Classroom lesson · Aného · 🇹🇬 Togo

Aného

A historic coastal town on a thin strip between the sea and a lagoon

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Aného is a charming old town on the southeastern coast of Togo, built on a narrow strip of land with the Atlantic Ocean on one side and a calm lagoon on the other. It is one of Togo's oldest towns and for a long time was its most important trading port. Today its wide sandy beach, painted colonial-era buildings, and busy fish market make it one of the most picturesque places in the country.

Tell me more

Aného sits on a thin finger of land — at its narrowest point you can stand in the middle of town and see water on both sides. In the morning, fishing boats set out through the surf into the open Atlantic. In the evening, the same boats come back loaded with tuna, barracuda, and sea bass, and the fish market fills with colour, noise, and the smell of the sea.

The town has an interesting mix of architectural styles because traders from different parts of the world passed through here for centuries. You can see old buildings with arched verandas and faded pastel walls standing next to newer concrete houses. Some buildings are decorated with colourful tiles, giving the streets a patchwork, storybook feel.

Behind the town, the Lac de Togo lagoon provides another playground for fishers in canoes, and children often swim in the calmer lagoon water rather than the rougher ocean. The bridge linking Aného to the main coastal road is a favourite spot for watching the sunset turn the water gold and pink each evening.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Aného has water on both sides. How might that shape the way people there earn their living and spend their time?
  2. 02Buildings in Aného show many different styles because traders from all over the world visited. How do visitors and new arrivals change the look and feel of a place?
  3. 03If you lived in a town by the sea, how do you think the sea would change your daily routines?
Try this

Classroom activity

Draw Aného from above as a map — a thin strip of land with ocean on one side and lagoon on the other. Add a fish market, some old painted buildings, fishing boats in the sea, and canoes in the lagoon. Give your map a compass rose and a simple key. Compare your map with a real satellite view if you have internet access.