Maasai semi-nomadic people located in Masai Mara National Reserve Kenya Africa. Photo:Jeff Gilbert

Maasai semi-nomadic people located in Masai Mara National Reserve Kenya Africa. Photo:Jeff Gilbert Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Jeff Gilbert / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

C7G4XJ

File size:

35.7 MB (1.1 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

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Dimensions:

2883 x 4325 px | 24.4 x 36.6 cm | 9.6 x 14.4 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

24 December 2008

Location:

Masai Mara National Reserve Kenya Afrtica

More information:

The Maasai (also Masai) are a Nilotic ethnic group of semi-nomadic people located in Kenya and northern Tanzania. Due to their distinctive customs and dress and residence near the many game parks of East Africa, they are among the most well known of African ethnic groups. They speak Maa, a member of the Nilo-Saharan language family that is related to Dinka and Nuer, and are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania: Swahili and English. The Maasai population has been variously estimated as 377, 089 from the 1989 Census or as 453, 000 language speakers in Kenya in 1994 and 430, 000 in Tanzania in 1993 with a total estimated as "approaching 900, 000".Estimates of the respective Maasai populations in both countries are complicated by the remote locations of many villages, and their semi-nomadic nature. Although the Tanzanian and Kenyan governments have instituted programs to encourage the Maasai to abandon their traditional semi-nomadic lifestyle, the people have continued their age-old customs.Recently, Oxfam has claimed that the lifestyle of the Maasai should be embraced as a response to climate change because of their ability to farm in deserts and scrublands.But while the Maasai run cattle farms, they invade the habitats of the endangered lions in Kenya. As of 2010, there are only about 2000 lions left in Kenya and at the rate the Maasai warriors kill them, the lions in Kenya could be gone within two years.