A
traditional Maasai village - Kenya 2008
For a donation to their nearby school we were able to
visit a Masaai village and to take photos.
Their village was just outside the Maasai Mara National Reserve.
Firstly we had the welcoming dance of the men
The
Maasai
are an indigenous African ethnic group of semi-nomadic people located
in Kenya and northern Tanzania.
Due to their distinctive customs and dress and residence near the many
game parks of East Africa,
they are among the most internationally well-known African ethnic
groups.
The Maasai speak the Maa language.
Is is estimated that there is a total Maasai population approaching
900,000.
On our drive to the Maasai Mara we passed many Maasai in their
colourful clothing.
Although
the Tanzanian and
Kenyan governments have instituted programs to encourage the Maasai
to abandon their traditional semi-nomadic lifestyle, the
people have continued their age-old customs.
Next we had the welcoming dance of the women
Some of my new friends
The Maasai houses are
constructed by women.
The structural framework is formed of timber poles fixed
directly into the ground and interwoven with
a lattice of smaller branches, which is then plastered with a
mix of mud, sticks, grass, cow dung and urine, and ash.
Starting a fire without matches. Not unlike the way
Australian Aborigines start fires.
Villages are
enclosed in a circular fence (Enkang) built by the men, usually of
thorned acacia.
At night all cows, goats and sheep are placed in
an enclosure in the center, safe from wild animals.
African acacias
Although
young boys are sent out with the calves and lambs as soon as they can
toddle,
childhood for boys is mostly playtime. Girls are
responsible for chores such as cooking and milking.