Nnamdi finds the village silent before he sees it. Then, rounding a dirt track near Burkina Faso’s border with Ghana, the walls appear: circles and rectangles rising from the earth, painted in bold reds, blacks, and whites. Geometric patterns wrap around every home like a language only the Kassena people can fully read.
This is Tiébélé, seat of the Kassena royal court, where architecture is more than shelter. It is memory, identity, and living history.
The houses, known as sukhala, have been built much the same way for centuries.
During the dry season, men shape earth, straw, wood, and cow dung into thick mud walls that naturally regulate temperature, keeping homes cool under the harsh Sahelian sun and warm when night falls. The entrances are deliberately low and narrow, requiring visitors to bend as they enter—a practical design once intended to slow intruders during periods of conflict.
But if the men build the houses, the women give them their voice.
Just before the rainy season arrives, women from across the community gather to decorate the walls. What began as a practical effort to protect the mud from erosion has evolved into one of Africa’s most remarkable artistic traditions. The eldest women guide the process, choosing motifs while younger generations learn through observation and participation. Using natural pigments sourced from the surrounding landscape, alongside simple tools such as feathers, pebbles, and handmade brushes, they transform each home into a work of art.
The murals are never merely decorative.
Every symbol tells a story. Stars and moons represent hope and guidance. Arrows identify the home of a warrior. Crocodiles and snakes, revered within Kassena tradition, are believed to protect families from misfortune and illness. Even simple geometric forms carry meaning, turning the entire village into a visual archive where every wall contributes to a shared cultural language.
Walking through Tiébélé feels less like moving between houses and more like reading chapters of a story written across generations.
Unlike monuments carved in stone, Tiébélé was never meant to remain unchanged. Seasonal rains gradually wear away the painted surfaces, requiring every generation to repaint, restore, and renew the murals by hand. Preservation here is not about freezing history in time. It is about participating in it.
Today, that cycle faces new challenges. Shorter dry seasons make painting more difficult, while changing environmental conditions threaten the availability of traditional materials, including the néré tree whose fruit provides the natural varnish that helps protect the artwork. Soil once ideal for construction has also become increasingly fragile due to environmental pressures and modern agricultural practices.
Yet the Kassena continue.
In 2024, UNESCO recognised the Royal Court of Tiébélé as a World Heritage Site, celebrating not only its distinctive architecture but also the living traditions, craftsmanship, and communal knowledge that have sustained it for centuries.
Tiébélé reminds us that heritage is not always built to resist time. Sometimes, it is built to be renewed by every generation willing to remember.
Because in Tiébélé, permanence is not found in walls that never change, it is found in the people who choose, year after year, to paint their history all over again.
Also read:
Great Zimbabwe: The Stone City Colonialists Refused to Believe Africans Built.

