Kenya's Maasai gather for once-in-a-decade ceremony to turn warriors
into elders
Send a link to a friend
[September 24, 2020]
MAPARASHA HILLS, Kenya (Reuters) -
Thousands of Maasai men clad in red and purple shawls and with their
heads coated in red ochre gathered this week for a ceremony that
transforms them from Moran (warriors) to Mzee (elders).
Around 15,000 men from all over Kenya and neighbouring Tanzania
congregated in Maparasha Hills in Kajiado County, 128 km from Nairobi,
to feast on an estimated 3,000 bulls and 30,000 goats and sheep.
The ceremony occurs once every decade at the site, which is surrounded
by hills and dotted with acacia trees.
On Wednesday, the men roasted the meat on beds of coal from acacia
trees, holding staffs and swords.
"I used to be a Moran, But after this ceremony, I now graduate to be a
Mzee (elder)," Stephen Seriamu Sarbabi, a 34-year-old livestock trader,
told Reuters.
"I will now be having a lot of responsibilities in the community. I will
be chairing some different meetings, I will be consulted," he added.
The arrival of the novel coronavirus in March forced a postponement of
the ceremony, which was meant to have been held earlier in the year.
"My role here in this ceremony, is to come and bless my boys to
graduate, to another stage of being wazees (elders), and to give them
their privileges," Moses Lepunyo ole Purkei, a farmer, community health
volunteer and elder, told Reuters.
[to top of second column]
|
Maasai women sing for their men of Matapato clan before attending
the Olng'esherr (meat-eating) passage ceremony to unite two
age-sets; the older Ilpaamu and the younger Ilaitete into senior
elder-hood as the final rite of passage,o after the event was
initially postponed due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreak in Maparasha hills of Kajiado, Kenya September 23, 2020.
REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya
During the ceremony, the men were accompanied by their wives, who
also wore colourful shawls and beads around their necks and sang
songs praising and encouraging the incoming group of elders.
There are about 1.2 million Maasai living in Kenya, according to the
government statistics office.
(Reporting by Thomas Mukoya; Writing by George Obulutsa; Editing by
Omar Mohammed and Alexandra Hudson)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|