Saturday, April 17, 2010

Maasai Village in the Serengeti

The visit with the Maasai people will be one of our favorite experiences in all of our travels. We stopped at this village, where 74 Maasai live. Our guide knows the son of the king of this village and he, Sangi, was our guide through the village. He was educated and his English was perfect. We were welcomed with song and dance. The Maasai "jump". They are well known for this. They jump for exercise, fun, ritual dance and "to get the girls". However, the girls also dance, so the same might be said that the girls jump to "get the guys". They don't just jump. They crazy jump! They jump over three feet high from a perfectly still standing position!
Sangi, took us through the village and into one house. The houses are made of sticks, that the young girls collect, hay and dried cow dung. If they have rain, they put goat skins on top of their houses if the dung washes away. There is one photo of a skin that is staked to the ground with wooden pegs drying in the sun.
Nicky needed to use the toilet! Their toilet is a outhouse. There are a few Maasai warriors stationed in the distance always watching for predators, so Sangi thought it was safe for him to head down the dirt path with the goats. It turned out to be safe.
Their jewelry was displayed along a fence. We walked all the way around the fence and picked out some things that we thought we could not live without. The ladies that had made the jewelry were all along the way, not pushing their wares on us like in some places we have been, but were very polite and happy we liked their work.
The lonely building you see is the school. The children that were in "class" were all very young. They were 3-5 year olds. When we stepped inside the school all of the children stood up and sang the ABC's in English! They were adorable. The little girls wanted to kiss Kathleen's hand. The little boys all wanted to shake Nicky's hand. All the boys were on the left side of the room and the girls were on the right. They were all sitting on wooded benches, no desks, no pencils, no paper, no crayons, no books...all they had was one small chalkboard and written on it was the ABC's and numbers. There was a donation box to help them with their school. It was a real eyeopener to say the very least.
There is a photo of a Maasai warrior in the distance coming back to the village. Sangi said he had been over the mountain either checking herds or delivering a message. Look how far away that mountain is! It must be about 6 miles to get there and then he had to climb over it and go wherever he needed to go and then turn around and come back! They are all very tall and very thin! When the warrior returns from a journey like that he can have milk. There is a photo of the shade of a tree and in the shade there are goat leather containers of milk! Those containers would have to be warm milk! There was one Maasai warrior laying in the grass in the shade exhausted for his trip. I don't think we took a picture of him, we were wondering if he was alive!
The whole idea of stretching your earlobes goes to a new level here. The small earlobe stretchers you see on people in the US are starter kits for these Maasai. They have large wooden pegs with which they stretch their earlobes. Some of them have stretched them out so far that they can wrap the bottom of their earlobe up and over their entire ear. It is a sign of beauty here.
Our visit was for a couple of hours. It was 2 of the best hours we have ever had.
















































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