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‘Kivuli & Nuru: The Afrodisiacs Collection' —African erotic stories delving deep into the queer world of desire

‘Kivuli & Nuru: The Afrodisiacs Collection' —African erotic stories delving deep into the queer world of desire

The Citizen28-05-2025

'Kivuli & Nuru: The Afrodisiacs Collection' was launched on Africa Day by Pan-Africanist digital platform HOLAAfrica.
The respect of elders and those around you is so deeply entrenched in African culture that it's often hard for Africans to openly speak about sex or anything about sexuality without being chastised for being crass.
The situation is far worse if you're an African that identifies as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ).
'The situation of queer people around the continent is multifaceted; it is incredibly painful in some spaces and in others incredibly powerful,' said Tiffany Mugo.
Together with Siphumeze Khundayi, Mugo is the co-founder of HOLAAfrica, a Pan-Africanist digital platform that focuses on sex and sexuality in Africa.
This past Sunday, on Africa Day, HOLAAfrica launched Kivuli & Nuru: The Afrodisiacs Collection. It is a collection of African erotic stories that delve deep into the world of desire.
The albums are described as a celebration of LGBTQ+ intimacies in their own words and voices.
In a truly African way, the first episode opened with a prayer from Mpho Andrea Tutu van Furth, aptly titled A Prayer for Good Sex.
'Good sex inspires me because good sex is the wish that I have as a mother for my children. It is the hope that I have as a priest for my congregation. It is the desire that I have as a woman for myself, it is the prayer that I have as an African, for every person on our continent,' Tutu van Furth is heard in her prayer.
Tutu van Furth is the daughter of revered political activist Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
ALSO READ: Sleep divorce may improve your sex life
Complexities of LGBTQ+ in Africa
Mugo speaks about the complexities faced by the LGBTQ+ community on the continent, saying it's full of 'hard times and full of joy'.
'The thing about the situation of queer people on the continent is it is not any one thing because even in the darkest moments you will find such fun and chaos and delicious goodness. This is part of what the work we do focuses on, a more holistic idea of what it means to be LGBTQ+ on the continent,' Mugo shares.
She adds: 'What is happening in those private moments, those mundane moments, those moments where the whole world doesn't seem to be against you. What does it mean to exist in your full glory?'
HOLAAfrica has taken its work around the world, including to global TED Talk stages.
Mugo admits that it's not all rainbows and sunshine as a queer on the continent and says Africa still has a long way to go before reaching the proverbial promise land.
'In a lot of cases, queer people's intimate lives have been used against them, making them seem dark and degenerate. Because so little is known about queer sex (outside of porn) it can be shaped into whatever those who weaponise it want it to be.'
She says queer sex is as intimate, messy, beautiful, confusing and magical as heterosexual sex. 'It's no different.'
'It is not always easy to be queer and African, but it is always magical. Yes, there is a long way to go, but what must be celebrated is how far rights have come,' she said.
Kivuli and Nuru mean 'shadow' and 'light' in Kiswahili, and Mugo says they chose these names to represent the light and dark aspects of sex, intimacy, and sexuality on the continent.
'If one wants to see how far we have to go, we can look to Kivuli, what is still lurking in the shadows; the things people can't express or explore,' she said.
However, there is light at the end of the tunnel, and Mugo says that is what Nuru brings.
'These are stories of being able to bring their desires to the light and be who they want to be. No matter how you engage with your sexuality, there is always more to learn and unpack and engage with, but we have also come so far in a number of ways.'
ALSO READ: 1 in 5 LGBTQ youth have attempted suicide in the past year – study
The episodes
There are 30 episodes of Kivuli & Nuru in the collection, which vary in length and titles.
'The albums are explorations into the different ways we love and lust, in both covert and open ways. Featuring stories from Lagos to Nairobi, from Cape Town to Cairo, The Afrodisiacs Collection takes you on an audio journey through tales of immortality, coming home, gyrating in nightclubs, or tempting daytime trysts in the middle of an afternoon,' shared Mugo.
In one episode, titled Why is There Never Foreplay in the Public Bathrooms written by Ghanaian author Kobby Ben Ben, the listener gets to be a fly on the wall in a public lavatory in Ghana during an intimate encounter between two lovers.
'During public sex, foreplay isn't a forgotten formality. Rather, it's elusive, measured by infinitesimal fractions of a second,' says the narrator in the episode, Anthony Oluoch.
'…or just plainly edited out just to make for a racier porn clip.'
The moans and grunts of pleasure give the episodes a strong sense of reality. So real that a minor listening to this collection of stories would be grounded for at least a year.
'Everything is delightful and pleasurable, even the darker stories, because it is erotica,' said Mugo.
'However, if you want to really zero in on the stories about threesomes, always delight, namely Ghosts of Threesomes Past, and It takes 3. But all of the stories will bring a hint of deliciousness.'
In the heat of all the pleasure in the stories, Mugo says that at the core of it is education.
'Stories have always been the biggest way to teach people about things, and in terms of sex and sexuality, these will do that. The stories will bring you into a world of sexuality that informs you through storytelling.'
NOW READ: Ghana parliament passes anti-LGBTQ bill

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Desire After Dark re-edit There are stories that seduce and then there are stories that awaken. Kivuli & Nuru: The Afrodisiacs Collection is the latter. Produced by HolaAfrica! the two albums of sonic storytelling don't so much whisper to your senses as they dance, boldly and barefoot, across your chest. Curated by the unapologetically audacious Tiffany Mugo, this collection is a defiant celebration of African eroticism; it is a reclamation, a resurrection, a rhythmic sermon preached in moans and murmurs. 'Kivuli and nuru — shadow and light,' Mugo says, 'are in constant battle. Human desire is always trying to move from the dark into the light. 'You only need to look at someone's Tuesday evening browser history to know that.' These aren't just concepts, they're mirrors. The shadow is where we bury our want: in prayer, in shame, in cultural silence. The light is where it spills, bold and breathless. The two aren't enemies, they're dance partners. 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Desire is not universal — it is personal.' But while the experiences are intimate, the locations ground them. Kivuli & Nuru don't take you to the usual, Western suspects. These stories move through Afrobeat clubs in Lagos, down side streets in Nairobi, in the quiet moments of Cairo and beside a roadside mango vendor in Cape Town. 'Desire is at your doorstep,' Mugo insists. 'It is not a visa application and a 14-hour plane ride away. 'The continent is a character in this anthology — one could argue the main character.' If the stories are homegrown, so too are their contradictions. 'Africa has a rich history of physical intimacies relegated to, and lurking in, the shadows — cultural spaces, mythology and the like,' Mugo reflects. 'But we also have a very 'robust' history of suppressing those desires.' Kivuli & Nuru are not offering escape but confrontation. 'Even the existence of this work is an instance of that epic battle; desires that have been shamed into the shadows coming into the light. 'That, and I am sure I have family members clutching their pearls at the thought of this existing.' Interestingly, masculinity and femininity fade as fixed concepts in the storytelling. 'These are very personal narratives, some fantasies, some memories, some fictional musings,' Mugo says. 'We're met with simply humans who have sensual, sweet or freaky thoughts. When the lights go out or stay on, if that's your thing, those societal roles start to melt.' The sensory richness of the collection is intentional. It doesn't just tell you what's happening — it makes you feel it. Tiffany Mugo, curator of Kivuli & Nuru: The Afrodisiacs Collection. 'Rachel Wamoto, the mind behind sound mixing and mastering, wanted you to not only hear the voices but for the sounds to sit in your skin,' Mugo explains. 'It's like literary ASMR [autonomous sensory meridian response]. The sensations needed to come from more than one sense.' The result is hypnotic. A gasp, a whisper, the distant sound of beads against skin — these are not flourishes. They are invitations. As for distinguishing fantasy from reality? 'Each author was given carte blanche,' she says. 'These stories just … are. Like WhatsApp, the sources are encrypted — even I don't know what's fantasy and what's real. 'I could know an honest-to-God immortal being, if the story I Killed Flowers For You is to be believed.' Mugo understands the emotional reactions to these stories will vary. 'This collection will touch different things in different people, depending on who you are, where you are in your love and lust life, what your history is or what your politics are. 'Even your current location could affect what comes up. I want this collection to come for all the emotions, good and bad, but all I ask is you feel something. Anything,' she says. And what if what you feel is discomfort or arousal? 'If I am completely honest, the most important emotion is stirring in your unmentionable areas because these are erotic stories,' she says. 'Even if you are a little mad at it, feel something delicious.' Audio storytelling was a deliberate choice: 'With an audio offering, we are doing the heavy lifting. 'You can lay back, relax and let us do the work.' And there's a deeper reach, too. 'Spotify and Apple Podcasts mean that people can access Kivuli & Nuru anytime, anywhere — unless it's banned in your context, of course.' The differences between Kivuli and Nuru were organic, not orchestrated. 'Goodness, you make this seem far more thought out than it is,' she responds. 'I wish I was this level of maestro, but alas, not in this life.' The emotional distinction isn't structural — it's spiritual. Kivuli lurks. Nuru glows. The people within shift, blur and burn. But perhaps the most profound impact of the collection lies in how it becomes medicine. 'One of the loveliest things I heard during this process was a contributor telling me, 'Wow, that felt amazing to put to paper and also say out loud in the studio.'' Mugo knows that erotica is more than titillation, it's transformation. 'It lets us imagine past the selves we are told we can be. It pushes us to think about the premium subscription to our wants, our needs and our sensual selves.' This isn't about climax. It's about clarity: 'Even if you can't get to the summit just yet, at least you know where your journey is taking you.' And for those who still think African sexuality is a blank page or a single story? 'We're not just a gaggle of countries that can't wrap our heads around desire, autonomy and general delicious goodness. 'We have a rich contribution to the global conversation about intimacies, wants and fantasies. We've been doing this before the boats arrived, and we'll keep on doing it, despite what people think. It stays wet and wild here on the continent.' So listen closely. The voices in Kivuli & Nuru don't just tell you how we desire — they remind you that we've always known how.

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