Classroom lesson · Music · 🇱🇾 Libya

Kaska Sword Dance

A colourful Libyan tradition of music, rhythm, and display

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The kaska is a traditional Libyan celebration dance performed at weddings, festivals, and special occasions. Performers dressed in beautiful embroidered robes form a circle, moving to the beat of drums while displaying ceremonial swords in stylised, graceful patterns. It is a joyful, colourful spectacle that brings communities together.

Tell me more

The kaska is performed by a group of men moving in a circle with drums beating a steady rhythm. The movements are choreographed and passed down through families and communities — a young person learns by watching elders and slowly joining in. The swords used are decorative ceremonial items carried as a symbol of elegance and pride.

The drummers are as important as the dancers. Libyan drumming uses several different types of drum, including the tabla (a goblet-shaped drum) and the darbuka, each producing different tones. The drummers improvise around a repeating pattern, building in speed and intensity as the performance goes on.

Kaska performances are a highlight at Libyan weddings, which can last for several days with music, dancing, and feasting. They are also performed at public festivals such as the Sahara Festival, where communities from across Libya and neighbouring countries gather to celebrate shared traditions.

The elaborate costumes worn by kaska performers are themselves works of craft — hand-embroidered robes, finely wrapped turbans, and leather sandals. Making a traditional costume can take many weeks of careful needlework.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Kaska is learned by watching and copying, not from written instructions. What things have you learned that way?
  2. 02The kaska brings whole communities together. What events or activities bring your school or neighbourhood together?
  3. 03Why do you think costumes and music are so important to celebrations in cultures around the world?
Try this

Classroom activity

In groups of six, create your own circle dance. Choose a steady beat to clap (four beats per cycle). Each person stands in the circle and performs the same four simple movements in turn — step forward, raise arms, step back, clap. Practise until it is in time, then perform for another group.