Two crocodile heads. One stomach. Everything they swallow feeds both of them equally. They are still fighting. The Akan people of Ghana looked at this image and did not call it a failure. They called it the most honest picture of what human community actually is — shared destiny, and still competing — and they made it into a symbol. Not to celebrate the conflict. To ask the question it raises: if the stomach is already one, what exactly are the heads fighting about?
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Funtumfunafu
Funtumfunefu Denkyemfunefu
Funtumfunafu

Two crocodiles. One stomach. The Akan symbol Funtumfunefu Denkyemfunefu is one of the most vivid images in the Adinkra canon — and one of its most quietly urgent lessons. It doesn't ask you to stop disagreeing. It asks you to remember what you're still sharing, even in the middle of the fight.
