harbor, this land was home to the…
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The day I decided to write about a two-headed serpent
So, we already know that I come from Cameroon. And in Cameroon, most people are aware that the traditional symbol of the Bamoun* people is a two-headed serpent. However, in certain popular interpretations, this symbol is seen as a sign of betrayal or duplicity. People say, “the serpent has two heads because it deceives, it…
The Byeri mask: when the ancestors watch from behind the carved wood
When you grow up in a Cameroonian city, traditional masks are something you don’t often come across. Maybe, hanging on a wall at an uncle’s house. In a craft shop. Behind the glass in a museum. Personally, as a child, I found them terrifying. I did everything I could to avoid looking at them for…
The two-headed serpent: when a people and a king create a symbol
The Bamoun people In the heart of the western highlands of Cameroon, the Bamoun Kingdom took shape over the centuries. Founded in the 14th century, it became one of the most powerful and organized kingdoms in Central Africa. Foumban, its capital, was a center of art, politics, and spirituality. Here, symbols were never chosen at…




