• Home
  • Suggest A DIY
  • DIY Newsletter

Lesson Plans

Ideas and resources

  • About CraftGossip
  • Our Network
    • Bath & Body Crafts
    • Candle Making Ideas
    • Crochet Ideas
    • Cross Stitch
    • Edible Crafts
    • Felting Patterns
    • Glass Art
    • Home & Garden Ideas
    • Indie Crafts
    • Jewelry Making
    • Kids Crafts
    • Knitting Patterns
    • Lesson Plans
    • Needlework
    • Party Ideas
    • Polymer Clay
    • Quilting Ideas
    • Recycled Crafts
    • Scrapbooking
    • Sewing Patterns
    • Card Making
    • DIY Weddings
    • Not Craft Ideas
  • Giveaways
  • Roundups
  • Store
  • Search

Learn about Burundi for Kids

January 22, 2025 by Sarah White Leave a Comment

Burundi, officially the Republic of Burundi, is a landlocked country in southeast Africa. It’s a nation with a long history that has been marked in modern times by coups and ethnic conflict.

Burundi Basics

  • Burundi is bordered by Rwanda, Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. After World War I, the territory of Rwanda and Burundi, which had been colonized by the Germans, were combined into one territory under Belgian control called Rwanda-Urundi.
  • Burundi’s capital is Gitega and its largest city is Bujumbura, but the nation is mostly rural. It has a population of more than 14 million people in a country that’s about 10,747 square miles, or 27,834 square kilometers. It is one of the smallest countries in Africa and is also one of the poorest and least developed countries in the world.
  • Nearly all of the country is ethnically Barundi, with 85 percent being Hutu and 14 percent Tutsi. When the Tutsi were in power there was a genocide against Hutus in 1972.
  • The official languages are Kirundi, French, English and Swahili, but Kirundi is by far the dominant language.
  • The name Burundi comes from the kind of Urundi, who ruled in the area starting in the 16th century.
  • The country is a republic and has a president, and the constitution requires that 30 percent of the members of the Senate be female.

Burundi National Symbols

The Burundi flag has wedges of red and green with white stripes between them, with a white circle in the center and three six-pointed stars in red outlined in green inside that. The three stars represent the three main ethnic groups — Hutu, Tutsi and Twa — as well as the three words in the national motto, which are unity, work and progress.

“Burundi Bwacu” is the national anthem, which means “Our Burundi.” It was adopted when the country gained independence in 1962.

The transvaal lion, a subspecies of African lion, is said to be the national animal, but the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs website on national symbols only lists the flag and the national anthem. Symbol Hunt also lists the lion, as well as the great blue turaco as the national bird and the bujumbura as national flower, which looks like a hibiscus.

Burundi Activities for Kids

That link for the bird above is a video kids can watch to see and hear what a great blue turaco is like.

Learn about Lake Tanganyika, which is the longest freshwater lake in the world and the second deepest. It forms part of the boundary of Burundi with the DRC.

Read the story of explorers Henry Stanley and David Livingstone, who met in Ujiji, Tanzania, but whose meeting is memorialized with a big rock in Burundi that overlooks Lake Tanganyika.

Spend some time learning about African lions and check out these ideas for learning about lions from Montessori Nature.

Learn about the karyenda, a type of drum that was once featured on the flag of Burundi. Traditionally this drum was a sacred object and the king was said to be able to interpret the beating of the drum as a message for the kingdom. Watch some traditional Burundi drummers here.

For kids who like creepy stories, tell them about Gustave, the ancient and deadly crocodile who might have eaten up to 300 people.

Burundi is known for its pottery, so you can make pinch pots or play with clay in other ways while talking about how clay pots are made and used in cooking there.

According to The Flavor Vortex, boko book harees is considered the national dish. This combination of chicken and bulgur is easy to cook and kids might like it, too. Get the recipe from Naptime Prep Cook or Jess Eats and Travels (this one looks like it has a lot more turmeric).

Next Plan Idea:

  • Democratic Republic of the Congo for Kids
«
»

Have you read?

Try This Fun Bake Off Drawing Challenge with a Group of Kids

Teach the Teacher Printable Worksheets: A Fun End-of-Year Student Lesson Activity

Book Review: Wild Your World

Teach the Teacher Activities and Lesson Plans That Put Students in Charge

America 250 Fourth of July Activities for Kids

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

Art Christmas Classroom Craft by Holiday Craft Inspirations DIY Tutorials and Patterns Elementary Games General Homeschool Kids Crafts Lesson Plan Activities & Ideas Math Nature PreSchool Printables Science Craft STEM & STEAM Toddler Tween

RSS More Articles

  • Designer Spotlight: Silverberry Designs
  • Sewing Pattern Saturday Review: The Juniper Dress PDF Sewing Pattern
  • Crochet Siamese Cat – Emotional Support Kitty
  • Easy Fourth of July Ribbon Wreath – No-Sew Patriotic Door Decor
  • Book Review: 200 Sanity-Saving Tips, Tricks, and Hacks for Quilters
  • How to Make a Shirt Shaped Card for Father’s Day
  • Free Felting Tutorial Friday: Needle Felted Bear Face
  • Freebie Friday – Free Printable 4th of July Junk Journal Images
  • How to Make A Wedding Tag Mini Scrapbook Album
  • Try This Fun Bake Off Drawing Challenge with a Group of Kids

Pick Your Blog

  • Sewing
  • Knitting
  • Quilting
  • Crochet
  • Home & Garden
  • Recycled Crafts
  • Scrapbooking
  • Card Making
  • Polymer Clay
  • Cross-Stitch
  • Edible Crafts
  • Felting
  • Glass Art
  • Indie Crafts
  • Kids Crafts
  • Jewelry Making
  • Lesson Plans
  • Needlework
  • Bath & Body
  • Party Ideas
  • Candle Making
  • DIY Weddings
  • Not Craft
  • Free Craft Projects

Copyright © 2026 · CraftGossip | Start Here | Contact Us | Link to Us | Your Editors | Privacy and affiliate policy