It's called a kinara. (pronounced kEEnara)
Kwanzaa.
go to playlist.com and search Kwanzaa and it should get a good songs. Or there is a song called beautiful Kwanzaa, Kwanzaa lights, African joy. Beautiful songs. very beautiful
Kwanzaa is very nice. The genders each wear a different outfit.
Kwanzaa is such a farce. It makes me sick. Who the f celebrates it anyway?
yes
False, the menorah is not a traditional symbol of Kwanzaa. True, it is a candleholder with places for nine candles to celebrate the Jewish holiday Hanukkah. But there also is a special candleholder with which to celebrate Kwanzaa. It is called the kinara, but has places for only seven candles.
The candleholder used during Kwanzaa is called a kinara. It sits on an mkeka, or mat.
The kinara is the special candelabra or candleholder for celebrating Kwanzaa. It holds places for seven candles. One candle is lit on December 26, the first day of Kwanzaa. Each day a new candle is lit, followed by the lighting of those already lit on the immediately preceding evenings. The last candle is lit on New Year's Day, when Kwanzaa ends.
The traditional name is a menorah. Modern (Israeli) Hebrew has added the name "hanukkiah."See also:More about Hanukkah
A menorah
The name Kwanzaa comes from the Swahili phrase matunda ya kwanza, which means "first fruits of the harvest".
pamot (פמוט)
yes his name is jamal
Kwanzaa is the name of an African-American holiday that began in 1966. According to the creator of the holiday, Karenga, the name "Kwanzaa" derives from the Swahili phrase matunda ya kwanza, meaning "first fruits of the harvest", although a more conventional translation would simply be "first fruits. The word "kwanzaa" itself resembles Swahili but is not an actual Swahili word.
pamot or pamotin.
Kwanzaa.
My cousin celebrates Kwanzaa