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This
is the Maasai Story:
Legend has it that long ago the Maasai were divided into two groups
during a season of drought. Before this time they lived as one
group in a crater-like region surrounded by steep escarpments.
They
spoke one language called olmaa and had no subdivisions as they
do today. However, when no rains fell they decided they had to
move into the hills where the land was vast and fertile.
Much
discussion was given to the problem of how to climb the escarpments.
It was decided that a great bridge would be built.When
the bridge had been built and the families with their cattle began
to ascend the bridge suddenly broke. Those who were crossing fell
back into the crater where many more awaited.However,
half of the people had already reached the top. These people at
the top became ilmeek or non-Maasai. Those in the crater remained
Maasai.Once
thought to be the lost tribe of Israel, a Maasai warrior resembles
a Roman foot soldier. Like the Romans, the Maasai have been regarded
for their militaristic strength. 
They
were able to forcibly displace tribes encountered on their migration
South. Arab slave traders wouldn’t touch them. Early European
settlers and explorers feared any encounter with the ‘warrior
tribe.’After
migrating South from the Nile Region of North Africa, in the fifteenth
century the Maasai established themselves in the East of Africa
by the mid seventeenth century. Along the way they conquered such
groups as the Chaga, Sirikwa, Galla, Iltatua, Ndorobo and Kikuyu.A
dispute between two brothers, one a religious leader and the other
a secular chief in the mid nineteenth century, caused a rift among
the people.A
civil war entailed as British colonists began to take an interest
in Maasai territory siding with the religious leader. Along with
disease and famine, the people were weakened. The British displaced
the Maasai to reservations where terrain was less than adequate
for sustenance.Although
their number slowly grows each year, the Maasai don’t command
the authority and presence they once did in Africa.After
independence, some Maasai were able to return to their family
homeland. By this time many Maasai had become more settled. Some
started growing crops or held jobs requiring them to stay.
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