Inyama yomcimbi
A beast (usually a cow or goat) slaughtered specifically for a Nguni memorial rite, its meat shared between the living mourners and set aside for the ancestors being honoured.
Does your family know it this way?
The names it answers to
- Inyama yomcimbiisiZulu / isiXhosa · meat of the gathering
MEANING
The slaughter itself is a communication with the ancestors as much as a meal: it is offered so the deceased’s spirit can be formally welcomed home or remembered, not simply cooked to feed a crowd.
Sharing this meat afterward binds the extended family together at the exact moment grief could otherwise scatter them.
Meanings are plural by design: your family may hold another. Dispute or add below; disagreement is recorded, never erased.
When it appears
Ingredients, in sketch
Named components, not a recipe: no quantities, no method unless the making itself is part of the custom.
Etiquette
- Specific portions of the animal are set aside for elders or for the ancestors before general sharing begins.
Who eats it
Provenance
- generated: 2026-07-10
- source: Model-knowledge aggregation pass (2026-07-10); unverified, awaiting community affirmation.
This entry is a hypothesis awaiting its people. If your family holds this dish differently, that difference is exactly what we want recorded.
Nearby in the library
Umqombothi
A thick, low-alcohol sorghum-and-maize beer, brewed over days and shared from a communal pot: the drink that calls the ancestors to a gathering.
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