Kawaza Village Tourism Project is offering the more adventurous tourists a stay in a traditional village. Here visitors are accommodated in huts, sleeping on grass mats like everyone else (mattresses are available if needed), and eating traditional dishes prepared on an open fire. Upon arrival a detailed programme based on the wishes of the visitor is drawn up. A walk in the bush to hear about the different trees and their traditional uses, a visit to the palace of the Senior Kunda Chief or seeing how the children are taught in the nearby school are among the options. Spirits and other non-physical entities play an important role in Zambian belief. To learn about the fascinating aspect of Kunda culture, a visit to a traditional healer can be arranged. Or why not take a visit to the sacred place where rainmaker ceremonies are conducted and where a Chief in 1876 was turned into a Baobab tree! The choice is yours. However, probably the best way of getting close contact with the local people, is to take part in daily life activities. Visitors to Kawaza Village are therefore invited to join the villagers whnen they go into the fields to work, or when the women are grinding Maize using stones, carrying water on there heads or preparing traditional local dishes like stiff maize porridge (Nsima) with relish made out of pumpkin leaves. In Kawaza village there is no electricity but that does not mean that visitors will have to go to bed right after sunset. In the dark, tropical night, villagers and school children will entertain you with drumming, dances and drama. And the finest story tellers will tell the old, dramatic Kunda stories with everyone seated around the fire.