- [sɪka] — 'honey' (cf. Maasai en-aisho)
- [íno] — 'Greater Honeyguide (Indicator indicator)' (compare Maasai n-cɛshɔrɔ-î)
- [kantála] — 'wooden honey container (about 60 cm)'
Wednesday, 4 January 2012
Yaaku people
The Yiaku (often Yaaku, or incorrectly Mukogodo-Maasai) are a people living in the Mukogodo forest west of Mount Kenya, a division of the Laikipia District of Rift Valley Province, Kenya. Former hunter-gatherers and bee-keepers, the Yaaku have partly assimilated to the pastoralist culture of the Maasai in the first half of the twentieth century, although some still keep bees. The reason for this transition is mostly one of social prestige. The Maasai look down upon hunter-gatherer peoples, calling them Dorobo ('the ones without cattle'), and many Yaaku for a certain time considered the Maasai culture superior to their own. As a result of this decision the Yaaku almost completely gave up their Cushitic language Yaaku for the Eastern Nilotic Maasai language between 1925 and 1936. The Maasai variant they speak nowadays is called Mukogodo-Maasai. Old Yaaku words are still found in some parts of the bee-keeping vocabulary, for example:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment