
Ashley Kay
@Kay2506 • 25,223 subscribers
Health care worker | Culture Observer | Content Creator | A nonchalant i guess
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What began as a visit to one of Africa’s last remaining hunter-gatherer communities slowly became a complete transformation of life itself, as a foreign woman chose to leave behind the routines and comforts of the modern world to live among the Hadza of Tanzania, eventually forming a relationship and marrying within the community, embracing a lifestyle centered around hunting, gathering, nature, and close communal living far removed from cities and technology, turning what may seem unimaginable to outsiders into a powerful story of adaptation, connection, and the human search for belonging beyond the boundaries of culture, language, and modern society
Ashley Kay621,331 views • 6 days ago

In a circle of Ju/’hoansi women, she sits as gentle hands rest on her belly, feeling for the life growing within. This is how knowledge moves here — not through machines or written charts, but through touch, experience, and shared intuition passed down over generations. Elder women use their hands to sense the child, offering reassurance, guidance, and communal care. Pregnancy among the Ju/’hoansi is not a private event; it is held by the group, woven into collective wisdom older than borders and maps.
Ashley Kay17,746,555 views • 4 months ago

What looks like a simple gesture is actually a powerful turning point, as during a wedding in the Omo Valley the removal of a leg ring from the bride marks her transition into a new stage of life, where ornaments are not just decoration but symbols tied to age, identity, and belonging within the community, and taking it off signals the end of one chapter and the beginning of another, as she steps into marriage with new responsibilities, expectations, and social recognition, all witnessed by those around her, turning a quiet moment into a deeply meaningful expression of tradition, continuity, and cultural identity
Ashley Kay2,572,942 views • 28 days ago

Among the Mursi of Ethiopia’s Omo Valley, the large clay lip plates worn by some women are among the most recognizable cultural traditions in the world, with the practice typically beginning during adolescence when the lower lip is gradually pierced and stretched over time to hold increasingly larger plates, a process tied to ideas of beauty, maturity, identity, and cultural pride within the community, while the size and decoration of the plates can also reflect personal expression and social recognition, turning what may appear shocking to outsiders into a powerful symbol of belonging and heritage shaped by generations of tradition in one of Africa’s most culturally distinct regions
PTE Gahene1,012,777 views • 20 days ago

What starts as a casual visit quickly turns uncomfortable, as a female tourist has her hand held tightly by a man from the Hadza while her partner appears to object, creating a tense moment where cultural boundaries, personal space, and expectations clash, and the lack of response only amplifies the unease, turning a simple interaction into a reminder of how encounters between visitors and traditional communities can easily cross lines when mutual understanding and respect are missing
Ashley Kay403,526 views • 28 days ago

😭😭 A scene from the Omo Valley, where body scarification has long been used by some communities as a marker of identity, resilience, and belonging, now intersecting with modern cameras and outside attention as visitors document traditions that carry deep cultural meaning
PTE Gahene375,506 views • 29 days ago
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In the remote villages of the Surma people in Ethiopia’s Omo Valley, women wear striking lip plates — circular discs of clay or metal inserted into a pierced lower lip. This practice is far more than decoration; it is a profound symbol of cultural identity, beauty, and social status. The size of the plate can signify maturity, courage, and even influence a woman’s bride price, making it an important marker of her role and value in the community. Rooted in tradition and rites of passage, the lip plate reflects the Surma’s deep respect for heritage, resilience, and the ways in which physical adornment can convey strength, pride, and belonging.
PTE Gahene1,280,384 views • 5 months ago

The gorilla avenged her baby from the leopard without remorses🥹🤎
PTE Gahene826,342 views • 3 months ago
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Among the Hamer (Hamar) people of Ethiopia’s Omo Valley, pressing the face or breathing in the warmth from the stomach of a freshly slaughtered animal is a practice rooted in survival and ritual meaning. In a pastoral environment where nights can be cold and resources limited, the animal’s remaining warmth is used to help retain body heat. Beyond practicality, the act also carries symbolic weight — representing a connection to the animal’s life force, strength, and the respect shown toward livestock that sustain the community. Nothing is treated as waste; every part has purpose. What may appear shocking to outsiders is, within Hamer culture, an expression of adaptation, respect, and inherited knowledge, shaped by environment rather than modern comfort.
PTE Gahene840,355 views • 5 months ago

A young woman bathing outdoors — a common reality in some rural African communities where access to indoor bathrooms and running water is limited. This isn’t about exposure or spectacle. It’s daily life shaped by environment, distance to water sources, and long-standing routines that existed long before modern infrastructure. What looks unusual to outsiders is often simply adaptation, practicality, and normalcy.
Muhoza Leilla819,563 views • 5 months ago

Many faces of Papua New Guinea. Among them are the Asaro people, often called the Mudmen, known for painting their faces white with clay and maintaining a deep cultural connection to pigs, one of the most important animals in their society. The white clay masks and face paint were historically used to intimidate enemies, creating ghost-like figures emerging from the mist. Over time, this striking appearance became a powerful symbol of identity, storytelling, and resilience. Pigs are more than livestock here — they represent wealth, social status, bride price, and ceremonial power. Together, the paint and the pigs reflect a culture where survival, symbolism, and tradition are tightly woven into everyday life.
PTE Gahene780,434 views • 5 months ago
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Guinea-Bissau Carnival 2025 🎭🇬🇼 A powerful explosion of color, rhythm, and storytelling, where traditional masks, music, and dance take over the streets. The carnival blends ancestral African rituals with Afro-Portuguese influences, turning celebration into living history. Each costume represents identity, satire, and community pride — not just spectacle. For a few days, Guinea-Bissau becomes a moving stage where culture, resistance, and joy march togethe
PTE Gahene483,258 views • 5 months ago

Among the Zo’é of the Amazon rainforest, one of the most striking cultural traditions is the use of wooden lower lip insertions known as embe-poto, worn by both men and women as an important symbol of identity, maturity, and belonging within the community, with the practice beginning from a young age as the lower lip is gradually prepared to hold the ornament, reflecting generations of tradition deeply tied to beauty, social recognition, and cultural continuity, while also serving as a powerful visual marker that distinguishes the Zo’é from surrounding groups and preserves a unique heritage shaped by life in the remote forests of northern Brazil
PTE Gahene45,171 views • 26 days ago

An a cappella rendition of “Mbube (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)” by the incredible Ndlovu Youth Choir 🦁🎶 Their raw harmonies and vocal precision show how powerful music can be without instruments. Having the lyrics in English helps a global audience connect with the story while still honoring the song’s African roots.
PTE Gahene209,010 views • 5 months ago

im sorry but this is INSANE.... like halfway through i forgot ts was a bus 😭
PTE Gahene166,117 views • 4 months ago