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Kenyan Maasai Warriors Head to Arizona
Twin Cities/AP ^ | 4/21/04 | Tom Maliti

Posted on 04/21/2004 2:07:14 PM PDT by CAIndependent

Maasai warriors and Arizona cowboys appreciate many of the same things - healthy cattle, roasted meat and the open plains - so it's no wonder they struck up a friendship.

A group of Maasai departed for Arizona on Wednesday to learn how to merge ancient Kenyan traditions with modern American agro-economics, reciprocation for a visit by a group of Arizona cowboys in 2002.

Ranchers from the Douglas, Ariz.-based Malpai Borderlands Group will be showing off the conservation and economic benefits of open rangelands when Maasai from Kenya and Tanzania spend a week with them.

The Arizona ranchers came to Kenya in October 2002 and shared their experiences with the Maasai, who like themselves have resisted government pressure to fence in their land and drive off wildlife, said James Ndung'u of the African Conservation Center, which helped the two groups meet.

During the Americans' stay, Yusuf Ole Petenya listened to Bill Miller and his wife, Carol, share their life story over a meal of nyama choma - or roast meat, a must-have in Kenya - and recognized his own.

"They live like Maasai, but their environment is different. They do things according to the clock," Petenya said. "Once a Maasai starts grazing his cattle, he's not in a hurry."

But many other things were the same.

"They milk their cattle, graze them, water them, take them to dips just like we do. Even they were surprised there were similarities between the Maasai and cowboys," Petenya said.

The Malpai Borderlands Group's ranch runs across Arizona and New Mexico along the border with Mexico. The Maasai tribe, known for its spectacular jewelry and distinctive red clothing, is also a border community, living in the savannas of southern Kenya and in neighboring northern Tanzania.

Like the Maasai, the Malpai ranchers not only think of their herds when pondering the future, they also keep in mind the wildlife that shares the open rangelands, such as the endangered Mexican jaguar, the recently reintroduced thick-billed parrots, or the rare Chiricahua leopard frog.

"We believe that our work will continue to show that cattle are not just compatible with rare species, but often they are beneficial. We've found that if you do the right thing for one, it tends to help the other," Bill McDonald, the group's executive director, said on its Web site.

The Maasai have learned over generations to coexist with wildlife and have turned that knowledge to their advantage by creating conservation areas.

One group, the Shompole Community Trust, noted that a trickle of tourists came soon after seeing the 1985 Oscar-winning "Out of Africa," which was partly filmed on Shompole land.

The community built the Shompole Safari Lodge with the help of the African Conservation Center to raise much-needed cash from tourists eager to see lions, cheetah, elephants and the endangered African wild dog.

Petenya said his American visitors told him they too had come under pressure from government officials to modernize and change their ways, to graze their cattle on less land, to subdivide their property or quit ranching all together.

When the Malpai ranchers subdivided their rangeland, which totals 800,000 acres, cattle overgrazed the smaller, 100-acre plots, which adversely affected the environment and the wildlife that had lived there. Eventually they opened up some of their prairies and are working to restore all of them.

In 2002, the Malpai ranchers decided to reach out to other ranchers with similar experiences because "after going through the bad stages and then the recovery they thought they owed it" to others to share the lessons they learned, Ndung'u said.

Petenya said he hopes to learn the skills the Malpai Borderlands Group used to lobby government officials and lawmakers to rethink their policies on ranching, so that "we can try to form a group here that can access (President Mwai) Kibaki" and hopefully avoid the same mistakes.

------

On the Net:

Malpai Borderlands Group, http://www.malpaiborderlandsgroup.org

African Conservation Center, http://www.conservationafrica.org

Shompole Safari Lodge, http://www.shompole.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; US: Arizona; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: africa; arizona; cattle; conservation; cowboys; farms; grouphug; kenya; livestock; maasai; ranchers

1 posted on 04/21/2004 2:07:15 PM PDT by CAIndependent
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To: CAIndependent
Great post!
2 posted on 04/21/2004 2:08:43 PM PDT by Glenn (The two keys to character: 1) Learn how to keep a secret. 2) ...)
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To: CAIndependent
Ah! So they'll be tootin' round the campfire singin' "Don't Fence Me In". Behold....the power of beans!

Happy news amid the usual dirge of anger-inspiring reportage. Thanx.

3 posted on 04/21/2004 2:32:55 PM PDT by dasboot (I do not mock. Much.)
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To: CAIndependent
hell, yeah!

curious: did the arizona visit in 2002 come in response at all because of the Masai donation of those cattle to us as a gift og sympathy after 9-11?

I STILL want to do something to send something back as a gesture of thanks
4 posted on 04/21/2004 2:56:31 PM PDT by King Prout (poets and philosophers should NEVER pretend to Engineering... especially SOCIAL Engineering!)
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To: CAIndependent
Open Range Bump!
5 posted on 04/21/2004 2:59:01 PM PDT by Feiny (They Will Fear Us, We Will Prevail)
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To: CAIndependent
Interesting read. We had some Maasai visitors here in Nashville a couple of years ago. They were surprisingly engaging and interesting. After speaking with them, a trip to eastern Africa is in my near future.
6 posted on 04/21/2004 3:55:34 PM PDT by tdadams (If there were no problems, politicians would have to invent them... wait, they already do.)
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