The Tswana–Tawana are a Setswana-speaking Sotho-Tswana people whose ancestors formed cattle-based chiefdoms across today's Botswana and later spread into western Zimbabwe through migration and trade networks. Their social life traditionally centered on dikgosi (chiefs), councils, and kinship systems that regulated land, marriage, and justice.
Most families combine crop farming with cattle, goat, and sheep herding. Maize, sorghum, beans, and millet are staples, while meat and sour milk are prized foods. Extended families cooperate in work, child-rearing, and ceremonies. Weddings, harvest celebrations, and initiation rites include song, dance, and communal feasting.
Many identify as Christian, yet traditional beliefs persist, including reverence for Modimo (God) and ancestral spirits, often blended with church practice. Indigenous healing and spiritual mediation remain influential.
The Tswana–Tawana need sustainable livelihoods, access to quality education, clean water, and resilient agriculture in drought-prone regions. They also need strong, biblically grounded discipleship so faith moves beyond nominal belief into transformed community life.
Pray for rain, food security, healthcare, and educational opportunities for children and youth.
Pray for Tswana-Tawana Christians to raise up and lead their communities for God's glory, preaching the gospel, teaching the Bible, planting churches, and making disciples among their people and beyond.
Pray for spiritual renewal, unity between churches and communities, and bold local witness.
Scripture Prayers for the Tswana-Tawana in Zimbabwe.
Tswana people - Wikipedia
Tswana | Culture & Traditions | Britannica
The Tswana People Of Southern Africa - WorldAtlas.com
Botswana - Animism, Christianity, Tswana | Britannica
| Profile Source: Joshua Project |


