Chances are, even if you don’t know who the Maasai people are, you will at some point have seen an image of them. Statuesque and usually swathed in red cloth and colourful beads, they are one of the quintessential images of Kenya. These people have survived here for thousands of years and at one point could be found all over the Great Rift Valley and the lands from Mount Marsabit to Dodoma.
Nowadays they are limited by expanding cities and private reserves and parks, and many have had to cease in their nomadic practise and set up permanent villages. This, along with other changes has meant that a lot of Maasai villages are unable to function as they once did; roaming the vast plains in search of game and grazing land and instead have had to turn to other methods to keep themselves self sufficient.
But the Maasai are not ones to accept defeat. Instead, in most cases they are embracing change, educating their youngsters, allowing members of the village to take on jobs within local hotels and resorts as waiters, security guards or guides and allowing tourists to experience their villages, involving them in arts and crafts and dances and songs. They have also taken to planting and cultivating grain, whilst also adapting their diet and in some cases, traditions, to fit in with the ever encroaching modern world.
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Source: http://islacampbell.articlealley.com/the-maasai-meet-the-21st-century-2125513.html