The Masai use medicinal plants; one such plant is o-rupanti, pl.i-rupanti is the commiphora tree(Commiphora zimmermannii) and parts of it are used as medicine for children. The roots of the tree are utilized to treat a snake bite; the leaves are infused in water and the liquid form of it is drank for cases of fever. To relieve a toothache the leaf stalks are heated in fire; cooking the bark with mead is said to prevent indigestion. To relieve constipation, abdominal and/or stomach ache the bark is chewed and the juice swallowed.
There are high figures for disease within the Masai, most Masai men will have two to four wives resulting in a large level of disease. While trading livestock of their animals in addition to that of neighbors and the community at large, large sums of cash is at hand which is used for bar girls and prostitutes in the townships. Sexually transmitted diseases are large in number in many areas with AIDs having affected the Masai at 20% - 30% in comparison to Kenya's national average of 06% to 12%. In addition to AIDS/HIV+, Tuberculosis (TB) incidents are high in numbers and mostly untreated. Though at times if treatment requires six months of regular drug therapy to complete recovery the lifestyle of the Masai and the matter of TB becoming resistant to the first generation drugs. Cancer and diabetes has been identified as causing death amount the Masai, previously this was not the case, a change in life styles, use of alcohol and roast meat (diet) has now made this an issue.
A lot of ailments are cared for directly by medicinal plants within the Masai however there are hospitals and health care centers available as monies provided from the national park and reserves helped to make them available for the Masai.
Although the Masai reside in a different region of the world there are similar underlying principles for living and concerns for well being. Instead of focusing on differences I choose to focus on similarities; I feel the similarities outweigh the differences. The Masai use medicinal plants for ailments, I myself have used aloe for burns and scrapes (skincare). I have utilized pickle juice for myself and family for a stomach ache, gargled salt for a soar throat, placed salt on a tooth for a toothache, had my son drink milk for heart burn, prunes/prune juice or whole grain usage for constipation these all being home remedies and not necessarily what is classified as medicine in society.
ReplyDeletePrior to researching and learning of the Masai therein lied activated ignorance on my part but not to the extent of having a cultural relativism mindset as to how they live. A quality shared is adaptation, change is always on the horizon and the Masai have managed to adapt to the modern society in Kenya as an indigenous group by way of a minimal benefit for them in the form of tourism. Ethnocentrism lacks understanding and respect for one's believes on how an indigenous group chooses to live, a interpretive approach.