Maasai Village Visit

Code
Destination
Category Day Trips
Duration 8 hours

Package

Visit the Maasai - one of East Africa's most known and fascinaing tribes!

You can take a day trip from Moshi to an authentic Maasai village near Kilimanjaro airport. As opposed to other Maasai villages where tourist visits are possible, this particular one was not set up for tourism purpose.

At the village, you experience many traditional aspects of Maasai life, but also see how the Maasai adapt to development and contact with modern civilization. All visits are planned and arranged by the Maasai themselves; they will show you their traditional Maasai dance and singing, different types of Maasai houses, traditional beard ornaments, the O’Brien School for the Maasai; and you can also walk with their cattle on the plains.

Price includes a lunch box.

 

About the Maasai and their village:

The Masai (or Maasai, Maassai) are nomadic herders that immigrated from northern Africa to East Africa towards the middle of the 16th century. This most well-known ethnic group in East Africa is now located in the Kilimanjaro region, both in southern Kenya and northern Tanzania. Currently, there are about 1,000,000 Maasai, equally divided between the two countries.
 
Originally, the Maasai were known primarily as a warriors and shepherds; the culture of the Maasai is mainly based on cattle. The rain god Ngai, perched on the summit of Mount Kenya, is said to have left to them by their faith, all the cattle of this earth. The Maasai believe this, and until until very recently, forcibly expropriated cattle from others. Even today, the cattle is the most important part of their diet.
 
They feed primarily on the meat, milk and blood from cattle, for their protein and caloric needs. The milk - blood mixture is a traditional Maasai specialty. Vegetable dishes are typically not eaten by Maasai. However, one can see Maasai who live outside the protected areas, resort to agriculture for their income, growing wheat, corn, beans, tea and potatoes. The traditional Maasai however, do not cultivate these but, buy them from other tribes.
 
There are no chiefs or leaders for the Maasai; they are organised by the age group of males. The transitions from one age group to the next are crucial moments in the life of a Maasai man and his reputation is very dependent on the number of cattle and women. It is not uncommon for a Maasai to have 50 cattle and five women. Numerous ceremonies, including the much criticised female circumcision, mark the life if the Maasai.
 
The traditional Maasai houses are round or rectangular depending on the region - but definitely built from a clay-manure mixture, which is similar to a half-timbered house attached to a wooden skeleton structure around. A fire is used for cooking and heating as there is no fireplace inside the Maasai house.
 
The Maasai speak among themselves their own language, Maa, which belongs to the group of Nilotic languages. However, most can also communicate in Swahili, which they have learnt in schools since the 60's.
 
In addition to language and food, many more features of the west are found in the everyday life of the Maasai. Maasai who go to college, download ringtones on their mobile phone, drive a car, write emails and play billiards and dance hip-hop in the city, are no exception. They do not give up their traditions, but mix them with others. Like no other tribe in Tanzania, the Maasai are faithful to their traditional way of life and benefit from tourism.

Two Maasai villages, Laizer and Leronjo, started this initiative and have received approval by the Tanzania Cultural Tourism Programme for the Reception of Foreigners in April 2009; they are familiar with the needs and practices of foreign tourists.