Culture, cloth & tradition
2026-01-083 min read
Naming ceremony (ìkómọ): one link for family abroad and home

A naming is not a small wedding—it is its own sacred rhythm. Guests need date, dress expectation, whether cash gifts are normal in your circle, and where to park at the compound or hall. The same WhatsApp energy applies: one ZuriCards link stops cousins in Texas from asking questions your mother already answered.
Put ceremony order and language notes up front
If prayers, pouring of water, or presentation of names happen in a set order, outline it briefly. Diaspora guests appreciate knowing if portions will be in Yoruba, Twi, or English only, so they know when to lean in or ask a sibling to translate quietly.
- State start time in local time and how late food typically serves—babies and elders plan around that.
- Name whether photography is open or if certain rites are private to family.
Gifts, envelopes, and what to say on the page
Some families love registry links; others expect cash in envelopes or transfers. Say what feels true to your household without awkwardness—guests prefer clarity to guessing in the car park.
- If you collect digitally, put methods beside a short thank-you line so it reads as invitation, not invoice.
- Offer a contact for people bringing items from abroad (weight, customs) if that is common in your network.
After-party is optional; say it
If only family returns to the house while colleagues go home, publish that gently so no one waits at an empty hall. African hospitality is generous; boundaries are still kindness.
- Pin one map for church or hall and another for the family house if they differ.
- RSVP for naming helps small chops math more than people admit.
