Tag Archives: northern Tanzania

Maasai youths embrace tradition and leadership at rare warrior training camp

In the misty highlands of Kenya’s Maasailand, 900 teenage boys have just completed an ancient rite of passage, transforming from boys into young Maasai warriors. Dressed in traditional shukhas, they endured weeks sleeping on the forest floor without bathing, often going hungry, as part of a warrior training camp held in Olaimutiai, Narok County — an event that only happens every 10 to 15 years.

The boys, chosen from across southern Kenya and northern Tanzania, learned essential Maasai values: respect, leadership, and cultural preservation. Chief Ole Ngoshoshi of the Irkitoip age set stressed the importance of maintaining cultural practices to avoid losing respect within the community. “If you lack respect, there will be disorder among the clans,” he warned, urging the younger generation to safeguard their traditions.

The training, known as “Enkipaata,” has evolved with modern times. Once lasting a full year and involving dangerous survival tests like lion hunting, the camp is now condensed into a month and synchronized with school holidays. Weapons have been replaced with wooden sticks, and education is highly encouraged alongside tradition.

For many, like 16-year-old Isaac Mpusia, the experience is a source of pride. “We are going to choose our leaders that will lead us through our age groups,” he said, beaming with excitement about the cultural celebration.

Women also play a pivotal role. Joyce Naingisa, a Maasai woman and county minister, highlighted that it was women who built the manyattas, the traditional homes,for the temporary camp. “We came to a plain field, and now you see full houses. That is the role of women,” she explained.

As the camp concluded, a ceremonial bull was slaughtered, its meat blessed and shared among all participants to reinforce community bonds. The graduating class was given the name “Iltaretu,” symbolizing unity and hope. Beyond training warriors, the event also planted the seeds of environmental stewardship, with 150 seeds and 50 tree seedlings planted alongside the new generation of leaders.

Facing challenges like climate change and shrinking grazing lands, the Maasai community is betting on its youth to carry forward a culture deeply rooted in resilience, respect, and community spirit.

Source: Africanews

Tanzania: Death toll from landslides rises to 68

The death toll from landslides and flooding triggered by heavy rainfall in northern Tanzania climbed to 68 on Monday, a regional official said, as rescue workers searched for trapped survivors.

Torrential downpours at the weekend washed away vehicles and brought down buildings in the hillside town of Katesh, 300 kilometres (185 miles) north of the capital Dodoma.

Images broadcast on television showed debris from houses, including furniture, strewn across streets, with key roads, power lines and communication networks disrupted.

“We have closed our evening with 68 deaths and rescue operations are ongoing,” said regional commissioner Queen Sendiga.

Tanzania’s Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa on Monday paid tribute to the victims during a ceremony in Katesh to hand over their remains to their families.

“We believe we will recover more bodies,” he said, adding that 116 people were injured in the disaster.

Search and rescue operations were underway with the help of the military as people were feared buried in thick mud.

Local resident Paschal Paulo said everything had been washed away in the market where he worked.

James Gabriel, who also worked at the market, said his relatives were missing and the search was “very stressful”.

Esther Bohay said she heard loud noises and saw the streets outside her home turn into a river of mud as the rain swept in.

She managed to escape the deluge with her family.

At least 100 houses were swallowed by the mud and a village with 28 families flattened, said Sendiga.

The disaster has prompted President Samia Suluhu Hassan to cut short her visit to Dubai for the COP28 climate talks.

Tanzania and its East African neighbours Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia are battling flash floods caused by torrential rains linked to the El Nino weather pattern.

The floods are exacerbating the humanitarian crisis in the region just as it emerges from the worst drought in four decades that left millions hungry.

Between October 1997 and January 1998, widespread flooding caused more than 6,000 deaths in five countries in the region.

Scientists say extreme weather events such as flooding, storms, droughts and wildfires are being made longer, more intense and more frequent by human-induced climate change.


Source: Africanews