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The Turkanas of Nyandarua
MugundaMan
#1 Posted : Monday, November 19, 2018 4:24:08 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 1/8/2018
Posts: 2,211
Location: DC (Dustbowl County)


The journalist avers that they have maintained their traditional way of life but the evidence we see hapa suggests otherwise IMHO. I see a well clothed people who may be hard to distinguish from their neighbours if they did not wear those bead necklaces, very fat cattle, beehives, and commercialist complaints about not having enough land to farm!
Muheani
#2 Posted : Monday, November 19, 2018 8:09:38 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 11/20/2009
Posts: 1,402
MugundaMan wrote:


The journalist avers that they have maintained their traditional way of life but the evidence we see hapa suggests otherwise IMHO. I see a well clothed people who may be hard to distinguish from their neighbours if they did not wear those bead necklaces, very fat cattle, beehives, and commercialist complaints about not having enough land to farm!



They provide good labour to the farmers around Kasuku area
Baratang
#3 Posted : Monday, November 19, 2018 1:13:16 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 10/6/2009
Posts: 587
Muheani wrote:
MugundaMan wrote:


The journalist avers that they have maintained their traditional way of life but the evidence we see hapa suggests otherwise IMHO. I see a well clothed people who may be hard to distinguish from their neighbours if they did not wear those bead necklaces, very fat cattle, beehives, and commercialist complaints about not having enough land to farm!



They provide good labour to the farmers around Kasuku area


@Muheani, you have your roots in Kasuku?
Wakanyugi
#4 Posted : Monday, November 19, 2018 1:46:51 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 7/3/2007
Posts: 1,634
Muheani wrote:
MugundaMan wrote:


The journalist avers that they have maintained their traditional way of life but the evidence we see hapa suggests otherwise IMHO. I see a well clothed people who may be hard to distinguish from their neighbours if they did not wear those bead necklaces, very fat cattle, beehives, and commercialist complaints about not having enough land to farm!



They provide good labour to the farmers around Kasuku area


Some of them actually own land in the Ol Joro Orok/Ol Kalou Salient and do farming. There is another Turkana community in the Eburu/Oljorai area and they seem to be doing fairly well too.

I think the Turkana are the most cosmopolitan of the Nomadic tribes in Kenya and the way they have thrived far away from their ancestral lands is a good sign for the future. Maybe it has something to do with the hostile terrain there (Turkana, Karamoja, Kapoeta etc). Unlike the Masai who, although they are more welcoming of foreigners among them, do not venture too far afield.
"The opposite of a correct statement is a false statement. But the opposite of a profound truth may well be another profound truth." (Niels Bohr)
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