Jump to content

Maasai people: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
m Reverting possible vandalism by 24.173.158.30 to version by Listmeister. False positive? Report it. Thanks, ClueBot NG. (1064428) (Bot)
Line 13: Line 13:
|related = [[Samburu people|Samburu]]
|related = [[Samburu people|Samburu]]
}}
}}
The '''Maasai ''' (sometimes spelled "Masai" or "Masaai") are a [[Nilotic]] [[ethnic group]] of semi-nomadic people located in [[Kenya]] and northern [[Tanzania]]. They are among the best known of African ethnic groups, due to their distinctive customs and dress and residence near the many game parks of East Africa.<ref name="b">[http://www.bluegecko.org/kenya/tribes/maasai/ Maasai - Introduction] Jens Fincke, 2000-2003</ref> They speak [[Maasai language|Maa (ɔl Maa)]],<ref name="b" /> a member of the [[Nilo-Saharan]] language family that is related to [[Dinka language|Dinka]] and [[Nuer language|Nuer]], and are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania: [[Swahili language|Swahili]] and [[English language|English]]. The Maasai population has reported as numbering 453,000 in Kenya
The '''Maasai ''' (sometimes spelled "Masai" or "Masaai") are a [[Nilotic]] [[ethnic group]] of semi-nomadic people located in [[Kenya]] and northern [[Tanzania]]. They are among the best known of African ethnic groups, due to their distinctive customs and dress and residence near the many game parks of East Africa.<ref name="b">[http://www.bluegecko.org/kenya/tribes/maasai/ Maasai - Introduction] Jens Fincke, 2000-2003</ref> They speak [[Maasai language|Maa (ɔl Maa)]],<ref name="b" /> a member of the [[Nilo-Saharan]] language family that is related to [[Dinka language|Dinka]] and [[Nuer language|Nuer]], and are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania: [[Swahili language|Swahili]] and [[English language|English]]. The Maasai population has been reported as numbering 453,000 in Kenya in the 2009 census, compared to 377,000 in 1989 and 400,000 in 2000.

The Tanzanian and Kenyan governments have instituted programs to encourage the Maasai to abandon their traditional semi-nomadic lifestyle, but the people have continued their age-old customs.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 122. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref> Recently, [[Oxfam]] has claimed that the lifestyle of the Maasai should be embraced as a response to climate change because of their ability to farm in deserts and scrublands.<ref>{{cite news | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7568695.stm | title = Maasai 'can fight climate change' | date = 18 August 2008 | work=BBC News}}</ref> Many Maasai tribes throughout Tanzania and Kenya welcome visits to their village to experience their culture, traditions, and lifestyle.<ref>[http://www.climbkili.com/safari-etc/climb-kili-safaris/masai-tribes/ Visiting a Maasi Village<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==History==
===Overview===
The Maasai are a Nilotic group in East Africa, next to the Indian Ocean. Nilotes speak [[Nilo-Saharan language]], and came to Eastern Africa by way of [[South Sudan]].<ref name="Okothndaloh">A. Okoth & A. Ndaloh, ''Peak Revision K.C.P.E. Social Studies'', (East African Publishers), p.60-61.</ref> Most Nilotes in Eastern Africa, including the Maasai, the [[Samburu people|Samburu]] and the [[Kalenjin people|Kalenjin]], are [[Pastoralism|pastoralists]], and are famous for their fearsome reputations as warriors and cattle-rustlers.<ref name="Okothndaloh"/> As with the Bantu, the Maasai and other Nilotes in Eastern Africa have adopted many customs and practices from the neighboring [[Cushitic languages|Cushitic]] groups, including the [[age set]] system of social organization, [[circumcision]], and vocabulary terms.<ref name="Collins">Robert O. Collins, ''The southern Sudan in historical perspective'', (Transaction Publishers: 2006), p.9-10.</ref><ref name="Wandi">S. Wandibba et al, p.19-20.</ref>

===Origin, migration and assimilation===
[[File:Maasai man, Eastern Serengeti, October 2006.jpg|thumb|right|Maasai man]]
According to their own [[oral history]], the Maasai originated from the lower Nile valley north of [[Lake Turkana]] (Northwest Kenya) and began migrating south around the 15th century, arriving in a long trunk of land stretching from what is now northern Kenya to what is now central Tanzania between the 17th and late 18th century. Many ethnic groups that had already formed settlements in the region were forcibly displaced by the incoming Maasai,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.maasaieducation.org/maasai-culture/maasai-history.htm |title=Maasai Education Discovery |publisher=Maasaieducation.org |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> while other, mainly southern Cushitic groups, were assimilated into Maasai society. The resulting mixture of Nilotic and Cushitic populations also produced the Kalenjin and Samburu.<ref>International Labour Office, ''Traditional occupations of indigenous and tribal peoples: emerging trends'', (International Labour Organization: 2000), p.55.</ref>

===Settlement in East Africa===
The Maasai territory reached its largest size in the mid-19th century, and covered almost all of the [[Kenyan Rift Valley|Great Rift Valley]] and adjacent lands from [[Mount Marsabit]] in the north to [[Dodoma]] in the south.<ref>''Northern Tanzania with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar'' by Phillip Briggs 2006 page 200 ISBN 1 84162 146 3</ref> At this time the Maasai, as well as the larger Nilotic group they were part of, raided cattle as far east as the [[Tanga Region|Tanga coast]] in Tanganyika (now mainland Tanzania). Raiders used spears and shields, but were most feared for throwing clubs (orinka) which could be accurately thrown from up to 70 [[Pace (unit of length)|paces]] (appx. 100 metres). In 1852, there was a report of a concentration of 800 Maasai warriors on the move in what is now Kenya. In 1857, after having depopulated the “Wakuafi wilderness” in what is now southeastern Kenya, Maasai warriors threatened [[Mombasa]] on the Kenyan coast.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=PQJjYC74tu8C&pg=PA183&lpg=PA183&dq=mombasa+maasai+1855&source=web&ots=1qDbq0WFrH&sig=-fwB9fWjkEt4scMNLIpnyIpTBMo |title=Sources and methods in African history: spoken, written, unearthed - Toyin Falola - Google Boeken |publisher=Books.google.com |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref><ref>''Sources and Methods in African History: Spoken, Written, Unearthed'' by Toyin Falola, Christian Jennings (2003), page 18 2. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 1580461344</ref>
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 105-DOA0556, Deutsch-Ostafrika, Massaikrieger.jpg|thumb|Maasai warriors in [[German East Africa]], c. 1906-1918.]]
Because of this migration, the Maasai are the southernmost Nilotic speakers.
The period of expansion was followed by the Maasai "Emutai" of 1883-1902. This period was marked by epidemics of [[contagious bovine pleuropneumonia]], [[rinderpest]] and [[smallpox]]. The estimate first put forward by a German lieutenant in what was then northwest [[Tanganyika]], was that 90 percent of cattle and half of wild animals perished from rinderpest. German doctors in the same area claimed that “every second” African had a pock-marked face as the result of smallpox. This period coincided with drought. Rains failed completely in 1897 and 1898.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/ecology/news/news.asp?id=192 |title=Ecology Books and Journals |publisher=Blackwell Publishing |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

The [[Austria]]n explorer [[Oscar Baumann]] travelled in Maasai lands in 1891-1893, and described the old Maasai settlement in the [[Ngorongoro Conservation Area|Ngorongoro Crater]] in the 1894 book ''Durch Massailand zur Nilquelle'' ("Through the lands of the Maasai to the source of the Nile"): "There were women wasted to skeletons from whose eyes the madness of starvation glared ... warriors scarcely able to crawl on all fours, and apathetic, languishing elders. Swarms of vultures followed them from high, awaiting their certain victims." By one estimate two-thirds of the Maasai died during this period.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ntz.info/gen/n00526.html |title=Rinderpest |publisher=Ntz.info |date=1997-02-14 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

Starting with a 1904 treaty,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,699336,00.html|title=The Land Is Ours | work=Time | first=Stephan|last=Faris|date=19 September 2004}}</ref> and followed by another in 1911, Maasai lands in Kenya were reduced by 60 percent when the British evicted them to make room for settler ranches, subsequently confining them to present-day Kajiado and Narok districts.<ref>{{cite web|author=Kitumusote |url=http://www.kitumusote.org/history |title=History of the Maasai |publisher=Kitumusote |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> Maasai in Tanganyika (now mainland Tanzania) were displaced from the fertile lands between [[Mount Meru (Tanzania)|Mount Meru]] and [[Mount Kilimanjaro]], and most of the fertile highlands near [[Ngorongoro]] in the 1940s.<ref>''The Myth of Wild Africa: Conservation Without Illusion''. Jonathan S. Adams, Thomas O. McShane. 1996. University of California Press. page = 44. ISBN 0520206711</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=GWtWDN0BWt0C&pg=PA42&lpg=PA42&dq=maasai+ears&source=web&ots=7u768brgsE&sig=q8PlaGC5C_ot35-PeLPJYlFDhxQ#PPA44,M1 |title=The myth of wild Africa: conservation without illusion - Jonathan S. Adams, Thomas O. McShane - Google Boeken |publisher=Books.google.com |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> More land was taken to create wildlife reserves and national parks: [[Amboseli Reserve|Amboseli]], [[Nairobi National Park]], [[Masai Mara]], [[Samburu National Reserve|Samburu]], [[Lake Nakuru National Park|Lake Nakuru]] and [[Tsavo]] in Kenya; and [[Lake Manyara|Manyara]], [[Ngorongoro]], Tarangire<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tanzaniaparks.com/tarangire.htm |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070814101508/http://www.tanzaniaparks.com/tarangire.htm |archivedate=2007-08-14 |title=Internet Archive Wayback Machine |publisher=Web.archive.org |date=2007-08-14 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> and [[Serengeti National Park|Serengeti]] in what is now Tanzania.

Maasai are pastoralist and have resisted the urging of the Tanzanian and Kenyan governments to adopt a more sedentary lifestyle. They have demanded grazing rights to many of the national parks in both countries.

The Maasai people stood against slavery and lived alongside most wild animals with an aversion to eating game and birds. Maasai land now has [[East Africa]]'s finest game areas. Maasai society never condoned traffic of human beings, and outsiders looking for people to enslave avoided the Maasai.<ref>''Africa's Great Rift Valley''. Nigel Pavitt. 2001. Page 122. Harry N. Abrams, Incorporated, New York ISBN 0-8109-0602-3</ref>

Though the Maasai people stood against slavery and the traffic of humans beings, they were able to conquer such large areas of land by displacing the people who had previously lived in the area.

Essentially there are twelve geographic sectors of the tribe, each one having its own customs, appearance, leadership and dialects. These subdivisions are known as the Keekonyokie, Damat, Purko, Wuasinkishu, Siria, Laitayiok, Loitai, Kisonko, Matapato, Dalalekutuk, Loodokolani and Kaputiei.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.archive.org/web/20080527022418/www.laleyio.com/facts.html |title=archived copy of laleyio.com |publisher=Web.archive.org |date=2008-05-27 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

==Genetics==
Recent advances in genetic analyses have helped shed some light on the [[ethnogenesis]] of the Maasai people. [[Genetic genealogy]], although a novel tool that uses the genes of modern populations to trace their ethnic and geographic origins, has also helped clarify the possible background of the modern Maasai.

===Autosomal DNA===
The Maasai's [[autosome|autosomal]] [[DNA]] has been examined in a comprehensive study by Tishkoff et al. (2009) on the genetic affiliations of various populations in Africa. According to the study's authors, the Maasai "have maintained their culture in the face of extensive genetic introgression".<ref name="Tishkoff2009">{{Citation | last = Tishkoff et al. | title = The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans | journal = the American Association for the Advancement of Science | year = 2009 | url = http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/1172257 }} Also see [http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/1172257/DC1 Supplementary Data].</ref> Tishkoff et al. also indicate that: "Many Nilo-Saharan-speaking populations in East Africa, such as the Maasai, show multiple cluster assignments from the Nilo-Saharan (red) and Cushitic (dark purple) AACs, in accord with linguistic evidence of repeated [[Nilotic]] assimilation of [[Cushitic languages|Cushites]] over the past 3000 years and with the high frequency of a shared East African–specific mutation associated with lactose tolerance."<ref name="Tishkoff2009"/>

===Y DNA===
A [[Y chromosome|Y-chromosome]] study by Wood et al. (2005) tested various Sub-Saharan populations, including 26 Maasai males from Kenya, for paternal lineages. The authors observed the [[E1b1b|E1b1b haplogroup]] in 50% of the studied Maasai,<ref name = "Wood2005">Elizabeth T Wood, Daryn A Stover, Christopher Ehret ''et al.'', "[https://www.familytreedna.com/pdf/WoodEJHG2005.pdf Contrasting patterns of Y chromosome and mtDNA variation in Africa: evidence for sex-biased demographic processes]", ''European Journal of Human Genetics'' (2005) 13, 867–876. (cf. [http://www.nature.com/ejhg/journal/v13/n7/extref/5201408x1.gif Appendix A: Y Chromosome Haplotype Frequencies])</ref> which is indicative of substantial [[gene flow]] from more northerly Cushitic males, who possess the haplogroup at high frequencies.<ref name="Cruciani2004">Cruciani et al., "[http://www.ajhg.org/AJHG/fulltext/S0002-9297(07)64365-1?large_figure=true Phylogeographic Analysis of Haplogroup E3b (E-M215) Y Chromosomes Reveals Multiple Migratory Events Within and Out Of Africa"], Am J Hum Genet. 2004 May; 74(5): 1014–1022</ref> The second most frequent paternal lineage among the Maasai was [[Haplogroup A (Y-DNA)#A3b2-M13|Haplogroup A3b2]], which is commonly found in Nilotic populations, such as the [[Alur people|Alur]];<ref name = "Wood2005"/><ref name="Hassan">{{cite journal|title=Y-chromosome variation among Sudanese: restricted gene flow, concordance with language, geography, and history.|year= 2008|last=Hassan|pmid=18618658|doi=10.1002/ajpa.20876|volume=137|issue=3|pages=316–23}}</ref> it was observed in 27% of Maasai males. The third most frequently observed paternal DNA marker in the Maasai was the [[Haplogroup E1b1a (Y-DNA)|E1b1a haplogroup]] (E-P1), which is very common in the Sub-Saharan region; it was found in 12% of the Maasai samples. The [[Haplogroup B (Y-DNA)|Haplogroup B]] was also observed in 8% of the studied Maasai,<ref name = "Wood2005"/> which is also found in 30% (16/53) of Southern Sudanese Nilotes.<ref name="Hassan"/>

===mtDNA===
According to an [[mtDNA]] study by Castri et al. (2008), which tested Maasai individuals in Kenya, the maternal lineages found among the Maasai are quite diverse, but similar in overall frequency to that observed in other Nilo-Hamitic populations from the region, such as the [[Samburu people|Samburu]]. Most of the tested Maasai belonged to various [[Macro-haplogroup L (mtDNA)|macro-haplogroup L]] sub-clades, including [[Haplogroup L0 (mtDNA)|L0]], [[Haplogroup L2 (mtDNA)|L2]], [[Haplogroup L3 (mtDNA)|L3]], [[Haplogroup L4 (mtDNA)|L4]] and [[Haplogroup L5 (mtDNA)|L5]]. Some maternal gene flow from [[North Africa|North]] and Northeast Africa was also reported, particularly via the presence of mtDNA [[Haplogroup M (mtDNA)|haplogroup M]] lineages in about 12.5% of the Maasai samples.<ref name="Castrí">{{cite journal|title=Kenyan crossroads: migration and gene flow in six ethnic groups from Eastern Africa.|year= 2008|last=Castrí|pmid=19934476|url=http://www.isita-org.com/jass/Contents/2008%20vol86/12_Castri.pdf|volume=86|pages=189–92}}</ref>

==Culture==
<!-- [[Maasai culture]] and [[Maasai Music and Culture]] redirects here -->
[[Image:Maasai Enkang and Hut.JPG|thumb|right|Maasai people and huts with enkang barrier in foreground - eastern [[Serengeti]], 2006]]
[[File:Crocuta vs masai 2.png|left|thumb|Maasai warriors confronting a [[spotted hyena]], a common livestock predator, as photographed in ''In Wildest Africa'' (1907)]]
Maasai society is strongly [[patriarchal]] in nature, with elder men, sometimes joined by retired elders, deciding most major matters for each Maasai group. A full body of oral law covers many aspects of behaviour. Formal [[execution]] is unknown, and normally payment in cattle will settle matters. An out of court process is also practiced called 'amitu', 'to make peace', or 'arop', which involves a substantial apology.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 53, 54. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>
The Maasai are [[monotheistic]], worshipping a single deity called ''Enkai'' or ''Engai''. Engai has a dual nature: Engai Narok (Black God) is benevolent, and Engai Nanyokie (Red God) is vengeful.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.institut.veolia.org/en/cahiers/water-symbolism/water-myths/africa-water.aspx |title=African water symbolism and its consequences |publisher=Institut.veolia.org |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> The "Mountain of God", [[Ol Doinyo Lengai]], is located in northernmost Tanzania. The central human figure in the Maasai religious system is the laibon who may be involved in: [[shaman]]istic [[healing]], [[divination]] and [[prophecy]], and ensuring success in war or adequate rainfall. Whatever power an individual laibon had was a function of personality rather than position.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/EthnoAtlas/Hmar/Cult_dir/Culture.7860 |title=Society-MASAI |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> Many Maasai have become [[Christianity|Christian]], and to a lesser extent, [[Muslim]].
The Maasai are known for their intricate jewelry.

A high [[infant mortality]] rate among the Maasai has led to babies not truly being recognised until they reach an age of 3 moons, ''ilapaitin''.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 169. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref> For Maasai living a traditional life, the end of life is virtually without [[ceremony]], and the dead are left out for [[scavenger]]s.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 103. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref> A corpse rejected by scavengers (mainly [[spotted hyena]]s, which are known as ''Ondilili'' or ''Oln'gojine'' in the Maasai language) is seen as having something wrong with it, and liable to cause social disgrace; therefore, it is not uncommon for bodies to be covered in fat and blood from a slaughtered [[ox]].<ref name="attitudes">''Cultural and Public Attitudes: Improving the Relationship between Humans and Hyaenas'' from Mills, M.g.L. and Hofer, H. (compilers). (1998) ''Hyaenas: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN/SSC Hyaena Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK. vi + 154 pp.</ref> Burial has in the past been reserved for great chiefs, since it is believed to be harmful to the soil.<ref>''The Lions of Tsavo: Exploring the Legacy of Africa's Notorious Man-eaters'' By Bruce D. Patterson. 2004. McGraw-Hill Professional. Page 93. ISBN 0071363335</ref>

Traditional Maasai [[lifestyle (sociology)|lifestyle]] centres around their [[cattle]] which constitute their primary source of food. The measure of a man's wealth is in terms of cattle and children. A herd of 50 cattle is respectable, and the more children the better. A man who has plenty of one but not the other is considered to be poor.<ref>''Northern Tanzania with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar'' by Phillip Briggs (2006), page 200. ISBN 1 84162 146 3</ref> A Maasai [[religious belief]] relates that God gave them all the cattle on earth, leading to the belief that [[rustling]] cattle from other tribes is a matter of taking back what is rightfully theirs, a practice that has become much less common.<ref>''Africa's Great Rift Valley''. Nigel Pavitt. 2001. pages 138. Harry N. Abrams, Incorporated, New York ISBN 0-8109-0602-3</ref>

=== Influences from the outside world ===
Maintaining a traditional pastoral lifestyle has become increasingly difficult due to outside influences of the modern world. [[Garrett Hardin|Garrett Hardin's]] article, outlining the “tragedy of the commons”, as well as [[Melville Herskovits|Melville Herskovits']] “cattle complex” helped to influence ecologists and policy makers about the harm Maasai pastoralists were causing to savannah rangelands. This concept was later proven false by [[anthropologist]]s but is still deeply ingrained in the minds of ecologists and Tanzanian officials.<ref name="Sustain">McCabe, Terrence. (2003). “Sustainability and livelihood diversification among the Maasai of Northern Tanzania”. Human Organization. Vol 62.2. p. 100-111.</ref> This influenced policy makers to remove all Maasai from the Serengeti National Park and relegated them to areas in and around the [[Ngorongoro Conservation Area]] (NCA). The plan for the NCA was to put Maasai interests above all else but this promise was never met. Due to an increase in Maasai population, loss of cattle populations to disease, and lack of available rangelands due to new park boundaries, the Maasai were forced to develop new ways of sustaining themselves. Many Maasai began to cultivate maize and other crops to get by, a practice that was viewed negative culturally.<ref name="Sustain" /> Cultivation was first introduced to the Maasai by displaced WaArusha and WaMeru women who were married to Maasai men; subsequent generations practiced a mixed livelihood. To further complicate their situation, in 1975 the Ngorongoro Conservation Area banned cultivation practices. In order to survive they are forced to participate in Tanzania’s monetary economy. They have to sell their animals and traditional medicines in order to buy food. The ban on cultivation was lifted in 1992 and cultivation has again become an important part of Maasai livelihood. Park boundaries and land privatisation has continued to limit grazing area for the Maasai and have forced them to change considerably.<ref>Goodman, Ric. (2002). “Pastoral livelihoods in Tanzania: Can the Maasai benefit from conservation?” Current Issues in Tourism. Vol 5.3,4. P.280-286.</ref>

Over the years, many projects have begun to help Maasai tribal leaders find ways to preserve their traditions while also balancing the education needs of their children for the modern world.

The emerging forms of employment among the Maasai people include farming, business (selling of traditional medicine, running of restaurants/shops, buying and selling of minerals, selling milk and milk products by women, embroideries), and wage employment (as security guards/ watchmen, waiters, tourist guides), and others who are engaged in the public and private sectors.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ilo.org/dyn/infoecon/docs/790/F2096573592/Pastoralists.pdf |title=Challenges To Traditional Livelihoods And Newly Emerging Employment Patterns Of Pastoralists In Tanzania |format=PDF |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

Many Maasai have moved away from the nomadic life to positions in commerce and government.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mashada.com/forums/23988-post19.html |title=Mashada Forums - View Single Post - Paul Muite...another piece to the Mt. Kenya Mafia jig-s |publisher=Mashada.com |date=2003-03-20 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> Yet despite the sophisticated urban lifestyle they may lead, many will happily head homewards dressed in designer clothes, only to emerge from the traditional family homestead wearing a shuka (colourful piece of cloth), cow hide sandals and carrying a wooden club (o-rinka) - at ease with themselves and the world.<ref>[http://www.travelafricamag.com/content/view/230/56/ Kenya: The Maasi - Travel Africa Magazine<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

===Shelter===
[[Image:Maasai shelter.jpg|thumb|left|Shelter covered in cattle dung for waterproofing]]
[[Image:Ludzie06(js).jpg|thumb|right|Maasai women repairing a house in Masai Mara (1996)]]
As a historically [[nomadic]] and then semi-nomadic people, the Maasai have traditionally relied on local, readily available materials and indigenous [[technology]] to construct their [[house|housing]]. The traditional Maasai house was in the first instance designed for people on the move and was thus very impermanent in nature. The ''Inkajijik'' (houses) are either star-shaped or circular, and are constructed by able-bodied 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 [[feces|dung]] and human [[urine]], and ash. The cow dung ensures that the roof is water-proof. The enkaj is small, measuring about 3x5&nbsp;m and standing only 1.5&nbsp;m high. Within this space, the family cooks, eats, sleeps, socializes, and stores food, fuel, and other household possessions. Small [[livestock]] are also often accommodated within the enkaji.<ref>[http://google.com/search?q=cache:Th7Q1mTUG-oJ:www.thinkcycle.org/tc-filesystem/download/development_by_design_2001/sustainable_improvement_of_traditional_maasai_housing_through_participatory_technology_development/Maasai%2520Housing.pdf+maasai+house&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=7&gl=us ]{{dead link|date=February 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.maasai-association.org/maasai.html |title=Maasai People, Kenya |publisher=Maasai-association.org |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> Villages are enclosed in a circular fence (an enkang) built by the men, usually of thorned [[acacia]], a native tree. At night, all [[cow]]s, [[goat]]s, and [[sheep]] are placed in an enclosure in the centre, safe from [[wild animal]]s.

{{wide image|Manyatta.jpg|1000px|Panoramic view of Maasai Enkang}}

==Social organization==
The central unit of Maasai society is the age-set. Young boys are sent out with the calves and lambs as soon as they can toddle, but childhood for boys is mostly playtime, with the exception of ritual beatings to test courage and endurance. Girls are responsible for chores such as cooking and milking, skills which they learn from their mothers at an early age.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 55, 94. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref> Every 15 years or so, a new and individually named generation of Morans or Il-murran (warriors) will be initiated. This involves most boys between 12 and 25, who have reached puberty and are not part of the previous age-set. One rite of passage from boyhood to the status of junior warrior is a painful [[circumcision]] ceremony, which is performed without anaesthetic. This ritual is typically performed by the elders, who use a sharpened knife and makeshift cattle hide bandages for the procedure. The Maa word for circumcision is emorata.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~dlpayne/Maa%20Lexicon/index-english/main.htm |title=English - Maa |publisher=Darkwing.uoregon.edu |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> The boy must endure the operation in silence. Expressions of pain bring dishonor, albeit temporarily. Any exclamations can cause a mistake in the delicate and tedious process, which can result in life-long scarring, dysfunction, and pain. The healing process will take 3–4 months, during which urination is painful and nearly impossible at times, and boys must remain in black clothes for a period of 4–8 months.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.maasai-association.org/ceremonies.html |title=Maasai Association |publisher=Maasai Association |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

[[Image:Young Maasai Warrior.jpg|thumb|120px|right|Junior ''Moran'' with headdress and markings]]
During this period, the newly circumcised young men will live in a "manyatta", a "village" built by their mothers. The manyatta has no encircling barricade for protection, emphasizing the warrior role of protecting the community. No inner [[kraal]] is built, since warriors neither own cattle nor undertake stock duties. Further rites of passage are required before achieving the status of senior warrior, culminating in the eunoto ceremony, the "coming of age".<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 83, 100-103. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

[[Image:Bandera masai.svg|thumb|150px|left|Maasai flag]]
When a new generation of warriors is initiated, the existing ilmoran will graduate to become junior elders, who are responsible for political decisions until they in turn become senior elders.<ref>''Northern Tanzania - The Bradt Safari Guide'' by Phillip Briggs (2006). British Library. ISBN 1 84162 146 3</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://maasai-association.org/ceremonies.html |title=Maasai Association |publisher=Maasai Association |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

The warriors spend most of their time now on walkabouts throughout Maasai lands, beyond the confines of their sectional boundaries. They are also much more involved in cattle trading than they used to be, developing and improving basic stock through trades and bartering rather than stealing as in the past.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 88. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://maasai-association.org/maasai.html |title=Maasai People, Kenya |publisher=Maasai-association.org |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

[[Image:Traditional Maasai Dance.jpg|thumb|right|Maasai traditional dance, Adumu]]
One myth about the Maasai is that each young man is supposed to kill a lion before he is circumcised. Lion hunting was an activity of the past, but it has been banned in East Africa—yet lions are still hunted when they maul Maasai livestock,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.maasai-association.org/lion.html |title=Maasai Association |publisher=Maasai Association |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> and young warriors who engage in traditional lion killing do not face significant consequences.<ref>[http://www.lionconservation.org/LionKillinginAmboseliregion2000-May2006.pdf Lion Killing in the Amboseli -Tsavo Ecosystem, 2001-2006, and its Implications for Kenya’s Lion Population]{{dead link|date=February 2012}}</ref> Increasing concern regarding lion populations has given rise to at least one program which promotes accepting compensation when a lion kills livestock, rather than hunting and killing the predator.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bigcatrescue.blogspot.com/2007/07/maasai-tribesmen-help-lions-rather-than.html |title=Field Reports: Maasai tribesmen help lions rather than kill them |publisher=Bigcatrescue.blogspot.com |date=2007-07-06 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> Nevertheless, killing a lion gives one great value and celebrity status in the community.

Young women also undergo [[wiktionary:excision|excision]] ("[[female circumcision]],""[[female genital mutilation]]," "emorata") as part of an elaborate [[rite of passage]] ritual called "Emuratare," the ceremony that initiates young Maasai girls into adulthood through ritual circumcision and then into early arranged marriages.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.orato.com/world-affairs/maasai-ritual-of-female-circumcision |title=Maasai Ritual of Female Circumcision: Genital Cutting Practiced throughout Africa and Middle East |publisher=Orato.com |date= |accessdate=2012-05-05}}</ref> The Maasai believe that female circumcision is necessary and Maasai men may reject any woman who has not undergone it as either not marriageable or worthy of a much-reduced bride price. In Eastern Africa, uncircumcised women, even those highly educated members of parliament like [[Linah Kilimo]], can be accused of not being mature enough to be taken seriously.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.irinnews.org/IndepthMain.aspx?IndepthId=15&ReportId=62462 |title=In-depth: Razor's Edge - The Controversy of Female Genital Mutilation |publisher=IRIN Humanitarian News and Analysis, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs |date=March 2005 |accessdate=2012-05-05}}</ref> To others the practice of female circumcision is known as [[female genital mutilation]], and draws a great deal of criticism from both abroad and many women who have undergone it, such as Maasai activist [[Agnes Pareiyo]]. It has recently been replaced in some instances by a "cutting with words" ceremony involving singing and dancing in place of the mutilation. However, the practice remains deeply ingrained and valued by the culture. The Maa word for circumcision, "emorata," is used for both female and male circumcision, yet the practices are not equitable in terms of benefit and harm to the patient. While there are certain [[circumcision controversies|controversies]] regarding [[circumcision|male circumcision]], it is generally a safe procedure with minimal side effects. In women, however, the practice can result in chronic [[urinary tract infection]]s, [[dysmenorrhea]], excessive scarring, and other medical side effects, all of which have led to increased controversy over the practice.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.irinnews.org/IndepthMain.aspx?IndepthId=15&ReportId=62462 |title=In-depth: Razor's Edge - The Controversy of Female Genital Mutilation |publisher=IRIN Humanitarian News and Analysis, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs |date=March 2005 |accessdate=2012-05-05}}</ref> [[Female genital mutilation]] is illegal in both Kenya and Tanzania.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.afrol.com/News2001/tan007_fgm.htm |title=tan007 Tanzania fails to enforce law against female mutilation |publisher=Afrol.com |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0001524.html |title=The Abolition of Female Genital Mutilation — |publisher=Infoplease.com |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> These circumcisions are usually performed by an invited 'practitioner' who is often not Maasai, usually from a [[Dorobo]] group. The knives and blades which make the cut are fashioned by blacksmiths, il-kunono, who are avoided by the Maasai because they make weapons of death (knives, short swords (ol alem), spears, etc.). Similar to the young men, women who will be circumcised wear dark clothing, paint their faces with markings, and then cover their faces on completion of the ceremony.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 168-173. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

Married women who become pregnant are excused from all heavy work such as milking and gathering firewood. Sexual relations are also banned.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 169. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

[[File:We Rule the School.jpg|thumb|Maasai school in Tanzania]]
The Maasai are traditionally polygamous; this is thought to be a long standing and practical adaptation to high infant and warrior mortality rates. [[Polyandry]] is also practiced. A woman marries not just her husband, but the entire age group. Men are expected to give up their bed to a visiting age-mate guest. The woman decides strictly on her own if she will join the visiting male. Any child which may result is the husband's child and his descendant in the patrilineal order of Maasai society. "Kitala", a kind of divorce or refuge, is possible in the house of a wife's father, usually for gross mistreatment of the wife. Repayment of the bride price, custody of children, etc., are mutually agreed upon.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 86-87. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref><ref>Spencer, P. (1988) ''The Maasai of Matapato: a study of rituals of rebellion'' Manchester University Press, Manchester. Spencer, P. (2003) ''Time, Space, and the Unknown: Maasai configurations of power and providence.'' Routledge, London.</ref>

==Music and dance==
<!-- [[Maasai music]] redirects here -->
[[Image:Maasai-Adumu.jpg|thumb|left|Traditional jumping dance]]
Maasai music traditionally consists of rhythms provided by a chorus of vocalists singing harmonies while a song leader, or olaranyani, sings the melody. The olaranyani is usually the singer who can best sing that song, although several individuals may lead a song. The olaranyani begins by singing a line or title (namba) of a song. The group will respond with one unanimous call in acknowledgment, and the olaranyani will sing a verse over the group's rhythmic throat singing. Each song has its specific namba structure based on [[Call and response (music)|call-and-response]]. Common rhythms are variations of 5/4, 6/4 and 3/4 time signatures. Lyrics follow a typical theme and are often repeated verbatim over time. Neck movements accompany singing. When breathing out the head is leaned forward. The head is tilted back for an inward breath. Overall the effect is one of polyphonic syncopation.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ilmurran.com/ |title=ilMurran |language={{fi icon}} |publisher=ilMurran |date=1999-12-04 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.archive.org/web/20080527010145/www.laleyio.com/music.html |title=Maasai Music (archived copy) |publisher=Web.archive.org |date=2008-05-27 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

Women chant lullabies, humming songs, and songs praising their sons. Nambas, the call-and-response pattern, repetition of nonsense phrases, monophonic melodies<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.music.vt.edu/musicdictionary/texth/Homophonic.html |title=Homophonic |publisher=Music.vt.edu |date=2011-11-17 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.medieval.org/emfaq/misc/homophony.html |title=What is monophony, polyphony, homophony, monody etc.? |publisher=Medieval.org |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> repeated phrases following each verse being sung on a descending scale, and singers responding to their own verses are characteristic of singing by females.<ref>The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 43, 100. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.laleyio.com/songstructure.html |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20080527010145/http://www.laleyio.com/songstructure.html |archivedate=2008-05-27 |title=Song Structure of Maasai Music (archived copy) |publisher=Web.archive.org |date=2008-05-27 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> When many Maasai women gather together, they sing and dance among themselves.<ref>Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. pages 194. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1</ref>

One exception to the vocal nature of Maasai music is the use of the horn of the [[Greater Kudu]] to summon morans for the Eunoto ceremony.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 12. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

Both singing and dancing sometimes occur around manyattas, and involve flirting. Young men will form a line and chant rhythmically, “Oooooh-yah”, with a growl and staccato cough along with the thrust and withdrawal of their lower bodies. Girls stand in front of the men and make the same pelvis lunges while singing a high dying fall of “Oiiiyo..yo” in counterpoint to the men. Although bodies come in close proximity, they do not touch.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 85. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

[[Image:Masaidance.jpg|thumb|Maasai dance]]
Eunoto, the coming of age ceremony of the warrior, can involve ten or more days of singing, dancing and ritual. The warriors of the Il-Oodokilani perform a kind of march-past as well as the '''adumu''', or aigus, sometimes referred as “the jumping dance” by non-Maasai. (both adumu and aigus are Maa verbs meaning "to jump" with adumu meaning "To jump up and down in a dance"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~dlpayne/Maa%20Lexicon/categories/main.htm |title=Maa - Categories |publisher=Darkwing.uoregon.edu |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>) Warriors are well known for, and often photographed during, this competitive jumping. A circle is formed by the warriors, and one or two at a time will enter the center to begin jumping while maintaining a narrow posture, never letting their heels touch the ground. Members of the group may raise the pitch of their voices based on the height of the jump.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.archive.org/web/20080527010156/www.laleyio.com/performance.html |title=Archived copy of laleyio.com |publisher=Web.archive.org |date=2008-05-27 |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:MaasaiRuffs2.JPG|thumb|left|Maasai women with necklet ruff, earrings, etc.]] -->
The girlfriends of the moran (intoyie) parade themselves in their most spectacular costumes as part of the eunoto. The mothers of the moran sing and dance in tribute to the courage and daring of their sons.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 43-45, 100, 107. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

==Body modification==
[[File:Masai Woman.jpg|thumb|Maasai woman with stretched earlobes]]
The piercing and stretching of [[earlobes]] is common among the Maasai. Various materials have been used to both pierce and stretch the lobes, including thorns for piercing, twigs, bundles of twigs, stones, the cross section of elephant tusks and empty film canisters. Fewer and fewer Maasai, particularly boys, follow this custom.<ref>''The Myth of Wild Africa: Conservation Without Illusion''. Jonathan S. Adams, Thomas O. McShane. 1996. University of California Press. page = 42. ISBN 0520206711</ref>
<ref>
[http://books.google.com/books?id=GWtWDN0BWt0C&pg=PA42&lpg=PA42&dq=maasai+ears&source=web&ots=7u768brgsE&sig=q8PlaGC5C_ot35-PeLPJYlFDhxQ The Myth of Wild Africa], Google Books.
</ref>
Women wear various forms of beaded ornaments in both the ear lobe, and smaller piercings at the top of the ear.<ref>''Culture and Customs of Kenya''. Neal Sobania. 2003. Greenwood Press. page 91. ISBN 0313314861</ref>
<ref>
[http://books.google.com/books?id=gfUbHXT2dloC&pg=PA91&lpg=PA91&dq=maasai+ears&source=web&ots=2bhvmh_ZDO&sig=qG0fvuy6s0de2sWkSvtgICzz2fA Culture and Customs of Kenya], Google Books
</ref>

The removal of deciduous canine tooth buds in early childhood is a practice that has been documented in the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania. There exists a strong belief among the Maasai that diarrhoea, vomiting and other febrile illnesses of early childhood are caused by the gingival swelling over the canine region, which is thought to contain 'worms' or 'nylon' teeth. This belief and practice is not unique to the Maasai. In rural Kenya a group of 95 children aged between six months and two years were examined in 1991/92. 87% were found to have undergone the removal of one or more deciduous canine tooth buds. In an older age group (3–7 years of age), 72% of the 111 children examined exhibited missing mandibular or maxillary deciduous canines.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Hassanali J, Amwayi P, Muriithi A |title=Removal of deciduous canine tooth buds in Kenyan rural Maasai |journal=East Afr Med J |volume=72 |issue=4 |pages=207–9 |year=1995 |month=Apr |pmid=7621751 }}
</ref>
<ref>{{cite journal |author=Hiza JF, Kikwilu EN |title=Missing primary teeth due to tooth bud extraction in a remote village in Tanzania |journal=Int J Paediatr Dent |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=31–4 |year=1992 |month=Apr |pmid=1525129 }}</ref>

==Diet==
[[File:Masaai with cattle.jpg|thumb|right|600px|A [[Masaai]] herdsman grazing his cattle inside the Ngorongoro crater]]
Traditionally, the Maasai diet consisted of meat, milk, and blood from cattle. An ILCA study (Nestel 1989) states: “Today, the staple diet of the Maasai consists of cow's milk and maize-meal. The former is largely drunk fresh or in sweet tea and the latter is used to make a liquid or solid porridge. The solid porridge is known as ugali and is eaten with milk; unlike the liquid porridge, ugali is not prepared with milk. Meat, although an important food, is consumed irregularly and cannot be classified as a staple food. Animal fats or butter are used in cooking, primarily of porridge, maize, and beans. Butter is also an important infant food. Blood is rarely drunk.”<ref>Livestock as food for pastoralists in Africa. J. M. Suttie. quoting from Nestel, P. 1989. A society in transition: developmental and seasonal influences on the nutrition of Maasai women and children ILCA, Nairobi [http://www.taa.org.uk/TAAScotland/LivestockasfoodforpastoralistsinAfrica2001.htm ]
</ref>

Studies by the International Livestock Centre for Africa (Bekure et al. 1991) shows a very great change in the diet of the Maasai towards non-livestock products with maize comprising 12 – 39 percent and sugar 8 – 13 percent; about one litre of milk is consumed per person daily.
Most of the milk is consumed as fermented milk or buttermilk - a by-product of butter making. Milk consumption figures are very high by any standards. The needs for protein and essential amino acids are more than adequately satisfied. However, the supply of iron, niacin, vitamin C, vitamin A, thiamine and energy are never fully met by a purely milk diet. Due to changing circumstances, especially the seasonal nature of the milk supply and frequent droughts, most pastoralists, including the Maasai, now include substantial amounts of grain in their diets.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fao.org/docrep/003/t0251e/T0251E07.htm |title=The technology of traditional milk products in developing countries |publisher=Fao.org |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref><ref>[http://www.taa.org.uk/TAAScotland/LivestockasfoodforpastoralistsinAfrica2001.htm ]{{dead link|date=February 2012}}</ref>

The Maasai herd goats and sheep, including the [[Red Maasai]] sheep, as well as the more prized cattle.<ref>[http://www.ilri.org/ILRIPubAware/Uploaded%20Files/20041029128410.00BR_ISS_AfricanGeneticTreasuresKeyToReducingDiseaseAndPoverty.pdf African Genetic Treasures Key to Reducing Disease and Poverty]{{dead link|date=February 2012}}</ref> Electrocardiogram tests applied to 400 young adult male Maasai found no evidence whatsoever of heart disease, abnormalities or malfunction. Further study with carbon-14 tracers showed that the average cholesterol level was about 50 percent of that of an average American. These findings were ascribed to the amazing fitness of morans, which was evaluated as "Olympic standard".<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 87. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

Soups are probably the most important use of plants for food by Maasai. ''[[Acacia nilotica]]'' is the most frequently used soup plant. The root or stem bark is boiled in water and the decoction drunk alone or added to soup. The Maasai are fond of taking this as a drug, and is known to make them energetic, aggressive and fearless. Maasai eat soup laced with bitter bark and roots containing cholesterol-lowering [[saponin]]s; those urban Maasai who don't have access to the bitter plants tend to develop heart disease.<ref>National Geographic Oct. 1995, page 161</ref> Although consumed as snacks, fruits constitute a major part of the food ingested by children and women looking after cattle as well as morans in the wilderness.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001266/126660e.pdf |title=Ethnobotany of the Loita Maasai: towards community management of the Forest of the Lost Child; experiences from the Loita Ethnobotany Project; People and plants working paper; Vol.:8; 2001 |format=PDF |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

The mixing of cattle blood, obtained by nicking the jugular vein, and milk is done to prepare a ritual drink for special celebrations and as nourishment for the sick.<ref>''The Last of the Maasai''. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 90. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref> However, the inclusion of blood in the traditional diet is waning due to the reduction of livestock numbers. More recently, the Maasai have grown dependent on food produced in other areas such as maize meal, rice, potatoes, cabbage (known to the Maasai as goat leaves) etc. The Maasai who live near crop farmers have engaged in cultivation as their primary mode of subsistence. In these areas, plot sizes are generally not large enough to accommodate herds of animals; thus the Maasai are forced to farm.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.maasai-association.org/maasai.htm |title=maasai-association.org }}</ref>

==Clothing==
[[Image:Masai woman.jpg|thumb|right|Maasai woman]]
[[File:Maasai Woman Meeyu Sale Wearing her Finest.jpg|thumb|right|Meeyu Sale Wearing her Finest]]
Clothing varies by age and location. Young men, for instance, wear black for several months following their circumcision. However, red is a favored color. Blue, black, striped, and checkered cloth are also worn, as are multicolored African designs.The names of the clothing are now known as the Matavuvale. The Maasai began to replace animal-skin, [[calfskin|calf hides]] and sheep skin, with commercial cotton cloth in the 1960s.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_gx5217/is_1999/ai_n19133542/pg_4 | work=Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of World Cultures | title=Maasai | year=1999}}</ref>

Shúkà is the [[Maasai language|Maa]] word for sheets traditionally worn wrapped around the body, one over each shoulder, then a third over the top of them. These are typically [[red]], though with some other [[colors]] (e.g. [[blue]]) and patterns (e.g. [[Tartan|plaid]]). Pink, even with [[flowers]], is not shunned by warriors.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~dlpayne/Maa%20Lexicon/categories/main.htm |title=Maa (Maasai) Dictionary |publisher=Darkwing.uoregon.edu |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> One piece garments known as [[Kanga (African garment)|kanga]], a [[Swahili language|Swahili]] term, are common.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.glcom.com/hassan/kanga_history.html |title=Kanga history |publisher=Glcom.com |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref> Maasai near the coast may wear [[kikoi]], a type of [[sarong]] that comes in many different [[colors]] and [[textiles]]. However, the preferred style is stripes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.africa.upenn.edu/NEH/kmatculture.htm |title=East Africa Living Encyclopedia |publisher=Africa.upenn.edu |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

Many Maasai in [[Tanzania]] wear simple [[sandals]], which were until recently made from cowhides. They are now soled with [[tire]] strips or [[plastic]]. Both men and women wear wooden [[bracelets]]. The Maasai women regularly weave and bead [[jewellery]]. This bead work plays an essential part in the ornamentation of their [[body]]. Although there are variations in the meaning of the color of the beads, some general meanings for a few colors are: [[white]], [[peace]]; [[blue]], [[water]]; [[red]], [[warrior]]/[[blood]]/bravery.<ref>''Northern Tanzania with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar'' by Phillip Briggs (2006), page 216. ISBN 1 84162 146 3</ref>

Beadworking, done by [[women]], has a long [[history]] among the Maasai, who articulate their identity and position in society through body ornaments and [[body painting]]. Before contact with [[Europe]]ans beads were produced mostly from local raw materials. White beads were made from [[clay]], [[exoskeleton|shells]], [[ivory]], or [[bone]]. Black and blue beads were made from [[iron]], [[charcoal]], [[seeds]], [[clay]], or [[horn (anatomy)|horn]]. Red beads came from [[seeds]], [[wood]]s, [[gourds]], [[bone]], [[ivory]], [[copper]], or [[brass]]. When late in the nineteenth century, great quantities of brightly colored European [[glass]] beads arrived in East Africa, beadworkers replaced the older beads with the new materials and began to use more elaborate color schemes. Currently, dense, [[Opacity (optics)|opaque]] glass beads with no surface decoration and a naturally smooth finish are preferred.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.smithsonianeducation.org/migrations/beads/essay3.html |title=(Klumpp 1987, 105, 30, 31, 67 |publisher=Smithsonianeducation.org |date= |accessdate=2012-02-28}}</ref>

==Hair==
Head shaving is common at many rites of passage, representing the fresh start that will be made as one passes from one to another of life's chapters.<ref>Broken Spears - a Maasai Journey. Elizabeth L. Gilbert. 2003. Atlantic Monthly Press. page 82. ISBN 0-87113-840-9</ref> Warriors are the only members of the Maasai community to wear long hair, which they weave in thinly braided strands.<ref>Broken Spears - a Maasai Journey. Elizabeth L. Gilbert. 2003. Atlantic Monthly Press. page 136. ISBN 0-87113-840-9</ref>

Upon reaching the age of 3 "moons", the child is named and the head is shaved clean apart from a tuft of hair, which resembles a cock's comb, from the nape of the neck to the forehead.<ref name="Maasai. Mohamed Amin 1987. Page 169">The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 169. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref> The cockade symbolizes the "state of grace" accorded to infants.<ref>The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 55. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref> A woman who has miscarried in a previous pregnancy would position the hair at the front or back of the head, depending on whether she had lost a boy or a girl.<ref name="Maasai. Mohamed Amin 1987. Page 169"/>

Two days before boys are circumcised, their heads are shaved.<ref>Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. page 79. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1</ref> The young warriors then allow their hair to grow, and spend a great deal of time styling the hair. It is dressed with animal fat and ocher, and parted across the top of the head at ear level. Hair is then plaited: parted into small sections which are divided into two and twisted, first separately then together. Cotton or wool threads may be used to lengthen hair. The plaited hair may hang loose or be gathered together and bound with leather.<ref>Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. pages 126, 129. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1</ref> When warriors go through the ''Eunoto'', and become elders, their long plaited hair is shaved off.<ref>Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. page 171. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1</ref>

As males have their heads shaved at the passage from one stage of life to another, a bride to be will have her head shaved, and two rams will be slaughtered in honor of the occasion.<ref>The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 168. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6</ref>

==See also==
* [[Maasai mythology]]
* [[Lion hunting]]
* [[Kenya]]
* [[Tanzania]]
* [[Maa Civil Society Forum]], an organization promoting land rights claims of the Maasai people

==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}

==External links==
{{Commons category|Maasai}}
* [http://www.uoregon.edu/~maasai/Maa%20Lexicon/lexicon/main.htm Maasai online dictionary]
* [http://www.e-solidarity.org/index-engl.htm Maasai Aid Association]
* [http://www.elandmaasai.org/ Working for a just and self-sustaining community for the Maasai People]
* [http://www.maasaivillages.org/ Mara Triangle Maasai Villages Association]
* [http://www.networkofchange.org/index.html Network of Change Organization for Maasai]
* [http://networkofchange.ning.com/ Maasai communication/info exchange - NOC Community]
* [http://www.maratriangle.org/kisaru-maasai-community-projec/ Kisaru Maasai Community Project]
* [http://www.massailand.com/en/default.php?language=en Massailand] Website about the Maasai people and supporting projects.
* [http://www.networkofchange.org/volunteer.html Volunteer to help with projects in Maasailand - Kenya]
* [http://www.maasaitrust.org/ Maasai Trust]
* [http://www.maasaieducation.org/ Maasai Education Discovery]
* [http://www.indigenousheartland.org/index.htm Indigenous Heartland Organisation - Tanzania.]
* [http://www.maasaimara.com/the-mara/maasai-people The Maasai People - History and Culture]

{{DEFAULTSORT:Maasai People}}
[[Category:Maasai| ]]
[[Category:Ethnic groups in Africa]]
[[Category:Indigenous peoples of East Africa]]

{{Link FA|fi}}
<!--Other languages-->
[[be:Масаі]]
[[be-x-old:Масаі]]
[[bo:མ་སེའི་མི།]]
[[bs:Masai]]
[[bg:Масаи]]
[[ca:Massais]]
[[cs:Masajové]]
[[da:Masai]]
[[de:Massai]]
[[et:Masaid]]
[[el:Μασσάι]]
[[es:Masái]]
[[eo:Masajoj]]
[[eu:Masai]]
[[fa:ماسای]]
[[fr:Maasaï]]
[[ko:마사이족]]
[[hi:मसाई]]
[[hr:Masai]]
[[id:Maasai]]
[[os:Масайтæ]]
[[it:Masai]]
[[he:מסאים]]
[[sw:Wamasai]]
[[nl:Masaï (volk)]]
[[ja:マサイ族]]
[[no:Masaier]]
[[oc:Massai]]
[[pnb:مآسائی]]
[[pl:Masajowie]]
[[pt:Masai]]
[[ro:Masai]]
[[ru:Масаи]]
[[simple:Maasai]]
[[sl:Masaji]]
[[sr:Масаји]]
[[fi:Maasait]]
[[sv:Massajer]]
[[ta:மாசாய் இனக்குழு]]
[[th:มาซาย]]
[[tr:Masailer]]
[[uk:Масаї]]
[[vec:Maasai]]
[[vi:Maasai]]
[[yo:Maasai]]
[[zh:马赛人]]

Revision as of 14:33, 9 May 2012

Maasai
Maasai warriors jumping
453,000[1]
 Tanzania (northern)430,000[citation needed]
[2]
Languages
Maa (ɔl Maa)
Religion
Monotheism
including Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Samburu

The Maasai (sometimes spelled "Masai" or "Masaai") are a Nilotic ethnic group of semi-nomadic people located in Kenya and northern Tanzania. They are among the best known of African ethnic groups, due to their distinctive customs and dress and residence near the many game parks of East Africa.[3] They speak Maa (ɔl Maa),[3] a member of the Nilo-Saharan language family that is related to Dinka and Nuer, and are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania: Swahili and English. The Maasai population has been reported as numbering 453,000 in Kenya in the 2009 census, compared to 377,000 in 1989 and 400,000 in 2000.

The Tanzanian and Kenyan governments have instituted programs to encourage the Maasai to abandon their traditional semi-nomadic lifestyle, but the people have continued their age-old customs.[4] Recently, Oxfam has claimed that the lifestyle of the Maasai should be embraced as a response to climate change because of their ability to farm in deserts and scrublands.[5] Many Maasai tribes throughout Tanzania and Kenya welcome visits to their village to experience their culture, traditions, and lifestyle.[6]

History

Overview

The Maasai are a Nilotic group in East Africa, next to the Indian Ocean. Nilotes speak Nilo-Saharan language, and came to Eastern Africa by way of South Sudan.[7] Most Nilotes in Eastern Africa, including the Maasai, the Samburu and the Kalenjin, are pastoralists, and are famous for their fearsome reputations as warriors and cattle-rustlers.[7] As with the Bantu, the Maasai and other Nilotes in Eastern Africa have adopted many customs and practices from the neighboring Cushitic groups, including the age set system of social organization, circumcision, and vocabulary terms.[8][9]

Origin, migration and assimilation

Maasai man

According to their own oral history, the Maasai originated from the lower Nile valley north of Lake Turkana (Northwest Kenya) and began migrating south around the 15th century, arriving in a long trunk of land stretching from what is now northern Kenya to what is now central Tanzania between the 17th and late 18th century. Many ethnic groups that had already formed settlements in the region were forcibly displaced by the incoming Maasai,[10] while other, mainly southern Cushitic groups, were assimilated into Maasai society. The resulting mixture of Nilotic and Cushitic populations also produced the Kalenjin and Samburu.[11]

Settlement in East Africa

The Maasai territory reached its largest size in the mid-19th century, and covered almost all of the Great Rift Valley and adjacent lands from Mount Marsabit in the north to Dodoma in the south.[12] At this time the Maasai, as well as the larger Nilotic group they were part of, raided cattle as far east as the Tanga coast in Tanganyika (now mainland Tanzania). Raiders used spears and shields, but were most feared for throwing clubs (orinka) which could be accurately thrown from up to 70 paces (appx. 100 metres). In 1852, there was a report of a concentration of 800 Maasai warriors on the move in what is now Kenya. In 1857, after having depopulated the “Wakuafi wilderness” in what is now southeastern Kenya, Maasai warriors threatened Mombasa on the Kenyan coast.[13][14]

Maasai warriors in German East Africa, c. 1906-1918.

Because of this migration, the Maasai are the southernmost Nilotic speakers. The period of expansion was followed by the Maasai "Emutai" of 1883-1902. This period was marked by epidemics of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia, rinderpest and smallpox. The estimate first put forward by a German lieutenant in what was then northwest Tanganyika, was that 90 percent of cattle and half of wild animals perished from rinderpest. German doctors in the same area claimed that “every second” African had a pock-marked face as the result of smallpox. This period coincided with drought. Rains failed completely in 1897 and 1898.[15]

The Austrian explorer Oscar Baumann travelled in Maasai lands in 1891-1893, and described the old Maasai settlement in the Ngorongoro Crater in the 1894 book Durch Massailand zur Nilquelle ("Through the lands of the Maasai to the source of the Nile"): "There were women wasted to skeletons from whose eyes the madness of starvation glared ... warriors scarcely able to crawl on all fours, and apathetic, languishing elders. Swarms of vultures followed them from high, awaiting their certain victims." By one estimate two-thirds of the Maasai died during this period.[16]

Starting with a 1904 treaty,[17] and followed by another in 1911, Maasai lands in Kenya were reduced by 60 percent when the British evicted them to make room for settler ranches, subsequently confining them to present-day Kajiado and Narok districts.[18] Maasai in Tanganyika (now mainland Tanzania) were displaced from the fertile lands between Mount Meru and Mount Kilimanjaro, and most of the fertile highlands near Ngorongoro in the 1940s.[19][20] More land was taken to create wildlife reserves and national parks: Amboseli, Nairobi National Park, Masai Mara, Samburu, Lake Nakuru and Tsavo in Kenya; and Manyara, Ngorongoro, Tarangire[21] and Serengeti in what is now Tanzania.

Maasai are pastoralist and have resisted the urging of the Tanzanian and Kenyan governments to adopt a more sedentary lifestyle. They have demanded grazing rights to many of the national parks in both countries.

The Maasai people stood against slavery and lived alongside most wild animals with an aversion to eating game and birds. Maasai land now has East Africa's finest game areas. Maasai society never condoned traffic of human beings, and outsiders looking for people to enslave avoided the Maasai.[22]

Though the Maasai people stood against slavery and the traffic of humans beings, they were able to conquer such large areas of land by displacing the people who had previously lived in the area.

Essentially there are twelve geographic sectors of the tribe, each one having its own customs, appearance, leadership and dialects. These subdivisions are known as the Keekonyokie, Damat, Purko, Wuasinkishu, Siria, Laitayiok, Loitai, Kisonko, Matapato, Dalalekutuk, Loodokolani and Kaputiei.[23]

Genetics

Recent advances in genetic analyses have helped shed some light on the ethnogenesis of the Maasai people. Genetic genealogy, although a novel tool that uses the genes of modern populations to trace their ethnic and geographic origins, has also helped clarify the possible background of the modern Maasai.

Autosomal DNA

The Maasai's autosomal DNA has been examined in a comprehensive study by Tishkoff et al. (2009) on the genetic affiliations of various populations in Africa. According to the study's authors, the Maasai "have maintained their culture in the face of extensive genetic introgression".[24] Tishkoff et al. also indicate that: "Many Nilo-Saharan-speaking populations in East Africa, such as the Maasai, show multiple cluster assignments from the Nilo-Saharan (red) and Cushitic (dark purple) AACs, in accord with linguistic evidence of repeated Nilotic assimilation of Cushites over the past 3000 years and with the high frequency of a shared East African–specific mutation associated with lactose tolerance."[24]

Y DNA

A Y-chromosome study by Wood et al. (2005) tested various Sub-Saharan populations, including 26 Maasai males from Kenya, for paternal lineages. The authors observed the E1b1b haplogroup in 50% of the studied Maasai,[25] which is indicative of substantial gene flow from more northerly Cushitic males, who possess the haplogroup at high frequencies.[26] The second most frequent paternal lineage among the Maasai was Haplogroup A3b2, which is commonly found in Nilotic populations, such as the Alur;[25][27] it was observed in 27% of Maasai males. The third most frequently observed paternal DNA marker in the Maasai was the E1b1a haplogroup (E-P1), which is very common in the Sub-Saharan region; it was found in 12% of the Maasai samples. The Haplogroup B was also observed in 8% of the studied Maasai,[25] which is also found in 30% (16/53) of Southern Sudanese Nilotes.[27]

mtDNA

According to an mtDNA study by Castri et al. (2008), which tested Maasai individuals in Kenya, the maternal lineages found among the Maasai are quite diverse, but similar in overall frequency to that observed in other Nilo-Hamitic populations from the region, such as the Samburu. Most of the tested Maasai belonged to various macro-haplogroup L sub-clades, including L0, L2, L3, L4 and L5. Some maternal gene flow from North and Northeast Africa was also reported, particularly via the presence of mtDNA haplogroup M lineages in about 12.5% of the Maasai samples.[28]

Culture

Maasai people and huts with enkang barrier in foreground - eastern Serengeti, 2006
Maasai warriors confronting a spotted hyena, a common livestock predator, as photographed in In Wildest Africa (1907)

Maasai society is strongly patriarchal in nature, with elder men, sometimes joined by retired elders, deciding most major matters for each Maasai group. A full body of oral law covers many aspects of behaviour. Formal execution is unknown, and normally payment in cattle will settle matters. An out of court process is also practiced called 'amitu', 'to make peace', or 'arop', which involves a substantial apology.[29] The Maasai are monotheistic, worshipping a single deity called Enkai or Engai. Engai has a dual nature: Engai Narok (Black God) is benevolent, and Engai Nanyokie (Red God) is vengeful.[30] The "Mountain of God", Ol Doinyo Lengai, is located in northernmost Tanzania. The central human figure in the Maasai religious system is the laibon who may be involved in: shamanistic healing, divination and prophecy, and ensuring success in war or adequate rainfall. Whatever power an individual laibon had was a function of personality rather than position.[31] Many Maasai have become Christian, and to a lesser extent, Muslim. The Maasai are known for their intricate jewelry.

A high infant mortality rate among the Maasai has led to babies not truly being recognised until they reach an age of 3 moons, ilapaitin.[32] For Maasai living a traditional life, the end of life is virtually without ceremony, and the dead are left out for scavengers.[33] A corpse rejected by scavengers (mainly spotted hyenas, which are known as Ondilili or Oln'gojine in the Maasai language) is seen as having something wrong with it, and liable to cause social disgrace; therefore, it is not uncommon for bodies to be covered in fat and blood from a slaughtered ox.[34] Burial has in the past been reserved for great chiefs, since it is believed to be harmful to the soil.[35]

Traditional Maasai lifestyle centres around their cattle which constitute their primary source of food. The measure of a man's wealth is in terms of cattle and children. A herd of 50 cattle is respectable, and the more children the better. A man who has plenty of one but not the other is considered to be poor.[36] A Maasai religious belief relates that God gave them all the cattle on earth, leading to the belief that rustling cattle from other tribes is a matter of taking back what is rightfully theirs, a practice that has become much less common.[37]

Influences from the outside world

Maintaining a traditional pastoral lifestyle has become increasingly difficult due to outside influences of the modern world. Garrett Hardin's article, outlining the “tragedy of the commons”, as well as Melville Herskovits' “cattle complex” helped to influence ecologists and policy makers about the harm Maasai pastoralists were causing to savannah rangelands. This concept was later proven false by anthropologists but is still deeply ingrained in the minds of ecologists and Tanzanian officials.[38] This influenced policy makers to remove all Maasai from the Serengeti National Park and relegated them to areas in and around the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA). The plan for the NCA was to put Maasai interests above all else but this promise was never met. Due to an increase in Maasai population, loss of cattle populations to disease, and lack of available rangelands due to new park boundaries, the Maasai were forced to develop new ways of sustaining themselves. Many Maasai began to cultivate maize and other crops to get by, a practice that was viewed negative culturally.[38] Cultivation was first introduced to the Maasai by displaced WaArusha and WaMeru women who were married to Maasai men; subsequent generations practiced a mixed livelihood. To further complicate their situation, in 1975 the Ngorongoro Conservation Area banned cultivation practices. In order to survive they are forced to participate in Tanzania’s monetary economy. They have to sell their animals and traditional medicines in order to buy food. The ban on cultivation was lifted in 1992 and cultivation has again become an important part of Maasai livelihood. Park boundaries and land privatisation has continued to limit grazing area for the Maasai and have forced them to change considerably.[39]

Over the years, many projects have begun to help Maasai tribal leaders find ways to preserve their traditions while also balancing the education needs of their children for the modern world.

The emerging forms of employment among the Maasai people include farming, business (selling of traditional medicine, running of restaurants/shops, buying and selling of minerals, selling milk and milk products by women, embroideries), and wage employment (as security guards/ watchmen, waiters, tourist guides), and others who are engaged in the public and private sectors.[40]

Many Maasai have moved away from the nomadic life to positions in commerce and government.[41] Yet despite the sophisticated urban lifestyle they may lead, many will happily head homewards dressed in designer clothes, only to emerge from the traditional family homestead wearing a shuka (colourful piece of cloth), cow hide sandals and carrying a wooden club (o-rinka) - at ease with themselves and the world.[42]

Shelter

Shelter covered in cattle dung for waterproofing
Maasai women repairing a house in Masai Mara (1996)

As a historically nomadic and then semi-nomadic people, the Maasai have traditionally relied on local, readily available materials and indigenous technology to construct their housing. The traditional Maasai house was in the first instance designed for people on the move and was thus very impermanent in nature. The Inkajijik (houses) are either star-shaped or circular, and are constructed by able-bodied 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 human urine, and ash. The cow dung ensures that the roof is water-proof. The enkaj is small, measuring about 3x5 m and standing only 1.5 m high. Within this space, the family cooks, eats, sleeps, socializes, and stores food, fuel, and other household possessions. Small livestock are also often accommodated within the enkaji.[43][44] Villages are enclosed in a circular fence (an enkang) built by the men, usually of thorned acacia, a native tree. At night, all cows, goats, and sheep are placed in an enclosure in the centre, safe from wild animals.

Panoramic view of Maasai Enkang

Social organization

The central unit of Maasai society is the age-set. Young boys are sent out with the calves and lambs as soon as they can toddle, but childhood for boys is mostly playtime, with the exception of ritual beatings to test courage and endurance. Girls are responsible for chores such as cooking and milking, skills which they learn from their mothers at an early age.[45] Every 15 years or so, a new and individually named generation of Morans or Il-murran (warriors) will be initiated. This involves most boys between 12 and 25, who have reached puberty and are not part of the previous age-set. One rite of passage from boyhood to the status of junior warrior is a painful circumcision ceremony, which is performed without anaesthetic. This ritual is typically performed by the elders, who use a sharpened knife and makeshift cattle hide bandages for the procedure. The Maa word for circumcision is emorata.[46] The boy must endure the operation in silence. Expressions of pain bring dishonor, albeit temporarily. Any exclamations can cause a mistake in the delicate and tedious process, which can result in life-long scarring, dysfunction, and pain. The healing process will take 3–4 months, during which urination is painful and nearly impossible at times, and boys must remain in black clothes for a period of 4–8 months.[47]

Junior Moran with headdress and markings

During this period, the newly circumcised young men will live in a "manyatta", a "village" built by their mothers. The manyatta has no encircling barricade for protection, emphasizing the warrior role of protecting the community. No inner kraal is built, since warriors neither own cattle nor undertake stock duties. Further rites of passage are required before achieving the status of senior warrior, culminating in the eunoto ceremony, the "coming of age".[48]

Maasai flag

When a new generation of warriors is initiated, the existing ilmoran will graduate to become junior elders, who are responsible for political decisions until they in turn become senior elders.[49][50]

The warriors spend most of their time now on walkabouts throughout Maasai lands, beyond the confines of their sectional boundaries. They are also much more involved in cattle trading than they used to be, developing and improving basic stock through trades and bartering rather than stealing as in the past.[51][52]

Maasai traditional dance, Adumu

One myth about the Maasai is that each young man is supposed to kill a lion before he is circumcised. Lion hunting was an activity of the past, but it has been banned in East Africa—yet lions are still hunted when they maul Maasai livestock,[53] and young warriors who engage in traditional lion killing do not face significant consequences.[54] Increasing concern regarding lion populations has given rise to at least one program which promotes accepting compensation when a lion kills livestock, rather than hunting and killing the predator.[55] Nevertheless, killing a lion gives one great value and celebrity status in the community.

Young women also undergo excision ("female circumcision,""female genital mutilation," "emorata") as part of an elaborate rite of passage ritual called "Emuratare," the ceremony that initiates young Maasai girls into adulthood through ritual circumcision and then into early arranged marriages.[56] The Maasai believe that female circumcision is necessary and Maasai men may reject any woman who has not undergone it as either not marriageable or worthy of a much-reduced bride price. In Eastern Africa, uncircumcised women, even those highly educated members of parliament like Linah Kilimo, can be accused of not being mature enough to be taken seriously.[57] To others the practice of female circumcision is known as female genital mutilation, and draws a great deal of criticism from both abroad and many women who have undergone it, such as Maasai activist Agnes Pareiyo. It has recently been replaced in some instances by a "cutting with words" ceremony involving singing and dancing in place of the mutilation. However, the practice remains deeply ingrained and valued by the culture. The Maa word for circumcision, "emorata," is used for both female and male circumcision, yet the practices are not equitable in terms of benefit and harm to the patient. While there are certain controversies regarding male circumcision, it is generally a safe procedure with minimal side effects. In women, however, the practice can result in chronic urinary tract infections, dysmenorrhea, excessive scarring, and other medical side effects, all of which have led to increased controversy over the practice.[58] Female genital mutilation is illegal in both Kenya and Tanzania.[59][60] These circumcisions are usually performed by an invited 'practitioner' who is often not Maasai, usually from a Dorobo group. The knives and blades which make the cut are fashioned by blacksmiths, il-kunono, who are avoided by the Maasai because they make weapons of death (knives, short swords (ol alem), spears, etc.). Similar to the young men, women who will be circumcised wear dark clothing, paint their faces with markings, and then cover their faces on completion of the ceremony.[61]

Married women who become pregnant are excused from all heavy work such as milking and gathering firewood. Sexual relations are also banned.[62]

Maasai school in Tanzania

The Maasai are traditionally polygamous; this is thought to be a long standing and practical adaptation to high infant and warrior mortality rates. Polyandry is also practiced. A woman marries not just her husband, but the entire age group. Men are expected to give up their bed to a visiting age-mate guest. The woman decides strictly on her own if she will join the visiting male. Any child which may result is the husband's child and his descendant in the patrilineal order of Maasai society. "Kitala", a kind of divorce or refuge, is possible in the house of a wife's father, usually for gross mistreatment of the wife. Repayment of the bride price, custody of children, etc., are mutually agreed upon.[63][64]

Music and dance

Traditional jumping dance

Maasai music traditionally consists of rhythms provided by a chorus of vocalists singing harmonies while a song leader, or olaranyani, sings the melody. The olaranyani is usually the singer who can best sing that song, although several individuals may lead a song. The olaranyani begins by singing a line or title (namba) of a song. The group will respond with one unanimous call in acknowledgment, and the olaranyani will sing a verse over the group's rhythmic throat singing. Each song has its specific namba structure based on call-and-response. Common rhythms are variations of 5/4, 6/4 and 3/4 time signatures. Lyrics follow a typical theme and are often repeated verbatim over time. Neck movements accompany singing. When breathing out the head is leaned forward. The head is tilted back for an inward breath. Overall the effect is one of polyphonic syncopation.[65][66]

Women chant lullabies, humming songs, and songs praising their sons. Nambas, the call-and-response pattern, repetition of nonsense phrases, monophonic melodies[67][68] repeated phrases following each verse being sung on a descending scale, and singers responding to their own verses are characteristic of singing by females.[69][70] When many Maasai women gather together, they sing and dance among themselves.[71]

One exception to the vocal nature of Maasai music is the use of the horn of the Greater Kudu to summon morans for the Eunoto ceremony.[72]

Both singing and dancing sometimes occur around manyattas, and involve flirting. Young men will form a line and chant rhythmically, “Oooooh-yah”, with a growl and staccato cough along with the thrust and withdrawal of their lower bodies. Girls stand in front of the men and make the same pelvis lunges while singing a high dying fall of “Oiiiyo..yo” in counterpoint to the men. Although bodies come in close proximity, they do not touch.[73]

Maasai dance

Eunoto, the coming of age ceremony of the warrior, can involve ten or more days of singing, dancing and ritual. The warriors of the Il-Oodokilani perform a kind of march-past as well as the adumu, or aigus, sometimes referred as “the jumping dance” by non-Maasai. (both adumu and aigus are Maa verbs meaning "to jump" with adumu meaning "To jump up and down in a dance"[74]) Warriors are well known for, and often photographed during, this competitive jumping. A circle is formed by the warriors, and one or two at a time will enter the center to begin jumping while maintaining a narrow posture, never letting their heels touch the ground. Members of the group may raise the pitch of their voices based on the height of the jump.[75]

The girlfriends of the moran (intoyie) parade themselves in their most spectacular costumes as part of the eunoto. The mothers of the moran sing and dance in tribute to the courage and daring of their sons.[76]

Body modification

Maasai woman with stretched earlobes

The piercing and stretching of earlobes is common among the Maasai. Various materials have been used to both pierce and stretch the lobes, including thorns for piercing, twigs, bundles of twigs, stones, the cross section of elephant tusks and empty film canisters. Fewer and fewer Maasai, particularly boys, follow this custom.[77] [78] Women wear various forms of beaded ornaments in both the ear lobe, and smaller piercings at the top of the ear.[79] [80]

The removal of deciduous canine tooth buds in early childhood is a practice that has been documented in the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania. There exists a strong belief among the Maasai that diarrhoea, vomiting and other febrile illnesses of early childhood are caused by the gingival swelling over the canine region, which is thought to contain 'worms' or 'nylon' teeth. This belief and practice is not unique to the Maasai. In rural Kenya a group of 95 children aged between six months and two years were examined in 1991/92. 87% were found to have undergone the removal of one or more deciduous canine tooth buds. In an older age group (3–7 years of age), 72% of the 111 children examined exhibited missing mandibular or maxillary deciduous canines.[81] [82]

Diet

A Masaai herdsman grazing his cattle inside the Ngorongoro crater

Traditionally, the Maasai diet consisted of meat, milk, and blood from cattle. An ILCA study (Nestel 1989) states: “Today, the staple diet of the Maasai consists of cow's milk and maize-meal. The former is largely drunk fresh or in sweet tea and the latter is used to make a liquid or solid porridge. The solid porridge is known as ugali and is eaten with milk; unlike the liquid porridge, ugali is not prepared with milk. Meat, although an important food, is consumed irregularly and cannot be classified as a staple food. Animal fats or butter are used in cooking, primarily of porridge, maize, and beans. Butter is also an important infant food. Blood is rarely drunk.”[83]

Studies by the International Livestock Centre for Africa (Bekure et al. 1991) shows a very great change in the diet of the Maasai towards non-livestock products with maize comprising 12 – 39 percent and sugar 8 – 13 percent; about one litre of milk is consumed per person daily. Most of the milk is consumed as fermented milk or buttermilk - a by-product of butter making. Milk consumption figures are very high by any standards. The needs for protein and essential amino acids are more than adequately satisfied. However, the supply of iron, niacin, vitamin C, vitamin A, thiamine and energy are never fully met by a purely milk diet. Due to changing circumstances, especially the seasonal nature of the milk supply and frequent droughts, most pastoralists, including the Maasai, now include substantial amounts of grain in their diets.[84][85]

The Maasai herd goats and sheep, including the Red Maasai sheep, as well as the more prized cattle.[86] Electrocardiogram tests applied to 400 young adult male Maasai found no evidence whatsoever of heart disease, abnormalities or malfunction. Further study with carbon-14 tracers showed that the average cholesterol level was about 50 percent of that of an average American. These findings were ascribed to the amazing fitness of morans, which was evaluated as "Olympic standard".[87]

Soups are probably the most important use of plants for food by Maasai. Acacia nilotica is the most frequently used soup plant. The root or stem bark is boiled in water and the decoction drunk alone or added to soup. The Maasai are fond of taking this as a drug, and is known to make them energetic, aggressive and fearless. Maasai eat soup laced with bitter bark and roots containing cholesterol-lowering saponins; those urban Maasai who don't have access to the bitter plants tend to develop heart disease.[88] Although consumed as snacks, fruits constitute a major part of the food ingested by children and women looking after cattle as well as morans in the wilderness.[89]

The mixing of cattle blood, obtained by nicking the jugular vein, and milk is done to prepare a ritual drink for special celebrations and as nourishment for the sick.[90] However, the inclusion of blood in the traditional diet is waning due to the reduction of livestock numbers. More recently, the Maasai have grown dependent on food produced in other areas such as maize meal, rice, potatoes, cabbage (known to the Maasai as goat leaves) etc. The Maasai who live near crop farmers have engaged in cultivation as their primary mode of subsistence. In these areas, plot sizes are generally not large enough to accommodate herds of animals; thus the Maasai are forced to farm.[91]

Clothing

Maasai woman
Meeyu Sale Wearing her Finest

Clothing varies by age and location. Young men, for instance, wear black for several months following their circumcision. However, red is a favored color. Blue, black, striped, and checkered cloth are also worn, as are multicolored African designs.The names of the clothing are now known as the Matavuvale. The Maasai began to replace animal-skin, calf hides and sheep skin, with commercial cotton cloth in the 1960s.[92]

Shúkà is the Maa word for sheets traditionally worn wrapped around the body, one over each shoulder, then a third over the top of them. These are typically red, though with some other colors (e.g. blue) and patterns (e.g. plaid). Pink, even with flowers, is not shunned by warriors.[93] One piece garments known as kanga, a Swahili term, are common.[94] Maasai near the coast may wear kikoi, a type of sarong that comes in many different colors and textiles. However, the preferred style is stripes.[95]

Many Maasai in Tanzania wear simple sandals, which were until recently made from cowhides. They are now soled with tire strips or plastic. Both men and women wear wooden bracelets. The Maasai women regularly weave and bead jewellery. This bead work plays an essential part in the ornamentation of their body. Although there are variations in the meaning of the color of the beads, some general meanings for a few colors are: white, peace; blue, water; red, warrior/blood/bravery.[96]

Beadworking, done by women, has a long history among the Maasai, who articulate their identity and position in society through body ornaments and body painting. Before contact with Europeans beads were produced mostly from local raw materials. White beads were made from clay, shells, ivory, or bone. Black and blue beads were made from iron, charcoal, seeds, clay, or horn. Red beads came from seeds, woods, gourds, bone, ivory, copper, or brass. When late in the nineteenth century, great quantities of brightly colored European glass beads arrived in East Africa, beadworkers replaced the older beads with the new materials and began to use more elaborate color schemes. Currently, dense, opaque glass beads with no surface decoration and a naturally smooth finish are preferred.[97]

Hair

Head shaving is common at many rites of passage, representing the fresh start that will be made as one passes from one to another of life's chapters.[98] Warriors are the only members of the Maasai community to wear long hair, which they weave in thinly braided strands.[99]

Upon reaching the age of 3 "moons", the child is named and the head is shaved clean apart from a tuft of hair, which resembles a cock's comb, from the nape of the neck to the forehead.[100] The cockade symbolizes the "state of grace" accorded to infants.[101] A woman who has miscarried in a previous pregnancy would position the hair at the front or back of the head, depending on whether she had lost a boy or a girl.[100]

Two days before boys are circumcised, their heads are shaved.[102] The young warriors then allow their hair to grow, and spend a great deal of time styling the hair. It is dressed with animal fat and ocher, and parted across the top of the head at ear level. Hair is then plaited: parted into small sections which are divided into two and twisted, first separately then together. Cotton or wool threads may be used to lengthen hair. The plaited hair may hang loose or be gathered together and bound with leather.[103] When warriors go through the Eunoto, and become elders, their long plaited hair is shaved off.[104]

As males have their heads shaved at the passage from one stage of life to another, a bride to be will have her head shaved, and two rams will be slaughtered in honor of the occasion.[105]

See also

References

  1. ^ 2009 Kenyan census
  2. ^ Ethnologue report for language code:mas ethnologue.com, '453,000 in Kenya (1994 I. Larsen BTL) ... 430,000 in Tanzania (1993)', Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (ed.), 2005. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Fifteenth edition. Dallas, Tex.: SIL International
  3. ^ a b Maasai - Introduction Jens Fincke, 2000-2003
  4. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 122. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  5. ^ "Maasai 'can fight climate change'". BBC News. 18 August 2008.
  6. ^ Visiting a Maasi Village
  7. ^ a b A. Okoth & A. Ndaloh, Peak Revision K.C.P.E. Social Studies, (East African Publishers), p.60-61.
  8. ^ Robert O. Collins, The southern Sudan in historical perspective, (Transaction Publishers: 2006), p.9-10.
  9. ^ S. Wandibba et al, p.19-20.
  10. ^ "Maasai Education Discovery". Maasaieducation.org. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  11. ^ International Labour Office, Traditional occupations of indigenous and tribal peoples: emerging trends, (International Labour Organization: 2000), p.55.
  12. ^ Northern Tanzania with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar by Phillip Briggs 2006 page 200 ISBN 1 84162 146 3
  13. ^ "Sources and methods in African history: spoken, written, unearthed - Toyin Falola - Google Boeken". Books.google.com. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  14. ^ Sources and Methods in African History: Spoken, Written, Unearthed by Toyin Falola, Christian Jennings (2003), page 18 2. Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 1580461344
  15. ^ "Ecology Books and Journals". Blackwell Publishing. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  16. ^ "Rinderpest". Ntz.info. 1997-02-14. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  17. ^ Faris, Stephan (19 September 2004). "The Land Is Ours". Time.
  18. ^ Kitumusote. "History of the Maasai". Kitumusote. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  19. ^ The Myth of Wild Africa: Conservation Without Illusion. Jonathan S. Adams, Thomas O. McShane. 1996. University of California Press. page = 44. ISBN 0520206711
  20. ^ "The myth of wild Africa: conservation without illusion - Jonathan S. Adams, Thomas O. McShane - Google Boeken". Books.google.com. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  21. ^ "Internet Archive Wayback Machine". Web.archive.org. 2007-08-14. Archived from the original on 2007-08-14. Retrieved 2012-02-28. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  22. ^ Africa's Great Rift Valley. Nigel Pavitt. 2001. Page 122. Harry N. Abrams, Incorporated, New York ISBN 0-8109-0602-3
  23. ^ "archived copy of laleyio.com". Web.archive.org. 2008-05-27. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  24. ^ a b Tishkoff; et al. (2009), "The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans", the American Association for the Advancement of Science {{citation}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |last= (help) Also see Supplementary Data.
  25. ^ a b c Elizabeth T Wood, Daryn A Stover, Christopher Ehret et al., "Contrasting patterns of Y chromosome and mtDNA variation in Africa: evidence for sex-biased demographic processes", European Journal of Human Genetics (2005) 13, 867–876. (cf. Appendix A: Y Chromosome Haplotype Frequencies)
  26. ^ Cruciani et al., "Phylogeographic Analysis of Haplogroup E3b (E-M215) Y Chromosomes Reveals Multiple Migratory Events Within and Out Of Africa", Am J Hum Genet. 2004 May; 74(5): 1014–1022
  27. ^ a b Hassan (2008). "Y-chromosome variation among Sudanese: restricted gene flow, concordance with language, geography, and history". 137 (3): 316–23. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20876. PMID 18618658. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  28. ^ Castrí (2008). "Kenyan crossroads: migration and gene flow in six ethnic groups from Eastern Africa" (PDF). 86: 189–92. PMID 19934476. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  29. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 53, 54. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  30. ^ "African water symbolism and its consequences". Institut.veolia.org. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  31. ^ "Society-MASAI". Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  32. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 169. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  33. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 103. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  34. ^ Cultural and Public Attitudes: Improving the Relationship between Humans and Hyaenas from Mills, M.g.L. and Hofer, H. (compilers). (1998) Hyaenas: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN/SSC Hyaena Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK. vi + 154 pp.
  35. ^ The Lions of Tsavo: Exploring the Legacy of Africa's Notorious Man-eaters By Bruce D. Patterson. 2004. McGraw-Hill Professional. Page 93. ISBN 0071363335
  36. ^ Northern Tanzania with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar by Phillip Briggs (2006), page 200. ISBN 1 84162 146 3
  37. ^ Africa's Great Rift Valley. Nigel Pavitt. 2001. pages 138. Harry N. Abrams, Incorporated, New York ISBN 0-8109-0602-3
  38. ^ a b McCabe, Terrence. (2003). “Sustainability and livelihood diversification among the Maasai of Northern Tanzania”. Human Organization. Vol 62.2. p. 100-111.
  39. ^ Goodman, Ric. (2002). “Pastoral livelihoods in Tanzania: Can the Maasai benefit from conservation?” Current Issues in Tourism. Vol 5.3,4. P.280-286.
  40. ^ "Challenges To Traditional Livelihoods And Newly Emerging Employment Patterns Of Pastoralists In Tanzania" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  41. ^ "Mashada Forums - View Single Post - Paul Muite...another piece to the Mt. Kenya Mafia jig-s". Mashada.com. 2003-03-20. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  42. ^ Kenya: The Maasi - Travel Africa Magazine
  43. ^ [1][dead link]
  44. ^ "Maasai People, Kenya". Maasai-association.org. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  45. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 55, 94. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  46. ^ "English - Maa". Darkwing.uoregon.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  47. ^ "Maasai Association". Maasai Association. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  48. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 83, 100-103. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  49. ^ Northern Tanzania - The Bradt Safari Guide by Phillip Briggs (2006). British Library. ISBN 1 84162 146 3
  50. ^ "Maasai Association". Maasai Association. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  51. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 88. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  52. ^ "Maasai People, Kenya". Maasai-association.org. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  53. ^ "Maasai Association". Maasai Association. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  54. ^ Lion Killing in the Amboseli -Tsavo Ecosystem, 2001-2006, and its Implications for Kenya’s Lion Population[dead link]
  55. ^ "Field Reports: Maasai tribesmen help lions rather than kill them". Bigcatrescue.blogspot.com. 2007-07-06. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  56. ^ "Maasai Ritual of Female Circumcision: Genital Cutting Practiced throughout Africa and Middle East". Orato.com. Retrieved 2012-05-05.
  57. ^ "In-depth: Razor's Edge - The Controversy of Female Genital Mutilation". IRIN Humanitarian News and Analysis, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. March 2005. Retrieved 2012-05-05.
  58. ^ "In-depth: Razor's Edge - The Controversy of Female Genital Mutilation". IRIN Humanitarian News and Analysis, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. March 2005. Retrieved 2012-05-05.
  59. ^ "tan007 Tanzania fails to enforce law against female mutilation". Afrol.com. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  60. ^ "The Abolition of Female Genital Mutilation —". Infoplease.com. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  61. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 168-173. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  62. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 169. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  63. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 86-87. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  64. ^ Spencer, P. (1988) The Maasai of Matapato: a study of rituals of rebellion Manchester University Press, Manchester. Spencer, P. (2003) Time, Space, and the Unknown: Maasai configurations of power and providence. Routledge, London.
  65. ^ "ilMurran" (in Template:Fi icon). ilMurran. 1999-12-04. Retrieved 2012-02-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  66. ^ "Maasai Music (archived copy)". Web.archive.org. 2008-05-27. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  67. ^ "Homophonic". Music.vt.edu. 2011-11-17. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  68. ^ "What is monophony, polyphony, homophony, monody etc.?". Medieval.org. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  69. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 43, 100. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  70. ^ "Song Structure of Maasai Music (archived copy)". Web.archive.org. 2008-05-27. Archived from the original on 2008-05-27. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  71. ^ Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. pages 194. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1
  72. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 12. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  73. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 85. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  74. ^ "Maa - Categories". Darkwing.uoregon.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  75. ^ "Archived copy of laleyio.com". Web.archive.org. 2008-05-27. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  76. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Pages 43-45, 100, 107. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  77. ^ The Myth of Wild Africa: Conservation Without Illusion. Jonathan S. Adams, Thomas O. McShane. 1996. University of California Press. page = 42. ISBN 0520206711
  78. ^ The Myth of Wild Africa, Google Books.
  79. ^ Culture and Customs of Kenya. Neal Sobania. 2003. Greenwood Press. page 91. ISBN 0313314861
  80. ^ Culture and Customs of Kenya, Google Books
  81. ^ Hassanali J, Amwayi P, Muriithi A (1995). "Removal of deciduous canine tooth buds in Kenyan rural Maasai". East Afr Med J. 72 (4): 207–9. PMID 7621751. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  82. ^ Hiza JF, Kikwilu EN (1992). "Missing primary teeth due to tooth bud extraction in a remote village in Tanzania". Int J Paediatr Dent. 2 (1): 31–4. PMID 1525129. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  83. ^ Livestock as food for pastoralists in Africa. J. M. Suttie. quoting from Nestel, P. 1989. A society in transition: developmental and seasonal influences on the nutrition of Maasai women and children ILCA, Nairobi [2]
  84. ^ "The technology of traditional milk products in developing countries". Fao.org. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  85. ^ [3][dead link]
  86. ^ African Genetic Treasures Key to Reducing Disease and Poverty[dead link]
  87. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 87. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  88. ^ National Geographic Oct. 1995, page 161
  89. ^ "Ethnobotany of the Loita Maasai: towards community management of the Forest of the Lost Child; experiences from the Loita Ethnobotany Project; People and plants working paper; Vol.:8; 2001" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  90. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 90. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  91. ^ "maasai-association.org".
  92. ^ "Maasai". Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of World Cultures. 1999.
  93. ^ "Maa (Maasai) Dictionary". Darkwing.uoregon.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  94. ^ "Kanga history". Glcom.com. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  95. ^ "East Africa Living Encyclopedia". Africa.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  96. ^ Northern Tanzania with Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar by Phillip Briggs (2006), page 216. ISBN 1 84162 146 3
  97. ^ "(Klumpp 1987, 105, 30, 31, 67". Smithsonianeducation.org. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  98. ^ Broken Spears - a Maasai Journey. Elizabeth L. Gilbert. 2003. Atlantic Monthly Press. page 82. ISBN 0-87113-840-9
  99. ^ Broken Spears - a Maasai Journey. Elizabeth L. Gilbert. 2003. Atlantic Monthly Press. page 136. ISBN 0-87113-840-9
  100. ^ a b The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 169. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  101. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 55. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6
  102. ^ Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. page 79. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1
  103. ^ Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. pages 126, 129. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1
  104. ^ Maasai. Tepilit Ole Saitoti with photos by Carol Beckwith. Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1980. page 171. ISBN 0-8109-8099-1
  105. ^ The Last of the Maasai. Mohamed Amin, Duncan Willetts, John Eames. 1987. Page 168. Camerapix Publishers International. ISBN 1 874041 32 6

Template:Link FA