October 09, 2015

Dark Business Of Cattle Rustling And Why It May Not End Any Time Soon

Isiolo County Commissioner George Natembeya (in Jungle uniform) addresses journalist shortly after a security and peace committee held at the KWS complex in Ngaremara Wednesday. To the right is Samburu County Commissioner Mohamed Birik

Though some aspiring politicians may be taking advantage of the avenue to seek political mileage by fueling conflicts, placing the blame squarely at the feet of the politician to hide the commercial viability the lucrative business in the northern part of the country.

This was a statement from the Ngaremara ward Member of County Assembly Peter Losu after listening to elders of two neighbouring communities who have hit the limelight after the Isiolo –Marsabit road was blocked by children belonging to one community who were protesting the killing of one of their own.

Ngaremara ward MCA Peter Losu addresses journalist shortly after the security and peace meeting held at the KWS Complex in his ward yesterday.

He linked the Turkana and Samburu animosity to disagreements over sharing of stolen livestock.

The international road that links Cape Town in South Africa to Cairo in Egypt was made impassable, a major security scare that can bring affect tourism in the country adversely.

Parks and conservancy managements saw the economic implications of the dangerous action but does this really bother the illiterate pastoralist who value cattle raiding more than education?

The two warring communities still hold their livestock dear and are oblivious of the Lapsset project that will soon transform Isiolo from a small town into an urban metropolis owing to its central position in the mega project that will link Lamu to South Sudan and Ethiopia.

Isiolo County Commissioner George Natembeya had an uphill task trying to sink sense into some Turkana’s living in Ngaremara about the dim future those of them rushing to sell land are going to face.

Addressing a baraza last week the newly posted County Commissioner said that the Turkana will only have themselves to blame if they do not strategize to reap from the benefits expected to accompany the Lapsset project.

“Isiolo is the centre of the Lapsset project and land prices will soon escalate. It will be very unfortunate for you to watch from a distance as immigrants construct skyscrapers on land that was previously your own,” said the senior administrator.

Natembeya gave the example of Nairobi where the original owners of land in the city were Maasai yet hardly any Maasai owns a building within the town after they sold out their land to immigrants who have since constructed bungalows and apartments earning them millions of shillings annually.

“The Maasai who owned Nairobi have now been pushed to as far as Kitengela and Kiserian and watch with envy as people from other parts of the country and beyond continue constructing skyscrapers on land that was originally theirs,” said the administrator.

The County Commissioner further disclosed that once bungalows and sky scrapers are constructed within the area there will no longer be land for livestock keeping and those stuck to some cultural practices like cattle rustling will be overtaken by events.

There has been constant blame game with the Turkana crying foul even to the extent of describing their Samburu neighbours as intolerant bullies who are forcing them to adopt their cultural practices.

“We have adopted their culture of circumcising our boys but imagining that we should subject our girls to FGM when the government is against it is ill informed.

We will certainly not subject our girls to circumcision,” said Peter Lekorop, a Turkana elder from Loruko.

Lekorop called on the national government to rename Samburu and Turkana counties into non ethnic names arguing that the tribal notions make the ethnic communities under whose name the county is known to be conceited against other communities living within.
“Why not rename Turkana county into Lodwar county and Samburu into Mararal and bring to an end this feeling that they are tribal counties where all communities do not have equal rights,” posed the Turkana elder.

The animosity between the Turkana and Samburu has been viewed with mixed feelings with some NGOs seeing it as a conflict over water and pasture but the government has maintained that it is all about youth with misplaced priorities.

In July this year the Northern Rangelands Trust (NRT) an NGO that has through experience come to understand the underlying causes of conflicts between pastoral communities called on the Maasai community living in some section of the county to desist from tribal conflicts and embrace education to enhance development of their area.

Turkana and Samburu elders at the KWS Complex meeting. They resolved to have an immediate ceasefire

NRT Chief Executive Officer Dr. Mike Harrison said his organization would work closely with the county and national governments to deter any ethnic animosity among the communities living in Isiolo and the neighbouring counties even as the conflicts over water and pasture threatened to drive them apart.

“The major cause of tribal animosity between the pastoralist communities of Samburu, Turkana, Maasai and Borana is due to competition for water and pasture.

We are therefore working with the national and county governments to avert any conflicts through organizing peace forums with the elders and morans of these communities,” Dr. Harisson had said.

But yesterday the NGOs coordinator expressed different feelings. Speaking in a joint security and peace meeting for Isiolo and Samburu counties held at the KWS complex in Ngaremara division Isiolo County yesterday, NRT Co-ordinator Tom Lalampa raised concern over rising cases of commercialization of cattle rustling.

Lalampa termed commercialization of cattle rustling as an impediment to reconciliation of the communities concerned since recovery of stolen livestock is made difficult by proceeds of the loot.

“Some cattle rustlers were arrested in an undisclosed market selling their loot but were later released under unknown circumstances, a trend that may limit the peace and reconciliation that this meeting was meant to kick start,” said Lalampa.

On their part Natembeya and his Samburu counterpart Mohamed Birik have maintained that the root cause of the animosity is illegal arms and ordered youths using firearms for cattle rustling and killing of innocent people to cease with immediate effect.

Speaking in the same meeting yesterday the two commissioners condemned the misuse of firearms by youths and ordered them to stop immediately or face the full force of the law.

“It is the government’s duty to protect all citizens and their property those who continue killing innocent people and stealing their livestock will be pursued with the full security machinery until this vice is brought to an end,” said Natembeya.

Birik said there have been several accords to seek for a lasting solution and him and his counterpart will ensure that they are fully implemented to end the animosity between the various ethnic communities living in the two neighbouring counties.

“History will judge us harshly if this meeting turns out to be only a public relations exercise and I call on the elders in this meeting to tell the youth that we are now fed up with cattle rustling and killing of innocent people,” said the Samburu county commissioner.

This question continue to linger whether the animosity is ending soon with the revelation by the MCA that the current ethnic animosity is nothing more than deals gone sour.

Losu said the Turkana and Samburu are fighting over deals gone sour after failing to come up with an amicable agreement on how to share livestock stolen from their Meru neighbours.

“When the Turkana who have stolen livestock from the Meru feel they are cornered by security officers, they hide them among the Samburu and vise versa and issues arise later when handing over the livestock to their original raiders become an issue,” said the MCA.

September 30, 2015

International Supermodel Ajuma Nasenyana Proves To The World That Black Skin Matters As She Graces This Month's Issue Of New African Woman

Ajuma Nasanyana, born in Lodwar graces the Cover of London based New African Woman Magazine's October/November issue

A former Kenyan athlete turned top model and one-time British designer Vivienne Westood lead model, Ajuma Nasanyana is the cover girl in the London based New African Woman’s (NAW) magazine in the October /November 2015 edition.

The award-winning bi-monthly magazine New African Woman is the only women's publication covering the entire African continent and its Diaspora. Founded in 2009 in UK with ReGina Jane Jere at the helm, NAW Provides in-depth coverage on a diverse range of issues that truly speak to and resonate with the modern African woman worldwide.

Ajuma who is appearing in the 33 edition which is already out and available digitally, is a fashion model born in Lodwar, Turkana County.

HOW AJUMA ROSE TO BECOME INTERNATIONAL SUPERMODEL

Born in Lodwar on August 16 1984, Ajuma was an athlete training with Paul Erang when she made her first foray into modeling, participating in the Miss Tourism Kenya competition in 2003.

Having won the 400 and 800 mt track events in the Kenya Junior Championships in 2002 she was now the crowd favorite in a very different type of competition. She won the ‘Miss Nairobi title.

On the threshold of pursuing an athletics career Lyndsey McIntyre of Surazuri Modeling Agency persuaded her to meet some journalists coming to Kenya to do a story on her search for a supermodel, they were Gamma Photo Agency.

They met at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport as Ajuma was about to board a plane to Sweden.

The journalists persuaded her to unload her bags and accompany them to Turkana with Lyndsey for a photo spread for French Magazine Gala.

The photographs taken were to provide the basis for Ajuma’s fabulous portfolio. They were so taken with Nasenyana that she became the main feature of the story, which later ran in France's Gala magazine.

Striking: the pictures taken anchored Nasenyana's portfolio, presented to international agency Ford Models, who entered her in Ford's Supermodel of the World competition.

Surazuri then sponsored the 19 year old to enter the Ford Models Supermodel of the World Search 2003 to represent Kenya. This is the worlds premier modeling competition with over 50 contestants taking part in a high profile show in New York.

Ajuma did her country proud by being the first black model ever to win a ($50,000) contract in an international competition that was not aimed solely at promoting black models.

In November 2003, Nasenyana traveled to Europe to build her portfolio prior to the supermodel finals in New York city.

She soon signed with agencies in London, Italy, Australia, Spain, Ireland, Canada and Sweden.

Nasenyana participated in the New York Fashion Week (mind you this is one of the big four fashion weeks in the world) along side Naomi Campbell and Alek Wek for designers such as Baby Phat and Carlos Mieness before traveling to milan to model for fashion houses such as Ungaro during the Italian Fashion Week.

Paris was the final destination during the winter show season and Vivienne Westwood made her the lead model in her show.

Since then, Nasenyana has shot several magazine editorials, a video for Lacoste, and a catalogue for Issey Miyake.

In 2011, she was also named AFI African Fashion International's, Africa Fashion Week Model of the Year 2012.

Besides modeling, Nasenyana has decried the apparent trend in Kenya toward rejection of the indigenous Black African physical standards of beauty in favour of those of other communities.

In an interview with the Daily Nation, she stated that "it seems that the world is conspiring in preaching that there is something wrong with Kenyan ladies' kinky hair and dark skin."

" Their leaflets are all about skin lightening, and they seem to be doing good business in Kenya. It just shocks me. It's not OK for a Caucasian to tell us to lighten our skin. "

"I have never attempted to change my skin. I am natural. People in Europe and America love my dark skin. But here in Kenya, in my home country, some consider it not attractive."

Striking: In 2004 Ajuma won a 6000 Euro prize for being voted Best Model of Spanish Fashion Week

In August 2005 she was voted amongst the worlds 10 most beautiful women by US magazine ‘Complex’.

She has starred in an art house movie that won an award at the New York Film Festival and has worked alongside Naomi Campbell and Alek Wek.

In 2006, she flew with the Victoria’s Secret angels including Gisele Bundchen to participate in a fashion show in Los Angeles for which she was paid a staggering $10,000.

Beautiful: Ajuma Nasenyana walks the runway during the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show held at the Kodak Theatre on November 16, 2006 in Hollywood, California, USA

In 2007 she was flown to South Africa to take part in the huge Positive Rocks concert and show in Sun City where she and Aluchi were the celebrity models for the event.

It was a tough decision to quit athletics but she is not one for regrets. She has adapted easily to the traveling although she admits it can get lonely.

However, her beautiful smile and genuine charm make her new friends wherever she goes - carrying the Kenyan flag with pride and grace.

Ajuma is highly intelligent, charming and ambitious and it is these qualities that make her such a successful model as well as her slim toned body and fantastic bone structure.

September 20, 2015

RENDILLE PEOPLE: AFRICA`S "HOLDERS OF THE STICK OF GOD"

The Rendille people are a nomadic pastoralist Cushitic-speaking ethnic group inhabiting the arid Northern Part of Kenya.

The Rendille also known as Rendile, Reendile, Rendili, Randali, Randile and Randille are popularly referred to as "The Holders of the Stick of God" occupies an area, precisely in the Kaisut Desert in the west Marsabit county.

There are about 64,000 Rendille people living in Kenya.

Rendille people from Kenya performing traditional dance. Photo by Eric Lafforgue

The Rendille descended through the Cushitic family lines with the Somali people.

When the Somali people were traveling from the Suez Canal through Ethiopia the Somali people chose to go toward Somalia for good pastures.

The Rendille people refused to go with them and separated to their present homeland around Marsabit.

They had rejected the land of the Somali's and were thereafter called Rertit. The Somalis consider them rejected people.

Rendille warrior with flashlight - Kenya. Photo by Eric Lafforgue

The name "Rendille" is a colonial misinterpretation of the word"rertit", which means "separated," "refused" or "rejected" in the Somali and Rendille languages.

The Rendille believe that they belong in the desert not by mistake but because it’s their "promised land".

They have a prominent sub-tribe known as the Ariaal-Rendille which some anthropologist recognize as different people, but are of mixed Nilotic and Cushitic descent and speak the Nilo-Saharan Samburu language of the Samburu Nilotes with whom they cohabit.

Veiled girl from Rendille tribe

The Rendille people first came to the attention of anthropologist when the versatile freedom fighter and anti-colonialist white American William A. Chandler published the first-ever ethnological study of the Rendille at the turn of the 20th century.

Chanler described the unmixed Rendille that his party encountered as tall, slender and reddish-brown in complexion, with soft, straight hair and narrow facial features.

Beautiful soft-haired Rendille girl

Chanler additionally remarked that many of the Rendille possessed "fierce" blue eyes, a physical peculiarity that was also later noted by Augustus Henry Keane (1900), John Scott Keltie (1904) and John Henry Patterson (1909).

This historical observation of the Rendille`s blue eyes account for the emergence of blue eyes dated back to10,000 years to the Black Sea region, when the Africans colonized Europe.

Rendille warrior

The Rendille are skilled craftsmen and make many different decoration or ornaments.

Rendile warriors often wear proudly a distinctive visor-like hairstyle, dyed with red ochre. As for the women, they wear several kilos beads.

Rendille beauty

LANGUAGE

The Rendille speak the Rendille language as a mother tongue (also known as Rendile or Randile), which is very close to Somali but is spoken more slowly.

It belongs to the Cushitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family.
Some Rendille also use English or Swahili as working languages for communication with other populations.

The Ariaal sub-group of the Rendille, who are of mixed Nilotic and Cushitic descent, speak the Nilo-Saharan Samburu language of the Samburu Nilotes with whom they cohabit.

Rendille are believed to be alienated and experts believe the pure Rendille are almost extinct with their language confined to a few in Kargi and Korr.

Rendille language especially is under threat from Samburu, a sub sect of the Masai language Ma, which is considered by many Samburu-speaking Rendille as a sexy and modern language.

LOCATION

The Rendille occupy an area in Northern Kenya from the Merille River and Serolipi in the South to Loyangalani in the North from Marsabit and Merti in the East to Lontolio in the West.

The primary towns include Marsabit, Laisamis, Merille, Logologo, Loyangalani, Korr, Kamboi, Ngurunit, and Kargi.

The climate of their homeland is semi arid.

Rendille woman

HISTORY

Rendille are Cushitic peoples and have Ethiopia as their original homeland, though as ancestors of Cush they traveled through Suez Canal to Ethiopia as their first destination.

They were compelled to migrate down south to the Great Lakes area in northern Kenya due to increased rivalry and conflicts with the people of the Oromo tribes and later Somalis mainly over grazing land and water for their livestock.

1970 photo of Rendille women

They are said to be related to the Somalis of Somalia. They don't have history with the British colonialists, because their land was too dry to interest them.

The language originally spoken by the Rendille is somewhat similar to the Somali languages, but currently many of them speak Samburu since they have intermarried.

The Rendille settled in the Laisamis Division in Marsabit county, mainly in the Kaisut Desert that is found east of Lake Turkana and west of Marsabit town.

This desert is bordered by the Chalbi Desert, Mount Marsabit, and the Ndoto Mountains.

In this region, they are neighbors to the Borana , Gabbra, Samburu and Turkana tribes.

HISTORY AND GENETIC CONNECTIONS

Recent advances in genetic analyses have helped shed some light on the ethnogenesis of the Rendille 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 Rendille Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA).

According to an mtDNA study by Castri et al. (2008), the maternal ancestry of the contemporary Rendille consists of a mixture of Afro-Asiatic-associated lineages and Sub-Saharan haplogroups, reflecting substantial female gene flow from neighboring Sub-Saharan populations.

About 30% of the Rendille belonged to the West Eurasian haplogroups I (15%), N1a (8%), M1a (3%) and R0/pre-HV (3%).

The remaining samples carried various Sub-Saharan macro-haplogroup L sub-clades, mainly consisting of L0a (22%) and L2a (8%).Rendille women of Kenya National Geographic November 1984. Angela Fisher.

RENDILLE'S AUTOSOMAL DNA

The Rendille'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 researchers, the Rendille showed significant Afro-Asiatic affinities.

They also shared some ties with neighboring Nilo-Saharan and Bantu speakers in the Great Lakes region due to considerable genetic exchanges with these communities over the past 5000 or so years.

Rendille girl with beads and flower headdress

ECONOMY

The Rendille people are traditionally pastoralists keeping goats, sheep, cattle, donkeys, and camels.

The Rendille get milk and meat from the camel.

As a semi-nomadic pastoralists who consider the camel most essential animal; their camel are the best suited for adaptability to the arid conditions of their territory.

Another important aspect of the camel is that it's used as a mode of transport when they shift from site to site carrying family goods on their uniquely designed backload.



Their nomadic lifestyle has become less prominent with the development of boreholes and centers that allow a more permanent existence.

Their staple food consists of meat, and a mixture of milk and blood, known as "Banjo".

SUBDIVISIONS

According to Spencer (1973), the Rendille are organized into an age grade system of patrilineal lineage groups (keiya), which are subsumed under fifteen clans (goup). Of those, only nine are considered authentic Rendille.

These Northern Rendille or Rendile proper are consequently the only ones that are included in the traditional Rendille moiety (belesi).

The remaining six clans that are excluded from the moiety consist of mixed individuals.

Five of those clans are of Rendille (Cushitic) and Samburu (Nilotic) descent.

Collectively, the latter hybrid groups are referred to as the Ariaal or Southern Rendille.

Smiling Rendille woman

SOCIAL-POLITICAL STRUCTURE

According to Spencer (1973), the Rendille are organized into an age grade system of patrilineal lineage groups (keiya), which are subsumed under fifteen clans (goup). Of those, only nine are considered authentic Rendille.

The real or Northern Rendille proper herds camel and are consequently the only ones that are included in the traditional Rendille moiety (belesi).

There are nine sub clans of Real or Northern Rendille includes: the Urowen, Dispahai, Rongumo, Lukumai (Nahgan), Tupsha, Garteilan, Matarbah, Otola, and Saale.

The remaining six clans that are excluded from the moiety consist of mixed individuals and are referred to as Southern Rendille.

It comprises the Ilturia and Ariaal,who also herd cattle, and are closely related to the Samburu.

Due to their intermarriage with the Samburu tribe, there is now what can be termed as a hybrid culture.

With the recent droughts, transition is underway and in the near future, there is a chance that their pure nomadic ways of life will slowly die.

Clans live in temporary settlement called gobs.

Gobs are usually near wells dug and are given the name of the clan, subclan or the elder of the family.

They never stay long at the same place to look for water sources and pasturing areas.

They have to move 3 to 5 times a year. Villages are typically made of two dozen houses (manyattas) or homesteads with about 120 individuals.

The manyattas are composed of a group of semi-spherical huts made of branches and covered with leather or canvas.

Women are in charge of taking the houses apart and putting them back in the new location.

Near them, an enclosure of crabbed branches protects camels for the night.

Each kind of livestock (camels, sheep, goats, cattle) have a separate camp that is taken cared of by people of a different age-set.

Elders and chiefs are the leaders of the traditional community.



RELIGION

Rendille practice a traditional religion centered on the worship of Waaq/Wakh. In the related Oromo culture, Waaq denotes the single god of the early pre-Abrahamic, monotheistic faith believed to have been adhered to by Cushitic groups.

As mentioned earlier, Rendille believe that they belong in the desert not by mistake but because it’s their "promised land".

In their popular morning prayers they pray "your people Waaq (God) cannot climb mountains, cross seas but remain in this Promised Land in which you have looked after our fore fathers, us and our children's children...."The Rendille traditional religion includes prayer to the moon, animal sacrifices, and the existence of ancestral spirits.

They also have traditional religious practices that resemble Jewish practices. Prayer is offered looking up to the heavens.

A christian Rendille girl

The moon plays an important part in the religion. The moon is god or represents god.

On the night of the new moon the firstborn son of each family blows a horn.

Individuals put red paint made from clay on their skin and hair.

They burn incense from local trees in the fire. Prayers are prayed to the god of the new moon at 8 PM.

A prayer for long life includes putting your hand out toward the new moon and praying, "You take the short life and give me the long life."

At the time of eclipse one prayers, "God, our father, don't die, be alive."

And after the moon shines again,"Our god is alive and he is with us."

They also have fortune-tellers who predict the future, and perform sacrifices for rain.

During draught some take little lambs to the raga or laga (dry river bed) and sacrifice them to god asking for rain.

Others go to Mount Moile where the women sing and pour milk and men offer sacrifices of goats to the gods and ask for rain.

Ancestral spirits of deceased men must be appeased. Among some of the Rendille, after a man dies, the manyatta will be burned, a sheep slaughtered, and the family must move to another place.

When they pass by the place milk, water, or tobacco will be placed on the grave to appease the spirit of the deceased.

The traditional witch doctor, called lariboni, practices sorcery to assist people with healing, delivering of mad people, etc.

A diviner or foreteller called oloiboni also plays a role in the society.

The Rendille oral history includes a tradition of coming from the Israelite line.

Most striking in this history is their Passover ceremonies called Sorio (literally sacrifice to God), which includes slaughtering sheep by the firstborn son of the family, putting the blood on the doorposts of their homes.

Blood is also put on the back of camels and other animals, on women's ear and cheek, and on men's chest and forehead.

This is done so that bad omen will not come to the house and animals.

Meat from the slaughtered sheep is eaten by all members of the family and shared with those who did not slaughter.

Rendille beauty

There is a place in every village called nahapo. This is a place of watching and prayer. A fire burns there that is never to go out. Wood is place on the fire each day. Every night the men of the village meet there at 8 PM. One man is designated to lead in prayer. He comes from the Saale sub clan. The Saale men are designated as the prayer men clan.

The Rendille people exist as a strategic tribe between the Muslims to the North and animistic and Christian tribes to the South.

When Islam came to the region and efforts were made by the Muslims to convert the Rendille to Islam the Rendille refused to become Muslims.

The Muslims insisted that prayer to Allah be made with their faces to the ground.

The Rendille believed that prayer should be made with their faces toward the heavens.

On one occasion the Rendille gathered all the Koran that had been distributed among them and took them to Mount Moile and burned them there.

Some Rendille continued to be Muslim since early times, but the percentage was small.

The Rendille people have had little exposure to Christianity until the latter part of the Twentieth Century.

The first churches to begin work among them included the Catholic, AIC, and more recently numerous Pentecostal churches (Kenya Assemblies of God, PCEA, Full Gospel Churches of Kenya, Christco, etc.).

While the Rendille people are listed among the least reached people groups of Kenya, they seem to be very responsive to the gospel.

An educated Rendille girl and Rendille warrior at a wedding

Rendille Culture and traditions(rites of passage,marriage,ceremonies etc)

Rendille culture is built on strict separation of the sexes during important cultural and spiritual practices.

Women are not allowed to talk or fraternize with men, and traditionally are shunned from major religious events outside of courtship rituals.

Rendille girl at her wedding

Rites of passage include the young men (moran) living in the bush, learning traditional skills, and undergoing traditional circumcision. Men marry after circumcision and the time of becoming a moran is as young as about eighteen to twenty years.

Marriage is not allowed within one's own clan, and is arranged by parents as for most tribes.

Each wife live in her own home with her children, and mothers have a high status. Society is strongly bound by family ties.

Circumcision is supposed to be a public event, and an issue of great delight and pride. Boys and young men who are circumcised but have not yet undergone Ennui, (rite into adulthood done at age 30) whereby men become elders and are given ownership of land. In this ritual, wear a purple cloth and a white feather as their headgear.

Rendille girl

This cloth is changed to a checked pattern at the final acceptance as an Elder.

Being very conscious of their headgear, warriors will even get upset if it is touched by an outsider or member of another tribe, especially a woman.

Nevertheless, some of the Rendille have adopted western clothing.

Their building styles for houses comprise of higher ones than those built by other pastoralist tribes and have a round shape.

After every seven (or fourteen) years, there is a general shifting up in status of the different male age-groups, moving from childhood to boyhood then to warrior hood and finally to elder hood.

Young girls are often "booked" at a very early age by older men. They marry as young as ten or twelve years.

The Rendille women`s, shift from maidenhood to matrimony is manifested by the agonizing rite of clitoridectomy, which happens in private on the very morning of her wedding.

Rendille girl with pendants on her beaded headdress

Nonetheless the event symbolizes the most important status-shift in the life of a woman.

The wedding ceremony takes time as women are made to learn skills of women that will benefit her and the husband in their future marriage.

The prospective groom must give the bride-wealth (gunu) to the bride's family: 4 female and 4 male camels (half for the father, the remaining camels for the rest of the family). One of them is eaten at the ceremony.

Rendille warrior with painted face

Beaded girls: the Rendille receive empooro Engorio beaded collars for marriage, made of palm fibers, girafe or elephant hairs- and warriors get ready for the wedding by applying a make-up of red ochre and sheep fat.

The warriors put on long hair woven and braided, then dyed red using ochre and fat, making their bodies shinny and colorful.

Rendille woman with Mpooro Engorio necklace - Kenya

The bride wears jewellery made of glass and metal, necklaces of beads and wire, headbands, and a large circular earrings.

She will join her husband's family after marriage.

The elders discuss problems in a ritual circle called Nabo, in which women are allowed to enter. They also meet there to pray, receive guests and perform ceremonies.

Rendille bride and groom strut their stuff at Rendille wedding ceremony. Photos by David Lansing.

Polygamy is part of the tradition. A wealthy man may have five wives.

Special ceremonies take place at a child's birth. A ewe goat is sacrificed if it is a girl, a ram if a boy. The girl is blessed 3 times while 4 for the boy.

In the same way, mother drinks blood for 3 days for a baby girl, 4 days for a baby boy.

Death rituals include a celebration day when the clothes and belongings of the deceased are given as gifts to those attending.

THE RENDILLE CALENDAR

The Rendille calendar functions according to a procession of seven-or fourteen-year cycles, which is based on both lunar and solar aspects.

The calendar, which is passed down in oral tradition, is essential for determining not only the various life-stages through which men must pass before being able to marry as elders, but also regulates with clockwork-like precision the various movements of the Rendille clans through their traditional territory, thus avoiding conflicts over forage and water rights, and preventing overgrazing which would otherwise quickly turn their already marginal lands into a completely sterile desert.

Rendille girl

The calendar also has implications for women in the form of the sepaade institution, by which women of a specific cyclical age-set delay their age at marriage, which significantly reduces overall Rendille fertility.

Every seven (or fourteen) years, there is a general shifting up in status of the various male age-sets, from childhood to boyhood to warrior hood and to elder hood.

Sources:

* Rantsmind

* Rita Willaert

* Eric Lafforgue

* Joshua Project.

August 29, 2015

Fascinating world of Kenya's Borana tribe revealed: They use butter as hair conditioner, shave their head until marriage... and think taking photos draws BLOOD.

Via Daily Mail

*.The majority of the 500,000-strong Borana tribe live in Kenya but some also live in Ethiopia and Somalia

*.Women use clarified butter (ghee) to keep their hair in perfect condition and wear it in elaborate plaits

*.Girls have the crown of their heads shaved,with the hair only allowed to grow after they marry

*.Other beliefs include the fear that having your photo taken removes some blood and steals your shadow

*.They also believe in a single god named Wak, although more are converting to Christianity and Islam


Split between Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia, the 500,000-strong Borana tribe might be numerous but their fascinating customs and religious beliefs are entirely unique.

A nomadic people, their lives revolve around finding good grazing for their herds of camels and cattle, which combined, provide everything they need to survive in the striking semi-arid scrub land they inhabit.

But while men dominate village life and are in charge of the herds, women play a vital role and are in sole charge of building Borana homes and performing the elaborate dances that signal the birth of a baby.

Dressed in her best: A Borana woman wearing traditional garb made from goat skins. The expensive dresses are now kept only for best

Rules: Many of the Borana's rules apply to children, including a prohibition on addressing anyone older than themselves by their first name

With so little water to be had, their beauty routine is an unusual one and involves anointing their locks with ghee (clarified butter) to keep hair smooth and shiny.

Girls are given the most striking hairdos and wear the crown of their heads shaved until they marry, at which point the hair is allowed to grow back while the rest is plaited into elaborate designs.

But hair isn't the only part of life governed by the Borana's centuries-old laws.

The majority of rules apply to children who, for instance, aren't allowed to call anyone older than themselves by their first names.

Those names are also governed by tribal law and are inspired by the time of day they were born. 'Boys born in broad daylight are always called Guyo,' explains photographer Eric Lafforgue who took these incredible pictures.

'Some are named after a major event, a ceremony (Jil), a rainy season (Rob) or a dry season (Bon). Others are named after weekdays while a few get odd names such as Jaldes (ape), Funnan (nose), Gufu (tree stump) and Luke (lanky long legs).'

Whatever their parents decide to call them, all children are given a place in the social pecking order at birth - and once done, it is rare for it to be changed.

Welcome: The birth of a baby of either gender is marked by a traditional women-only dance which welcomes the infant into the world

Hard work: Women are in sole charge of building Borana homes and since they move four times a year, have to work extremely hard

A woman carries milk in an engraved gourd and shows off a bead ring

The chief's wife is given special jewellery

Shaved: Girls such as this one have the crowns of their heads shaved until marriage. Afterwards, hair grows back and is plaited

Traditionally, the Borana believed in a single god called Wak.

Now Islam and Christianity are beginning to make inroads

Many young people are leaving tribal life behind

This woman is studying to become a nurse

Elders complain but families say they need the money

Screened: Borana women are not allowed to come face-to-face with their son-in-laws. If they do, both must immediately cover their faces

The luckiest are the sons of village chiefs who are placed in the top grade, daballe, at birth and show their status with long locks that make them resemble girls.

As future chiefs themselves, no one is allowed to punish them, even when they misbehave, while their mothers gain an honoured place in society and are frequently asked to bless well-wishers.

These women are also given special jewellery to wear usually made from colourfully beaded leather, enlivened on occasion with recycled Coca-Cola caps.

Those who aren't married to a chief, although often forced to share a husband, do get some special benefits including being in sole charge of who can and cannot enter their homes - spouses included.

'A wife always decides who will enter in the house,' explains Lafforgue. 'If her husband comes back and finds another man’s spear stuck into the ground outside her house, he cannot go in.'

Women are also in sole charge of raising their daughters and usually insist that they become excellent housewives. Men, when they come to choose a wife, will often judge the girl by her mother, which makes getting it right all the more important.

Older women are honoured as the keepers of tribal lore, although not all of it makes sense to Western ears. 'Old people are afraid of having their picture taken,' says Lafforgue. 'They believe that when you take their photo, you remove their blood and steal their shadow.'

New religion: An increasing number of Borana are becoming Muslim and have adopted Islamic customs such as the headscarf


This boy is the son of a chief and can never be punished

Important man: This man is the overseer of one of the Borana's network of wells. It is taboo to fight over water

Chief: The Borana elect a leader every eight years. The 'father of the village' wears a special headdress called a kalacha

Home: Women have the final say on who can enter their homes. If a man finds another man's spear outside his wife's hut, he can't go in

Laborious: Women are tasked with building all the houses, as well as dismantling and rebuilding them when the village moves on

Livelihood: The Borana's cattle and camels are their most precious possessions and are nearly always cared for by men