Faith & ancestorsAI-aggregated

Yennayer · the Amazigh new year

On 12–13 January the Amazigh world welcomes the agrarian new year (counting from 950 BCE and the pharaoh Sheshonq): a feast of couscous with the year’s wishes, first haircuts, and doors opened to good fortune.

The names it answers to

  • YennayerTamazight · first month of the agrarian year

What happens

  1. 1

    The feast

    Families cook abundance: couscous with dried meat or seven vegetables; a generous table pledges a generous year.

  2. 2

    The tokens

    A date pit or almond hidden in the dish blesses whoever finds it; children may receive first haircuts, and thresholds are renewed.

  3. 3

    The wishes

    Aseggas ameggaz ("happy new year") is exchanged; in recent decades the day is an official holiday in Algeria and a proud identity celebration continent-wide.

WHY

Keeping a calendar of one’s own is keeping a self: Yennayer counts time from Amazigh history, not anyone else’s.

The overloaded table at winter’s hungriest point is deliberate defiance: plenty spoken into scarcity.

WHYs are plural by design: your family may hold another. Dispute or add below; disagreement is recorded, never erased.

Who practices it

🇲🇦 🇩🇿 🇱🇾Amazigh (Berber)people

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.

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