Give reason to explainwhy the maasai community lost their grazing lang
5 points
Answers
1. The lives of the African
pastoralists have changed drastically in the Colonial and postcolonial phases.
In the 19th Century the European powers were fighting for colonies. The
occupied several regions which were divided by multiple International borders between
British Kenya and German Tanganyika.
2. In 1885, Maasais land were
divided between the British and the Germans. The Maasai community was pushed
into a small area in South Kenya and North Tanzania which considerably reduced
their grazing lands.
3. From the late 19th century, The
British colonial rulers promoted cultivation on pasture lands. The movement of
herders were restricted in the settlements. The Maasais therefore lost their
grazing areas.
4.The Maasais were forced to live
in a dry area where there was a little water and poor pasture. They could not
graze their herds in such areas.
5. The British converted many
forest into game reserves like the Masai Mara, Serengeti national park and Samburu
National Park. This led to fall in pasture lands.
6. The Masai community was not
left with many Pasture tracts as a result their livestock declined and their
economic condition became worse.
Hope its enough reasons :)
In the late nineteenth century, in what would be knowns as the ‘scramble for Africa’, European imperial powers slicing up the region into different colonies with little to no regard about the local sentiments. In 1885, the land of the Maasai, Maasailand, was cut into half with an international boundary between British Kenya and German Tanzania. As a result, the best grazing lands were reserved for white settlers with Maasai being pushed into a small area in southern Kenya and northern Tanzania.
Large areas of grazing land were also turned into game reserves like the Maasai Mara and Samburu National Park in Kenya and Serengeti Park in Tanzania. Pastoralists were not allowed to enter these reserves; they could neither hunt animals nor graze their herds in these areas.