They have no written language, yet their stories have survived droughts, wars, and the passage of centuries. 🦁🌍
How does your culture preserve history without books? Option 3: Twitter / X (Short & Punchy) 🧵 African Art & Literature Series: The Inkishu
The Maasai don't have a written alphabet. So how do they preserve 500 years of history? They have no written language, yet their stories
I have tailored this for different platforms (Instagram/Facebook, LinkedIn/Blog, and Twitter/X). Header: 📖✨ Series: African Art & Literature
Today, we explore the and their concept of Inkishu (myths/histories). For the Maasai, a semi-nomadic people dwelling in Kenya and Tanzania, history is not written in ink, but woven into shúkà (cloaks), carved into wooden clubs ( rungu ), and recited through call-and-response narratives. So how do they preserve 500 years of history
1/5 The answer is (Oral Myths). Every bead pattern, every warrior chant, every cattle brand is a sentence in a larger story. 🐄
Welcome to the latest installment of our , where we dive into the Inkishu —the oral myths and legends of the Maasai people of East Africa. For the Maasai, a semi-nomadic people dwelling in
3/5 Maasai stories use "Panic of the Zebra" – a metaphor for sudden war. Unlike Western metaphors (which are visual), Maasai metaphors are auditory (echoes of hooves).