Homegrown: Yam’s Significance in Nigeria
In Igboland, yam represents the viability of life. | IITA AfricaYam Project, AfricaYam/Femi Olayinka/IITA (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Homegrown: Yam’s Significance in Nigeria

“Yam, the king of crops, was a very exacting king. For three or four moons it demanded hard work and constant attention from cock-crow till the chickens went back to roost, the young tendrils were protected from earth-heat with rings of sisal leaves.” — excerpt from ‘Things Fall Apart’, by Chinua Achebe, Igbo writer from Nigeria.

For eight hours, my family and I travelled on the road from Kogi State, where we currently dwell, to Obingwa Local Government Area in Abia State, the hometown of my parents, grandparents, and ancestors. Despite how tired and stressed out my siblings and I were after the journey, we insisted on visiting the house where my mother was raised before proceeding to my father’s home place, where we stay anytime we visit. We had not been to Abia for a while, so we were quite happy to be there over the Christmas break — and looking forward to having the chance to unwind after a long and challenging year full of difficulties. Fortunately for me, it was also an opportunity to learn more about my culture.

My mother led us through the rooms of her former home, now vacant as her surviving siblings had moved away to different cities, drawn by jobs and marriages. As she showed us the cooking area, a clay cottage separate from the main house, she recalled the busyness there as meals were prepared. We continued the tour until we arrived at the space that had functioned as my grandfather’s yam barn. There she let out a nostalgic sigh as she thought about her late father, who had worked primarily with that crop as a farmer.

Some yams go to market; the rest feed farmers’ families. | Yam tubers at Bodija market, Nigeria IITA (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Some yams go to market; the rest feed farmers’ families. | Yam tubers at Bodija market, IITA (CC BY-NC 2.0)

So I was born into a farming background. While my grandfather grew the crops, my grandma was a trader; selling some of the produce in the market while keeping the rest for their own household use. Carefully stored in the barn we had visited, the yams were both a generator of income and a reliable source of subsistence.

And since the yam plays a big part in the culture of my people, most males have a yam barn much like my grandfather’s. In Obingwa, more specifically in Umuagu (my mother’s family village), having a barn full of large, robust yams is considered a sign of riches. Owners of the barns are recognised and given a respectable seat at meetings and discussions. It is regarded as an indication of power. 

The primary agricultural crop and staple meal of the Igbo people, yam — known as jii — doesn’t just represent food or profit, it’s a symbol of the viability of life. To celebrate the yam, a festival is held in early August, towards the conclusion of the rainy season and the start of the harvest. The old yams from the previous year’s crop must all be eaten before the eve of the New Yam Festival, and the fresh/new yams are consumed as part of the celebration.

A barn full of robust yams confers status in Igbo culture. | Yam storage barn, IITA (CC BY-NC 2.0)
A barn full of robust yams confers status in Igbo culture. | Yam storage barn, IITA (CC BY-NC 2.0)

Although my parents are now civil servants working with the government, farming hasn’t left our lives. At nine years old, I remember going to sow the crops while toting a bowl of grains, and also joining my parents and siblings when it was time for harvesting. Sometimes I went along grudgingly — upset at being taken away from cartoons — and at other times, I participated cheerfully as I knew there would be corn to eat during the harvest season. Over the years my family has always kept our farm in Kogi where we still cultivate edible plants including groundnuts, okra, cassava, corn, and green leafy ugu.

But even though I’ve been actively engaged in farming with my family, I’m unable to claim that I have ever planted yam myself, perhaps because it is seen as a manly or masculine duty. However, I have watched my dad sow it a couple of times.

To begin the process of yam planting, one must either use the head of the yam or acquire two small tubers. Using a hoe, a hole is dug in a large mound of loamy soil and the yam is placed inside before filling the hole back up with soil. Finally, a lightweight structure — a type of scaffold — is placed over the mound to protect the yam from sunlight and allow for easy stem growth. Yam planting processes differ from culture to culture and community to community.

Among the Igbo people, yam planting is regarded as a job for men. Location: Nigeria | Omotayo Tajudeen, Unsplash
Among the Igbo people, yam planting is regarded as a job for men. | Omotayo Tajudeen, Unsplash

Several days after our tour of my mother’s old home, I visited an uncle on my father’s side who owns a farm where various crops are grown, including yam, where I learned more about the cultural significance of yam in ngwa-land and the Igbo culture as a whole. He told me about several mythological stories associated with the celebration of the New Yam Festival.

According to one ancient tale, the yam is the gift of Ahiajoku — the daughter of a king, she was sacrificed during a famine so that others might live. After being killed, her buried body sprouted into a yam crop that saved the starving village. This festival pays homage to Ahiajoku, with her spirit believed to have transformed into the spirit of yam.

While yam can be prepared in various ways — roasted, boiled, pounded and fried — my family prefers to eat it boiled and served with mmanu uri (red palm oil) softened a little on the fire and then garnished with ground pepper and onions. And in talking to friends, it seems that’s how most families in our culture enjoy theirs too.

A versatile staple food, yam can be prepared in many ways. | Elle Bramble, Cultura Creative
A versatile staple food, yam can be prepared in many ways. | Elle Bramble, Cultura Creative

Yam also plays an important role in Igbo marriages. At a cousin’s engagement, I noticed that yam was presented more by the groom’s family than any other gift. It is a sign of respect, a form of appreciation, and a promise for a prosperous and fruitful married life. It’s also accompanied by items that represent cultural values and significance such as kola nuts, palm wine, and garden egg which is eaten with ground-up groundnut.

This presentation of yam during Igbo weddings is seen as a way of reaffirming the bond between the two families, and signifies their commitment to supporting each other in every aspect of life.

From a sign of wealth and prosperity; to part of life’s special celebrations; to a source of daily sustenance — yam’s special importance in Igbo culture and significance in Nigeria overall cannot be overemphasised.

Precious Uzoma-Nwosu

Storyteller

Precious Uzoma-Nwosu is a culture, content and creative writer who specialises in topics relevant to women and covers other thought-provoking and intriguing stories that matter. Precious has written for reputable magazines like Culture Custodian, Adventures From, Document Women, Gay.Uk, etc. and is also a book reviewer. You can reach her on Twitter @adannaya.

Time to Read:  5 Minutes
Storyteller: Precious Uzoma-Nwosu
30 May 2023
Category:
Local Stories - Meet the People

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Community Includes Everyone

Community Includes Everyone

What is a community? It’s many things to many people, but by definition, it’s a unified body of individuals. They can be brought together by similar interests, shared goals, common characteristics or identity; or simply through proximity. 

If you’re fortunate, when you come into this world you automatically have a community swaddled around you like a soft fuzzy blanket; a cocoon of family, friends, neighbours, townspeople. 

Of course, that community — your very first community — is an accident of birth. For better or worse, you’ve no choice in the matter. Your pin is dropped on the map without your knowledge or consent, as you arrive at your first destination without a passport. So our origin story begins simply, with us discovering the people around us and what’s in our own backyard by default.

But then, as the movie of our lives continues, in the next scene the focus changes; the lens pulls out slowly from the close-up to the wide-angle view. In my case, thanks to the irresistibly tinted atlases and globes of my primary education (and reading voraciously about other people in other lands), I started to understand the enormity of what was beyond my understanding… nearly everything! Turned out that there was a vast, wonderful world beyond the doorstep. 

So I made a choice; to travel as much as I could and see all of it for myself. Though the logistics for an eight-year-old were hazy, it was a conscious decision to strike out on my own someday.

For those of us who travel, it’s through the act of exploring, on our various adventures and misadventures, that we establish commonality with a whole new group of people; those we would never have met otherwise. We increase our capacity for kindness and caring, adopting an entirely different kind of community — one that we seek out for ourselves. At its best, it’s wildly diverse, thoroughly inclusive and warmly welcoming. A chosen community where everyone can play a part.

Community

Our worldview broadens, our minds open… but that’s only the start. By seeing the world through a global lens, paradoxically we’re in a much better position to put an emphasis on the wellbeing of local communities wherever we roam. ‘Think Globally, Act Locally’ takes on a personal meaning. And the more we see, the better informed we are when it comes to how we travel. The bucket list fades into insignificance as quality eclipses quantity.

We make another choice, as we evolve into members of yet another community; one made up of responsible, ethical travellers. 

We respect other cultures, appreciate their customs and celebrate what makes them unique and special. Going a step further, we can be mindful of opportunities to give back to those host communities as travellers; we may only visit any given destination for a few days, weeks or months but we can consider how to have a lasting beneficial effect that persists long after we’re gone.

So what came next in my own journey? Fast-forward a few decades, and those colourful childhood atlases are long outdated. I’ve lived in different countries, have seen some unforgettable sights, and have met some incredible people. The globe to me certainly doesn’t feel any smaller, but my understanding of it is a lot richer. I still want to see more — but travel better. And I’m exceptionally lucky to have the opportunity to ‘travel’ through my work as an editor, seeing the sights through the eyes of passionate activists, eloquent local experts and avid storytellers alike.

When I joined Resonate to collaborate with writers on their stories, I already understood that meaningful transformation can only happen when we bridge our differences. But the more time I spend helping authors to find their voices and develop narratives, the more I grow, and I discover something new every day about the places people call home. I’m proud to have been involved in helping to launch the Resonate Travel Community as a way of bringing us all together in one great big like-minded family.

We’re diverse and distinctive, but we’ve got at least one thing in common — we’re born travellers. We may not know where we’re headed, but we know where we’ve been. We are thoughtful people; interested in everything and everybody around us. We can’t help being curious, are keen to find connection and will never tire of trying to learn more. We may be a quirky bunch; but as we embrace our common goals, our community can expand to include just about everyone.

Emily Cathcart

Resonate Team

From her base in Ireland, Emily Cathcart was delighted to join Resonate as a Content Manager and has been revelling in the opportunity to collaborate with writers worldwide ever since. Emily enjoys encouraging authors through the creation process and also helping non-writers to tell their tales — all with Resonate’s ethical principles in mind. When she isn’t busy commissioning or editing, she can be found, camera in hand, seeking out-of-the-way discoveries for her own site that’s literally All About Dublin. And when Emily’s not working on any/all of the above, she’s writing articles and photo essays as a freelance journalist for publications from boutique magazines to national newspapers.

Time to Read:  3 Minutes
Resonate Team: Emily Cathcart
23 May 2023
Category:
From the Editor

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Meet Andrew Foster, a Bajan Man Spotlighting the Authentic Taste of Barbados
An exploration of true local food culture serves up what Barbadians actually want to eat themselves.

Meet Andrew Foster, a Bajan Man Spotlighting the Authentic Taste of Barbados

Too often in Barbados, ‘native’ food experiences take visitors to resorts and restaurants catering to tourists — rather than showcasing and supporting the spots frequented and run by locals. These contrived offerings rarely reflect the surrounding community or how they really enjoy their meals.

Having been raised in Barbados, Andrew Foster knew that the small businesses he loved weren’t being put in the spotlight by local food tours; instead, he was keen to support the places he dined at with family and friends. At the same time, he aspired to celebrate the traditional foods he grew up with and continues to enjoy today.

In the Caribbean, to be “lickrish” means to crave, to be greedy; an ardent lover of food. Andrew — together with his brother, Christopher — wanted to share his craving for the unique tastes of home. The goal? To make visitors just as lickrish as he is, while imparting Bajan history, culture and traditions.

There’s an intriguing blend of influences on the plate here; Britain, Portugal, India and West Africa all had notable input into the gastronomy of Barbados.

flavours of Barbados

For example, take pudding and souse, a dish with steamed sweet potato and pickled pork which locals enjoy for Saturday lunch. A speciality which has been made for centuries, some say the original recipe used haggis, introduced to Barbados by indentured servants arriving from Scotland in the 1600s.

Moving on to Iberian inspirations, guava cheese — a popular filling for pies and cakes, made by cooking down the fruit with sugar into a sweet paste — traces back to Portugal.

Hailing from closer to home, there’s cassava root, native to Barbados and an important staple throughout the Caribbean. “You’d be surprised how many people don’t taste cassava [while they’re here]” says Foster. The plant’s root is cooked and grated, then used to bake into pies and breads. For cassava pone, coconut and cassava are combined in a soft snack cake.

Foster doesn’t take visitors to fine-dining establishments, and wherever they do go is locally owned. There’s nearly always a queue upon arrival (but Foster knows all the owners, accelerating the trip to the front) and the service is friendly. One popular stop is a bright-orange food truck dishing out some of the island’s best fish cakes in ball-shaped, deep-fried form. The outer shell is crisp and crunchy while the inside is soft and spicy. Locals often enjoy them with hot sauce.

“I wanted things that visitors could experience that are authentic or Bajan,” he says, “what my brother and I grew up with. We thought, ‘What are some of the restaurants in the city that we know are very well patronised by Barbadians?’ ”

Developing a dream list of what a tour of genuine Bajan cooking would include took time. “We started with snacks — sugar cakes and nut cakes — then added foods like macaroni pies [a take on macaroni and cheese inevitably personalised according to the cook’s own recipe] and fish cakes,” he says.

A fresh-fruit market is also on the itinerary, with an opportunity to sample what’s in season, as is a bakery. “We chose the bakeries that Barbadians go to on their way to work,” says Foster. “Anything that sells in there is Barbadian.” This includes conkies, a dessert of cornmeal, coconut, sweet potato, raisins and pumpkin, steamed in banana leaves and traditionally made in November to mark the country’s independence from Britain (November 30), as well as at Christmas time.

Black cake is another bakery find for those who’ve never encountered it. “If you said ‘black cake,’ any Barbadian would know what you are talking about,” says Foster. “It’s made with lots of fruit.” To put it mildly; it’s chock full of cherries, raisins, prunes, and orange rind, with a splash or two of local spirits for good measure. This dark-hued treat for celebrations may have origins in Britain’s rich plum pudding, but it now has a decidedly Bajan character.

And while the exploration of local food does a good job of accommodating those who don’t eat meat, “Barbados loves pork. They love it baked and they love it well seasoned,” says Foster. Consequently, pork was a must-have on the menu.

Food images: Lickrish Food Tours

Foster has been doing this since 2016; organising walks with visitors, making sure they’re well fed and showing off the best of Bridgetown, Barbados’ capital city. About eight stops are on the way, ending up at a chocolate factory which ethically sources cacao beans from around the world and turns them into chocolate bars right here on the island. Vegan and gluten-free ice cream is also made on-site including a flavour that’s a nod to one of the most famous Barbados exports: Rum Caramel.

“It’s all locally made and by a Barbadian-owned company,” says Foster of the factory and its products.

This theme comes up again and again. The idea of championing food by locals, for locals — and proudly supporting the businesses that enterprising Barbadians have started themselves — is what drives Foster. The two brothers knew their efforts were a success when they began to notice a trend; it wasn’t just tourists signing up. “We have had a few Bajans take the tour. They’re very intrigued by the historical past of Bridgetown,” says Foster, adding with a grin “and we all like to eat.”

Kristine Hansen

Storyteller

Based in the U.S. Midwest, Kristine Hansen covers sustainability, food, and design as it relates to travel, contributing to other outlets that include TravelandLeisure.com, Fodors.com and ArchitecturalDigest.com. She's also the author of Frank Lloyd Wright's Wisconsin: How America's Most Famous Architect Found Inspiration in His Home State and Wisconsin Cheese Cookbook: Creamy, Cheesy, Sweet, and Savory Recipes from the State's Best Creameries, both published by Globe Pequot Press.

Time to Read:  4 Minutes
Storyteller: Kristine Hansen
22 May 2023
Category:
Game Changers

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Discovering Creole Cuisine on the Exotic Island of Réunion
Bourbon vanilla, one of Réunion’s signature flavours, grows in plantations on the island’s east coast.

Discovering Creole Cuisine on the Exotic Island of Réunion

The islands in the Indian Ocean have always conjured up images of white sandy beaches and azure waters for me. However, while travelling to the small village of Saint-Suzanne on the north coast of Réunion Island, I discovered much more.

Réunion, first named Bourbon Island, is an overseas territory of the French Republic. What struck me was the fusion of different cultures: people originating from France, Mozambique, India, China, Madagascar, and Comoros. Their histories are interwoven and span more than four centuries. The country saw slavery, Indian indenture, colonialism, and a takeover by the French. 

I observed the community’s diversity while waiting for a new friend, Sebastian, to pick me up at a local bus stop. A woman, her face painted white and dotted with African tribal patterns, sat quietly alongside her bags while two ladies in cheerful, bright dresses and straw hats chatted in Creole next to her. A few women in colourful saris with long headscarves trailing behind them stood nearby. 

Sebastian pulled up and warmly greeted me with a typical Réunionese hello: “Bonzour!” While French is the official language, people mostly speak Réunionese Creole and some Tamil or English in their homes. The Creole language is a mix of French, African, English, Indian, and Chinese.

Creole cuisine grew from these multi-ethnic influences such as the Indian tamil cari, a tropical version of a classic curry served with either rice, beans, or lentils. Gujarati Muslims have preserved their culture through native dishes like biryani and roasted sweet potatoes flavoured with salt, dried mango powder, and chilli. The island grows a variety of spices, adding colour and fragrances to food inherited from different parts of the world.  

As we drove along the old coastal road, Sebastian explained, “People support the local markets because their spices, fresh fruit and vegetables like chouchou and taro corm are popular in traditional cooking.“

Chouchou? Taro corm? These were new to me. 

“Oh,” laughed Sebastian. “Chouchou is a fruit, like a pear. We cook it in stews and soups or mix it in a salad. Taro corm are also called green elephant ears. You can’t eat the raw tubers because they are poisonous, but when you season and cook the corm, it is delicious.”

A local market is a feast for the eyes. Colourful baskets of red and green peppers, tomatoes, avocadoes, and fresh fruit stood proudly on display. Vendors noisily competed selling a variety of delicious treats like spring rolls and bonbon millet sweet pastries, similar to the beignets of New Orleans. The aroma of spices emanated from where a tall Indian man prepared samosas filled with chicken and chilli.

We arrived at a friend’s house for lunch. As we entered the door, bottles of different rums greeted us, covering every inch of the surface — even the staircase. We received a warm welcome from our happy host, Jacky, as he gifted us with the island’s speciality: “Infused rum! This one is flavoured with an endemic orchid.”

Seeing my surprise, he continued, “Orchids grow wild on the island because of the many micro-climates. There are 120 species representing about 30 different genera.”

He poured us a small glass of rum and as I inhaled the infusion, Jacky stressed, “The secret is to obtain the delicate balance between the orchid’s fragrance and the alcohol’s taste.”

Réunion has a rough, mountainous interior, a very active volcano, Piton de la Fournaise, and an extinct volcano, Piton des Neiges. The volcanic soil is excellent for agricultural farming and certain sugarcane crops. Sugarcane was imported in the 17th century, first from Java and later from Madagascar. Rum was a byproduct of the sugar industry. Today, the island has three rum distilleries and numerous small businesses supporting them. They promote the island’s speciality, rhum arrangé, infusing the rum with flavours from local crops. 

Jacky led us onto a large patio where we enjoyed some unusual appetizers: a jar of achard and a spread served with slices of French bread. “The spread is a mixture of peanut butter and mashed sweet potatoes. The achard are pickled vegetables. It is an old Indian recipe using ginger, garlic, oil, vinegar, salt, and a little chilli.” 

He brought out a few bottles of beer. As Sebastian poured, I smiled at the image of a grinning dodo on the bottle. The island established a large brewery, Brasseries de Bourbon, using the extinct big bird as its label. The dodo used to live on the neighbouring Mascarene island, Mauritius. Retailers further keep its memory alive by painting the slogan ‘la dodo lé la’ (the dodo is here) on their walls. 

A few big, black cast-iron pots simmered in a large fireplace. Traditionally, Réunionese cook over an open fire. My eye caught a big bowl of leafy greens. Sebastian gestured, “Brèdes… the stalks and leaves of different green plants. We season the brèdes the same way as the achard.” Take note: regional restaurants serve brède mafane, a variation of the plant, in a pot-au-feu. As you eat the slow cooked one-pot dish it anaesthetises the mouth, explaining its nickname; toothache plant!

Réunionese bounty | Photo: Elsa Dixon
Réunionese bounty | Photo: Elsa Dixon

Soon, we ate delicious chicken and vegetables in a red wine sauce reminiscent of the French classic coq au vin. Jacky served cornbread as an accompaniment, followed by a local speciality, sweet potato cake. Islanders flavour the cake with rum and Réunion’s signature Bourbon vanilla, harvested from the Planifolia Orchid. In 2011, the island patented an award-winning Blue Vanilla process, ageing the vanilla pods for two years instead of drying or boiling them. 

Although Réunion Island is a true melting pot of nations, it has developed its own distinct Creole flavour. I came away with a deeper understanding of how historical events paved the way for different peoples to unite and contribute to the rich ethnic diversity of Réunion, its culture, and cuisine. 

Elsa Dixon

Traveller

Elsa Dixon is an award-winning freelance writer and contributor to stock photography sites who has been leading custom tours to South Africa and other countries since 2006. The company, TravelswithElsa LLC, has an active website and blogging component and lists her articles. She has published a biography of her father, an iconic South African entertainer (PIET wat POMPIES was), and a global award-winning memoir, Hippos, Hotspots, and Homelands. Recently retired, she also runs a private piano teaching studio. Headshot photo: HM Cotton

Time to Read:  5 Minutes
Traveller: Elsa Dixon
12 May 2023
Category:
Travellers' Tales - Food and Drink

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Finding a Cure in Maasai Herbal Medicine
Resourceful Maasais in Kajiado County, Kenya, respect and make good use of the plant life of their landscape.

Finding a Cure in Maasai Herbal Medicine

Kajiado got its name from the word “Olkeju-ado” meaning “The Long River” in the Maasai language. It is home to Amboseli National Park, which traverses Kenya and Tanzania and is known for safaris. The weather is fairly hot throughout the year, and the first thing that will catch your eye when you get to this town is the many Maasai people in their colourful shukas. You’ll also spot Maasai men carrying polished clubs (rungus) and walking sticks. This is where I usually spend my Christmas holidays.

Christmas is a big deal in my family. It’s the time that we all come together to celebrate in Kajiado. Although my three siblings and I are married and have kids of our own, we all gather for Christmas with our parents as has always been our tradition.

In 2020, we weren’t able to meet due to the inter-county cessation of movement enforced by the government. So, the following year, we couldn’t wait to celebrate together. We embarked on the 100km journey to Kajiado my home county, with my husband and two kids all ecstatic and looking forward to a happy holiday after being cooped up indoors for over a year.

On the day of Christmas Eve, I woke up with an awful toothache. It had been bothering me for some weeks on and off, and going to the dentist just seemed to temporarily numb the pain only for it to come back at the most inappropriate times. Taking breakfast was out of the question since I had a splitting headache, and even an attempt to open my mouth was stopped by the sharp pain in my wisdom tooth.

I asked my dad where I could find a good dentist and explained to him how I had been dealing with the pain for months without a solution. Since most dentists had closed for the holidays, my dad directed me to mzee Ole Kina, a renowned herbalist in the area. My brother volunteered to take me there since he had also been treated and knew the way.

Herbal Medicine

When we got to Ole Kina’s compound, we were greeted by his cheerful wife yeyo Lasoi. She directed us to her husband’s enkaji in the middle of the boma (enclosure). Ole Kina welcomed us into the house and we bowed for the man to touch our heads for greetings in the Maa tradition. His wife wanted to offer us something as it’s the norm but we respectfully declined her offer.

I poured out my troubles to Ole Kina. Before treating me, mzee took his time to teach us about the importance of trees and herbal plants in the Maasai community, and their cultural and medicinal use. Maasai huts— like the enkaji we were sitting in — are constructed by women using sticks, cow dung, urine, and mud, among other materials. Since they are temporary structures, the women source twigs and sticks from the available trees.

Besides using trees for building, the Maasai also sculpt their clubs (rungus), making spears and walking sticks from the African olive trees, also known as “Oloerien” in the Maa language. The brown olive tree is used in many Maasai cultural events, including the circumcision ceremony for boys. During the ceremony, the community celebrates the transition of the boys from childhood to adulthood, and into warriorhood too. The Maasai people hang olive branches at the village entrances to let everyone know what is going on.

As a community best known for its keto diet of fatty meat, blood, and milk, I was surprised to discover how much they rely on and revere herbs and plants. After the learning session, Ole Kina then proceeded to retrieve a jar filled with a brownish powder, which he gave me to put on the aching tooth. While the taste was not the best due to its bitterness, the pain subsided almost immediately, and I couldn’t believe that all it took was a tiny amount of that magical substance.

I got curious and asked him what he had treated me with. Ole Kina explained that the Maasai use the sogonoi plant to cure toothaches. The plant has been used for its medicinal properties for centuries, and he explained that the community was obligated to protect it due to its value as an effective treatment. Its bark is chopped into tiny pieces, dried, and finally ground into a fine powder. Unlike urban dwellers who use electric grinders to effortlessly crush things into powder, the Maasai use a grinding stone. A lot of hard physical work goes into making these medicines that are treasured by the Maa community.

Ole Kina explained to us that he has never been to a hospital, and if he gets sick, all he needs is to get the right herbal medicine for the illness. He even treats snake bites which are common in the area. Ole Kina also uses herbs to treat his livestock and that of his neighbours. His biggest problem was that more people were buying the land around them and cutting down all the medicinal trees to build their mansions.

As he explained this, his eyes got teary, and we could see the pain he felt knowing that people didn’t care that the same trees they were felling could someday save their lives. According to him, his community is educated to take care of the plants and trees around them. In return, the trees help attract rainfall, which feeds the grass for their cattle, and they also get medicine from them.

He showed us some plants that I didn’t know were medicinal. I had been treating them as weeds and uprooting them at any given chance. Although Ole Kina doesn’t even have a high school education, his expertise and knowledge in herbal medicine is unparalleled. That day, I went home with not only toothache medicine, but also a different view of what is around me. While I always plant a tree when I can, that day, I learned that plants have far more benefits than we think.

Cecilia Mwangi

Storyteller

Cecilia is a Kenyan IT graduate who chose to follow her dreams of becoming a freelance copywriter. For 8+ years, she has worked with agencies, independent clients, and freelancing platforms. She loves writing about travel destinations, personal finance, business, iGaming, and health and wellness topics. When she is not on her keyboard cooking up a storm with words, Cecilia loves travelling, reading, and pampering her two beautiful children and a furbaby. You can check out her blog or connect with her on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Time to Read:  5 Minutes
Storyteller: Cecilia Mwangi
12 May 2023
Category:
Local Stories - Meet the People

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