I've visited the Olpopongi Maasai Cultural Village north of Arusha in Tanzania a few times. It's lovely to be recognized by these warm-hearted greeters who noticed when I change my hair style.
I've shared tea with "Bibi" (grandma) who readily smiles for a camera, but doesn't speak a word of English. Bibi was 82 when I first met her in 2010. When I returned in 2012, my translator told me said she was 87. I didn't ask at my next visit. On my first visit, I watched the locals slit the neck of a goat and bleed it to death, catching and drinking the blood without sharing. We had goat for dinner, then danced around a bonfire like we all came from the same parents. We sang until the fire burned out. We taught them Kumbaya and they taught us Sigogo. My sleeping quarters were inside a traditional elephant-dung hut with a bed of branches covered in goat skins, and a clean sleeping bag. Our guide Freddy walked us away from the village on day two, over dry ground for a bush tour to show us ant hills and plants that any medicine man would covet. He slashed spiny branches from our path and made spear-throwing look easy. He insisted I try my hand at throwing his spear, then in the sweetest voice you've ever heard, said the village would starve if they had to rely on my hunting skills.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorSally Oberstein is a novelist, playwright, producer, musician, and international tour guide. "Though it might feel like danger when you let the world swallow you whole, it is actually saving you and improving human relations."
Archives
February 2025
Categories |