The Maasai, and their close cousins, the Samburu - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

The Maasai, and their close cousins, the Samburu

Description:

World's second largest continent. Home to the world's ... The Sahara - the largest desert in the world. Rich in minerals. Gold, Platinum, Diamonds, Copper ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:390
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: Mel65
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Maasai, and their close cousins, the Samburu


1
Africa
2
  • Worlds second largest continent
  • Home to the worlds longest river, the Nile
    River
  • Mount Kilimanjaro A volcano and Africas
    highest mountain
  • The Sahara - the largest desert in the world
  • Rich in minerals
  • Gold, Platinum, Diamonds, Copper

3
East Africa
  • Cradle of humanity
  • Large number of prehistoric remains found in
    this region
  • Area where early civilizations developed
  • Aksum emerged in 100 AD as an important trading
    center

4
Colonization
  • Berlin Conference 1884-1885
  • 14 European nations laid down rules for dividing
    Africa
  • A claim was made by telling the other nations
    and by showing that they had control
  • Set boundaries with no regard to ethnic or
    linguistic groups
  • Root cause of the political violence and ethnic
    conflicts of today
  • Only Ethiopia and Liberia remained free

5
Colonization
  • By the 1970s, most of East Africa gained its
    independence from Europe.
  • Internal disputes and civil wars were serious
    problems because European colonial powers had not
    prepared East African nations for independence

6
The Masaia major ethnic group of East Africa
7
Maasai People
  • Indigenous peoples of Kenya
  • Nomadic pastoralists people who exist off the
    land
  • Patriarchal society guidance and wisdom come
    from older males
  • Live in the Great Rift Valley continental
    plates that have moved apart from one another

8
Maasai People
  • Live in temporary villages, or manyattas
  • Huts surrounded by a thorn fence for protection
  • Fierce warriors and lion killers skilled with the
    bow and arrow

9
Maasai Men
  • At the time of circumcision, around 12-15 years,
    males are initiated as morani, or young warriors
  • As morani, they wander from the village, keeping
    watch over the livestock, and defend the tribe
    against enemies
  • The boys color their skin red and braid their
    colored hair intricately

10
Maasai Men
  • In order to be considered a man, they must hunt a
    lion with only a spear
  • The young Maasai warriors live together in a boma
    a group of Maasai boys journey towards manhood

11
Maasai Men
  • They remain warriors for about 15 years
  • Pass through another set of rituals, enuoto,
    which confers elder status
  • They may then
  • Marry
  • Have children
  • Considered an elder
  • Own cattle

12
Maasai MenVertical and Chanting Kings
  • Chanting and jumping was developed as a way of
    intimidating lions
  • Leaping and chanting is now used to
  • Relax
  • Attract women
  • Get hype
  • Before hunting and battle

13
Grazers
  • Lives revolve around herding cattle
  • Believe that God entrusted His cattle to them
  • They measure their wealth by the number of cattle
    they acquire
  • In the evening the livestock are brought inside
    for protection

14
Maasai Women
  • Women do much of the work in the manyatta
  • Caring and teaching of the children
  • Building and decorating huts
  • Making clothing
  • Milk the cows and fetch water (sometimes 36
    miles)
  • Clean the insides of the kraal (corral)

15
Maasai Women
  • Circumcision of the women is required
  • They are allowed to
  • Scream and kick as long as they do not kick the
    knife
  • Infection is said to be rare

16
North Africa
17
West Africa
18
Central Africa
The Slave Trade
19
Central Africa
The Slave Trade
  • In the 1400s Europeans wanted slaves for their
    plantations
  • African merchants traded slaves for guns and
    other goods
  • Slavery existed in Africa already but with key
    differences
  • wasnt lifelong
  • wasnt racial
  • wasnt necessarily for labor

20
Colonization
  • King Leopold II of Belgium took control of the
    Congo
  • In the 1800s and 1900s Belgians and the French
    colonized central Africa
  • disrupted long-standing systems of government
  • did not consider ethnic regions
  • grouped traditional enemies together
  • loss of resources
  • cultural and ethnic oppression
  • When finally given independence Central Africa
    was left in disarray

21
Southern Africa
22
  • In 1948 the white minority government of South
    Africa instituted a policy of apartheid, or
    complete separation of the races
  • Banned social contact
  • Established segregated schools, hospitals, and
    neighborhoods
  • Best land went to whites
  • Imprisoned those who fought against it
    including Nelson Mandela
  • Ended in 1989
  • Nelson Mandela became the first black president
    in 1994
  • 1996 a new democratic constitution was passed

23
Issues in Africa
  • HIV/AIDS
  • Sub-Saharan Africa, which has only 10 of the
    worlds population, has 70 of the worlds HIV/AIDS
    infected population. 80 of AIDS deaths, and 90
    of AIDS orphans.
  • In 2000, AIDS took the lives of 3 million people
    world wide, 2.4 million of them lived in
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • UNAIDS estimates that 4.63 billion is needed to
    fight AIDS in Africa

24
  • Why?
  • Poverty
  • Social Norms
  • Lack of effective institutions

25
  • ShunnedGertrude combs her hair outside her shack
    in Durban. "When I developed shingles the family
    realized that I had AIDS and kicked me out," she
    said. "I had nowhere to live so Theresa, a
    home-care volunteer, helped me to build this
    shack where I live by myself."

26
  • Breaking the silenceNomhlahla Zungu bathes her
    daughter Nomfuno both are HIV positive.
    Nomhlahla said, "My mother at first did not want
    me to disclose my status in public as she had
    heard that if it was known within the community I
    might be killed. But they are not being hostile
    to me. Perhaps many of them know or worry that
    they might be positive as well."

27
  • Limited resourcesMzokhona Malevu, 29, who is HIV
    positive, lives with his 21-member family in a
    two-room squatter shack. Mzokhona said, "I was
    given some drugs which make me feel better, but I
    cannot afford to buy anymore. I have heard that
    in overseas countries the government provides
    drugs and food free for people with AIDS, but
    here in South Africa, there is nothing now. I am
    unhappy that I live in South Africa and have to
    die."

28
  • A surrogate familyCaring for the many children
    orphaned by AIDS stretches the resources of
    extended family, neighbors and institutions.
    These children live in the Durban orphanage, in a
    special unit set up to give orphans with AIDS
    intensive care.

29
  • AIDS educationA child, orphaned by AIDS, battles
    the disease herself. She does her homework in a
    special unit of the Durban orphanage which
    specializes in caring for children with AIDS. In
    Zimbabwe alone, 86,000 children have lost
    teachers as a result of AIDS.

30
  • Too young to dieA baby in the terminal stages of
    AIDS is watched over by its grandmother in the
    childrens' ward of Nquelezana hospital. Of the
    11.5 million people who have already died from
    AIDS, a quarter of the dead were children.

31
  • Not a curseQueen Ntuli, a traditional Zulu
    healer, points with her divining stick at the
    shells and bones she reads to advise clients.
    Some traditional healers claim they can cure
    AIDS, but Queen Ntuli says that is because they
    don't understand the disease. So she has started
    educating fellow healers and clients about the
    dangers of AIDS. "I must start at the point that
    people accept AIDS as AIDS and not a curse," she
    said.

32
  • Scared to lookA grandmother cannot bear to look
    as her granddaughter, who has AIDS, is drip fed
    at Nquelezana Hospital. In the region nearly 30
    percent of pregnant mothers are testing HIV
    positive.

33
Issues in Africa
The Orphan Pandemic
34
The Orphan Pandemic
  • 9,600 people die of AIDS a day in Africa
  • 13 million orphans in Africa
  • Most of these children do not have AIDS but are
    in danger of
  • Slavery
  • Starvation
  • Childhood diseases
  • Forced into prostitution

35
The Orphan Pandemic
  • As a result of the AIDS epidemic orphans are
    quickly outgrowing their resources
  • Uganda has over 500,000
  • Zambia has over 650,000
  • Kenya has over 700,000
  • Botswana has over 800,000
  • Zimbabwe has close to one million

36
The Orphan Pandemic
  • By the end of this decade it would take 80,000
    orphanages, holding 500 orphans each, just to
    house the children orphaned by AIDS in Africa
    alone. (40,000,000) Time Magazine

37
The Orphan Pandemic
  • Within a five-mile radius in sparsely populated
    southern Zimbabwe, there were 600 children found
    without parents. In many households, the oldest
    living person was 10 years old. Time Magazine

38
Assignment
  • Should the AIDS epidemic affect you as an
    individual why or why not?
  • Does the United States of America have a
    responsibility to do something about the AIDS
    epidemic why or why not?
  • Identify two possible solutions to the orphan
    situation.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com