Sebou · the Egyptian seventh-day welcome
Egypt’s seventh-day celebration, older than Islam and Christianity in the Nile valley: the baby is carried in procession with candles, sieved and gently instructed, amid song and noise to make the child brave.
The names it answers to
- Seboū‘Arabic (Masri) · from "sabaa", seven
What happens
- 1
The preparation
The home fills with family; sweets and nuts in decorated bundles await guests; the baby wears white.
- 2
The sieve and the salt
The baby is laid in a large sieve (ghorbal) and gently shaken; the mother steps over the child seven times while salt is scattered against envy.
- 3
The procession and the commandments
Children parade with candles; an elder woman knocks a brass mortar and comically commands the baby to obey the mother and father; the name is celebrated.
WHY
The sieve and noise are ancient inoculation: startle the child in love so the world cannot startle them in malice.
Surviving seven days earned a Nile-valley child its public existence for millennia; sebou is that ancient threshold, still crossed with candles.
WHYs are plural by design: your family may hold another. Dispute or add below; disagreement is recorded, never erased.
Who practices it
Provenance
- generated: 2026-07-04
- source: Model-knowledge aggregation pass (2026-07-04); unverified, awaiting community affirmation.
This entry is a hypothesis awaiting its people. If your family does it differently, that difference is exactly what we want recorded.
Nearby in the library
Imbeleko · introducing the child to the ancestors
The Nguni rite in which a goat is slaughtered at the family homestead to introduce a newborn (or a person never introduced) to the ancestors and formally place them in the clan.
🇿🇦 🇿🇼 🇸🇿Xhosa · Zulu · Ndebele +2
Ìkómọjáde · the Yoruba naming day
On the seventh (girls), ninth (boys), or eighth day by family practice, the Yoruba child is carried out and named before family, with symbolic foods placed on the tongue and the oríkì declared.
🇳🇬 🇧🇯 🇹🇬Yoruba
Ịgụ aha · the Igbo naming ceremony
The Igbo child is named before kin, often on the 7th or 28th day market cycle, with kola nut broken, the circumstances of birth honoured in the name, and the paternal line affirmed.
🇳🇬Igbo