@afghanistan16443: دی مور بچی ٹول مسافر دی 🥺🥺

afghanistan🇦🇫
afghanistan🇦🇫
Open In TikTok:
Region: SA
Monday 01 June 2026 22:56:45 GMT
755
83
13
1

Music

Download

Comments

hdsv88
Hdsv :
2026-06-02 02:08:42
1
hroon412
ٱلسَّلَامُ عَلَيْكُمْ :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-03 07:40:12
1
user132928267028
مسعود افغان :
🥀🥀🥀
2026-06-01 23:06:48
1
haroon.amire5
Haroon Amire :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-04 11:37:12
1
ahmadshahking603
🔥_𝐇_𝐊_🔥 :
💔💔💔
2026-06-02 06:21:51
1
abidullah.khan102
Abidullah Khan :
💔💔💔
2026-06-02 07:34:41
1
adaulla
بغلانی :
💔💔
2026-06-02 15:35:42
1
sifatullahkhan6
Sifatullah 🇦🇪 :
😢😢😢
2026-06-02 10:07:23
1
khanafghan5060gmail.com
nurjan omarkhel :
❤️❤️🥰
2026-06-02 07:24:48
1
ismail.ahmadzai99
👑AHMADZAI👑 :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-04 11:36:49
1
haji__darman
Därmâñ khå№ 🖤 :
💔💔💔
2026-06-02 03:19:36
1
user841218828
محمدهارون :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-02 00:26:24
1
haroon.amire5
Haroon Amire :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-01 22:59:30
1
user62429473304836
Athar khan naizi :
🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-12 11:21:42
0
To see more videos from user @afghanistan16443, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

ULI ART IN IGBA MGBA (TRADITIONAL IGBO WRESTLING) In traditional Igbo society, Igba Mgba was a cultural performance that combined strength, identity, beauty, spirituality, and community pride. Long before the wrestlers entered the arena, the preparation had already begun at home. On the day of the contest, young men preparing for Igba Mgba would wake early to bathe and prepare their bodies. Family members, friends, and age-grade companions gathered around them with excitement and encouragement. After this preparation, women skilled in uli art began decorating the wrestlers’ bodies. These women were often respected female artists known for their steady hands and knowledge of traditional motifs. Using natural uli dye made from plants, they painted the wrestler’s chest, back, arms, and legs with flowing designs that followed the movement of the body. As the wrestler journeyed from his home to the village square or wrestling arena, his decorated body already announced his presence before the match even began. The uli designs made him stand out. Some common uli motifs used during Igba Mgba included: * Agwọ (Python motifs) — symbolising strength, flexibility, and fearlessness * Agụ (Leopard spots) — representing bravery, power, and masculine authority * line patterns — highlighting movement, agility, and physical beauty * Lineage and community markings — showing identity, belonging, and honour.  Significance of Uli During Igba Mgba * Enhanced the wrestler’s physical appearance and masculinity * Highlighted muscles and movement during performance * Connected the wrestler to his family, lineage, and community identity * Offered spiritual protection and ancestral favour * Linked the wrestler to Ala, the earth goddess, through natural dye and body symbolism * Made the wrestling arena visually entertaining and culturally meaningful *  Through uli, women became part of the wrestling performance itself. While men wrestled in the arena, women shaped how strength, identity, and honour were visually expressed on the body. Today, traditional Igba Mgba has disappeared in many Igbo communities, replaced by modern entertainment and sports. Yet with its disappearance, we are also losing the body art, rituals, symbolism, and communal experiences that once gave life to village festivals. Should traditional wrestling and its uli traditions be revived, or should modern entertainment continue to replace them? #igbamgba #uliart #igboculture #africanindigenousart #igbotradition
ULI ART IN IGBA MGBA (TRADITIONAL IGBO WRESTLING) In traditional Igbo society, Igba Mgba was a cultural performance that combined strength, identity, beauty, spirituality, and community pride. Long before the wrestlers entered the arena, the preparation had already begun at home. On the day of the contest, young men preparing for Igba Mgba would wake early to bathe and prepare their bodies. Family members, friends, and age-grade companions gathered around them with excitement and encouragement. After this preparation, women skilled in uli art began decorating the wrestlers’ bodies. These women were often respected female artists known for their steady hands and knowledge of traditional motifs. Using natural uli dye made from plants, they painted the wrestler’s chest, back, arms, and legs with flowing designs that followed the movement of the body. As the wrestler journeyed from his home to the village square or wrestling arena, his decorated body already announced his presence before the match even began. The uli designs made him stand out. Some common uli motifs used during Igba Mgba included: * Agwọ (Python motifs) — symbolising strength, flexibility, and fearlessness * Agụ (Leopard spots) — representing bravery, power, and masculine authority * line patterns — highlighting movement, agility, and physical beauty * Lineage and community markings — showing identity, belonging, and honour. Significance of Uli During Igba Mgba * Enhanced the wrestler’s physical appearance and masculinity * Highlighted muscles and movement during performance * Connected the wrestler to his family, lineage, and community identity * Offered spiritual protection and ancestral favour * Linked the wrestler to Ala, the earth goddess, through natural dye and body symbolism * Made the wrestling arena visually entertaining and culturally meaningful * Through uli, women became part of the wrestling performance itself. While men wrestled in the arena, women shaped how strength, identity, and honour were visually expressed on the body. Today, traditional Igba Mgba has disappeared in many Igbo communities, replaced by modern entertainment and sports. Yet with its disappearance, we are also losing the body art, rituals, symbolism, and communal experiences that once gave life to village festivals. Should traditional wrestling and its uli traditions be revived, or should modern entertainment continue to replace them? #igbamgba #uliart #igboculture #africanindigenousart #igbotradition

About