Afro Caribbean Wedding Ritual Card Inserts | Digital Download

Afro Caribbean Wedding Ritual Card Inserts | Digital Download

$15.00
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Afro Caribbean Wedding Ritual Card Inserts | Digital Download

Afro Caribbean Wedding Ritual Card Inserts | Digital Download

$15.00

Some of the most powerful moments in a wedding ceremony are the ones guests don't expect — a broom on the floor, a libation poured, a call and response that fills the room. These cards make sure no one misses what's happening or why.

Each insert explains the meaning and practice of key Afro-Caribbean and African diaspora wedding traditions — jumping the broom, the libation ceremony, the handfasting, and other ancestral rituals that ground a celebration in something larger than the day itself. Clear, elegant, and designed to feel like a natural part of your program.

For the couple honoring West African roots at a Caribbean wedding. For the Jamaican celebration that also carries American Black Southern tradition. For every ceremony where the ancestors are present and deserve to be named.

About Afro-Caribbean wedding traditions

The traditions carried into Afro-Caribbean and African American wedding ceremonies are acts of remembrance as much as celebration.

Jumping the broom has roots in both West African tradition and the history of enslaved people in America who created their own ceremonies of union when legal marriage was denied to them. To jump the broom today is to honor that resilience — to say that love persisted, that family was built, that the lineage continues.

The libation ceremony — pouring water or spirits to honor ancestors — is practiced across West Africa and throughout the diaspora in the Caribbean, the American South, and beyond. It acknowledges that the people who came before are still present at moments of joy.

Handfasting, the ritual binding of hands, appears in multiple African and Celtic traditions and has found a place in many diaspora weddings as a symbol of the couple's choice to be bound to one another.

These cards invite every guest — regardless of background — into the meaning of these traditions. They are an act of cultural pride and an act of welcome, both at once.

Want to learn more about Afro-Caribbean wedding traditions? Read our design guide →

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