Share the spirit of the season and join Saint Joseph's Catholic
Church Choir for a Sunset Christmas Carol sing-along as Emmanuel Kazumba
leads you through a jamboree of carols.
The party starts at 8pm! Rock around the Christmas Tree with Santa's
Karaoke Party and lots of sparkling good cheer.
Christmas Day Chill Out
Join us at the Sunset Bar for lazy day Christmas
cocktails and Sizzling Sunset Bar-B-Q. Savour a variety of
fresh local seafood & quality meats marinated with our Chef's own secret
recipe & char-grilled to perfection.
New Year's Eve
Indulge in the exotic flavours of our specially prepared New Year's Eve menu
for an evening of fine dining in Tradewinds
Restaurant. The diet starts in January so this is your last chance
to indulge one last time!
The clock is ticking for an unforgettable New Year's celebration with Big Music
from Big Joe entertaining all the party revellers with the best sounds this
side of the Equator.
Countdown to 2014 in style in the
Sunset Bar.
The place to be and be seen!
Africa House History
The oracle pace quickened with the increase of the drum tempo... Dressed in
a loincloth, a necklace of horns around his neck and his body adorned with
animal skin and other tools of his trade, around and around he went dipping
the whisker in the gourd filled with a magical liquid concoction and spraying
it onto the tethered goat. Reciting intonation loudly, his bloodshot eyes
bulging and arms flaring, his dance reached its frenzied climax.
The tall man standing aside, dressed in a long white robe with a turban tied
around his head looked towards the east. The first sign of dawn was beginning
to show against the pitch black sky - it was time. He withdrew a long knife
from the sheath around his waist, bent down, a flash of steel against the
flames as he slashed the throat of the goat separating the head from the body.
As he placed the blood drenched goat head atop of the waist high stone wall he
could hear the witch doctor prophecy:
"May it stand for a thousand years. Blessed are all who comes through it's
doors. Laughter and happiness shall prevail within its walls..."
And so the head was placed on the building which approximately 150 years later
became the Africa House Hotel.
Fiction? Wild imagination? Not so, please read on...
The first part of the building was erected by Ibn Ismail, a wealthy and
flamboyant Omani slave trader and used as his home in Zanzibar. Towards the end
of his life he donated it to the Sultan of Zanzibar and it became a guest house
for members of the Royal Family. Majid, the sultan's son was a frequent visitor
to the house for his forbidden love tryst with the beautiful slave girl Ayasha.
Over the years, the building became part of the Royal Family "Bait al Mal"
(community trust) and was eventually sold to a family who leased it to the
newly formed English Club.
In 1888, the English Club (the oldest such club in East Africa) opened
exclusively to English residents. Facilities included a bar, restaurant,
library, billiard room and accommodation. Golf, tennis, hockey and cricket
matches were played at the clubs sports fields at Mnazi Mmoja. Membership
regulations changed in later years allowing Europeans and Americans to apply.
One of the annual highlights was the New Years Eve fancy dress ball which
created great interest amongst the locals. Large crowds would gather to stare
at the mad "wazungu" (colonials) in their fancy dress costumes.
Later, garages were built at the sea front (the present day shops), and a
terrace erected above. (Now the Sunset Bar)
After the revolution in 1964, the English Club and all other secular social
clubs were abolished by Presidential Decree. The building was taken over by
the government and converted to a hotel which became part of a co-operation
(Furaha ya Visiwani) which included the Zanzibar Hotel and the Starehe Club
(formally the Yacht Club).
Over the years, the building was neglected and fell into disrepair. Most of the
books from its once impressive library (where research by the author of the
novels Murder in Zanzibar and Tradewinds was carried out) disappeared. The
decrepit hotel with its dark corridors, stinking toilets and unreliable stock
of warm beers - the only place in Zanzibar you may have found one, became a
haven for young tourists on the hippy trail, a meeting place of souls from
around the world in a journey of discovery and the young at heart in search of
a glimpse of the past.
The building remained in this decrepit and semi abandoned state until it was
rescued by an Omani investor with a dream. For him, the building was much more
than a potential business; it was love encounter which turned into an obsessive
affair. Negotiation with the government led to the privatisation of the hotel.
Years of neglect had taken a heavy toll on the building and inspections revealed
many haphazard repairs. Partitions and additions using incompatible methods
together with heavy water tanks on every floor greatly compromised the
structure of the building; indeed part of the building had collapsed and was
off limits to the construction crew. Every effort must be made to transform the
building to its former glory. Restoration commenced. Plumbing and electrical
system were installed, foundations strengthened and walls rebuild. Traditional
building methods were used throughout employing many skilled and semi-skilled
local artisans.
It was during the restoration of the oldest part of the wall that the building
revealed its secret... The skull of the goat, the incense burner and other
sacrificial implements used by the Oracle to bless the house more than 150
years ago were discovered!
Decor and interior furnishing was a task which the new owner, an airline
captain, took a special interest in. Through his travels came carpets from
Persia, lamps from Morocco, marble from Italy, silk and velvet from China,
bar decor from England, antique four poster beds from Zanzibar and other
paraphernalia from the Arabian Gulf and the rest of the world. Everything had
to reflect a sense of place, history and tradition creating an aura of
timelessness, elegance and grandeur.
The Africa House re-awakened from its checkered and interesting past,
embracing all who walk through the door with warmth and old world charm.
Laughter and happiness prevail.
AFRICA
HOUSE
HOTEL,
STONE
TOWN,
ZANZIBAR
ISLAND
P.O. Box 3246, Shangani, Stone Town, Zanzibar
Tel.: +255 (0)774 43 23 40 or +255 (0)777 212621
Email: /
Skype: africahousehotel