Berliner Boersenzeitung - Resilient but threatened, Kenya celebrates Maa culture

EUR -
AED 3.936215
AFN 72.8726
ALL 97.467007
AMD 414.915038
ANG 1.93241
AOA 977.88496
ARS 1064.967164
AUD 1.628338
AWG 1.92897
AZN 1.82606
BAM 1.94464
BBD 2.164876
BDT 128.123536
BGN 1.960695
BHD 0.403945
BIF 3107.785221
BMD 1.07165
BND 1.417167
BOB 7.425319
BRL 6.179675
BSD 1.072247
BTN 90.460029
BWP 14.220393
BYN 3.508864
BYR 21004.341491
BZD 2.161157
CAD 1.491528
CDF 3071.349506
CHF 0.938546
CLF 0.037721
CLP 1040.829844
CNY 7.693488
CNH 7.629393
COP 4672.126419
CRC 548.452572
CUC 1.07165
CUP 28.398727
CVE 109.848306
CZK 25.263122
DJF 190.454073
DKK 7.4572
DOP 64.808082
DZD 143.533639
EGP 52.827034
ERN 16.074751
ETB 130.580982
FJD 2.44019
FKP 0.819993
GBP 0.830395
GEL 2.915307
GGP 0.819993
GHS 17.591179
GIP 0.819993
GMD 76.627107
GNF 9248.340537
GTQ 8.288435
GYD 224.32267
HKD 8.332512
HNL 26.8774
HRK 7.38263
HTG 141.090319
HUF 407.30246
IDR 16799.240175
ILS 4.018485
IMP 0.819993
INR 90.437033
IQD 1403.8616
IRR 45108.434916
ISK 148.749117
JEP 0.819993
JMD 170.110604
JOD 0.759911
JPY 163.57708
KES 138.243236
KGS 92.380308
KHR 4361.616185
KMF 493.360946
KPW 964.484827
KRW 1496.463293
KWD 0.328654
KYD 0.893473
KZT 527.816074
LAK 23501.286542
LBP 96019.847189
LKR 313.686904
LRD 202.974567
LSL 18.893599
LTL 3.164304
LVL 0.648231
LYD 5.197911
MAD 10.569727
MDL 19.229646
MGA 4945.665473
MKD 61.415853
MMK 3480.677644
MNT 3641.466988
MOP 8.585232
MRU 42.791393
MUR 49.728573
MVR 16.557399
MWK 1860.384902
MXN 21.614329
MYR 4.696511
MZN 68.482436
NAD 18.893595
NGN 1787.598463
NIO 39.420689
NOK 11.808138
NPR 144.737389
NZD 1.797088
OMR 0.412588
PAB 1.072237
PEN 4.040523
PGK 4.301645
PHP 62.633129
PKR 297.972705
PLN 4.330132
PYG 8383.88703
QAR 3.90161
RON 4.979426
RSD 117.029588
RUB 104.593516
RWF 1460.123229
SAR 4.025175
SBD 8.94595
SCR 14.533461
SDG 644.60146
SEK 11.617024
SGD 1.423039
SHP 0.819993
SLE 24.487602
SLL 22471.962842
SOS 611.912556
SRD 37.476
STD 22180.992922
SVC 9.382071
SYP 2692.553253
SZL 18.893587
THB 36.731346
TJS 11.397493
TMT 3.761492
TND 3.343017
TOP 2.509916
TRY 36.840762
TTD 7.286186
TWD 34.55754
TZS 2861.306062
UAH 44.263258
UGX 3924.478428
USD 1.07165
UYU 44.792114
UZS 13733.196083
VEF 3882108.699077
VES 47.292514
VND 27085.955673
VUV 127.228482
WST 3.001889
XAF 652.214111
XAG 0.03177
XAU 0.000394
XCD 2.896188
XDR 0.803887
XOF 653.174574
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.72502
ZAR 18.853973
ZMK 9646.140508
ZMW 29.190212
ZWL 345.070887
  • RBGPF

    0.0100

    61.4

    +0.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    7.15

    -0.84%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    9.28

    -0.43%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    24.77

    +0.36%

  • AZN

    -0.0600

    64.63

    -0.09%

  • BTI

    0.0150

    35.415

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.3800

    36.28

    -1.05%

  • RELX

    0.3200

    47.98

    +0.67%

  • RIO

    -3.4300

    64.04

    -5.36%

  • BCC

    1.4900

    142.34

    +1.05%

  • SCS

    0.0100

    13.09

    +0.08%

  • BCE

    0.4400

    28.51

    +1.54%

  • NGG

    -0.4800

    63.82

    -0.75%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    13.47

    +0.74%

  • BP

    -0.9250

    28.885

    -3.2%

  • CMSD

    0.1900

    25.08

    +0.76%

Resilient but threatened, Kenya celebrates Maa culture
Resilient but threatened, Kenya celebrates Maa culture / Photo: Tony KARUMBA - AFP/File

Resilient but threatened, Kenya celebrates Maa culture

The Maa Festival celebrates one of the best-known parts of Kenya's culture, which has been remarkably resilient even as it is strained by modernisation and climate change.

Text size:

At this week's festival, which brought members of Maa tribes from across Kenya to the Samburu national reserve in the north of the country, modern technology sits comfortably alongside ancient culture.

In a straw-topped dung-walled hut, a group of women pass around smartphones and a tablet to share pictures of members of other sub-tribes they have met.

On a main stage, groups combine contemporary beats with the hypnotic guttural throb of Maa chants, while elsewhere people in dazzling beads and headdresses leap and dance in circles that speak of much older traditions.

Kenya has dozens of tribes, but it is the pastoralist Maa communities -- named after the language they share -- that have held on to ancient dress and customs the longest, becoming beloved symbols of the country as a result.

- 'A disconnect' -

The Maasai are the best-known to tourists, but the family includes the Samburu, Laikipiak, Njemps and many others.

"The Maa lived very communally," said Stella Napanu of the Northern Rangelands Trust, a conservation group run by local indigenous communities.

"That strengthened them and helped protect their culture from outside influences."

Climate change is a threat to the Maa, however.

Dwindling water resources have forced herders to travel further from their families, straining community ties.

"There's a disconnect between elders and young people because of this and it has weakened our government structures," said Napanu.

Other changes have been more positive.

Maa musicians have new outlets like YouTube to foster pride in their culture. Some travel as far as France and Australia to perform.

"God has given us this culture, so we must preserve it for our children," said a woman who recently travelled to Germany to show off her beadwork.

But communal living is unlikely to survive the lure of the city.

"Some parts of our culture will not last much longer," said Nasieku Letipila, 42, who runs Samburu county's culture department.

"For the Maa, if I have 10 cows and my neighbour has none, I have to share -- I cannot eat if they cannot eat -- that is the most beautiful part of our culture," she said.

"It sustained us, but it is the most difficult part to maintain. Now I live in a city in a gated community and I don't know my neighbours."

The Maa festival, which is becoming an annual affair since its launch last year, is a chance to reconnect with that older way of being.

"I always have to go back to the village and live like that for a while," said Letipila.

"Our culture is the strongest in Kenya. It's a religion to us, we cannot live without it."

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)