Saturday, February 12, 2011

Interesting African Facts - DID YOU KNOW? - #00022

It has been estimated that Africa would be ahead an estimated US $100 billion as of 1999 if malaria had been eliminated years ago.

Volunteering in Africa & Donations for Africa - Issue #00022 - January 22, 2011

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African Jewels Safari Newsletter
  January 22, 2011             Issue #00022  

Volunteering in Africa & Donations for Africa
Volunteering in Africa

It is very possible to incorporate a volunteer component in a tour of Africa. Usually there is a minimum commitment of 2 weeks required. The need for volunteers is great and the sense of satisfaction from volunteering is immense.

Most given instruction is in English and there are opportunities to pass along basic skills in English, computer, creative arts, office training, sewing, carpentry, hospitality, math, health education, sports, cooking , reading comprehension, etc.
 
There are also opportunities to work in a day care so that the mothers can work or attend classes, or to help out with building or renovation projects.

There is usually a special visa required to volunteer and there is often a cost required to pay for your own accommodation and food but the process is relatively inexpensive, simple and safe.

There is also a great need for new and used items such as children’s clothing and shoes, reading comprehension and story books, bedding, school supplies, educational games & toys, mosquito nets, backpacks, sewing machines, computers, calculators, hand tools, etc.

Let us know if you would be interested in our arranging donations and/or a volunteering stint for you, as part of the overall African touring experience.

African Jewels Safari Newsletter
LION DOG AFRICAN SAFARIS
www.liondogafricansafaris.com
  Toll Free Phone: 1-888-50AFRICA
Phone: 403-613-3043

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The Maasai - Issue #00021 - January 15, 2011

African Jewels Safari Newsletter
January 15, 2011             Issue #00021  

The Maasai
THE MAASAI

The Maasai are a semi-nomadic people located near the many game parks of East Africa who will be encountered while on game safari. The Maasai are very distinguishable by their attire and adherence to their established customs. The Maasai population has been estimated as approaching 900,000.

Traditional Maasai lifestyle centers around their cattle which constituted their primary source of food. The measure of a man's wealth is in terms of cattle and children. A herd of 50 cattle is respectable, and the more children the better. A man who has plenty of one but not the other is considered to be poor.

Villages are enclosed in a circular fence usually of thorned acacia. At night all cows, goats and sheep are placed in an enclosure in the centre, safe from predators. The traditional Maasai house are either star-shaped or circular constructed of a structural wooden mesh plastered with a mix of mud, sticks, grass, cow dung and human urine, and ash. Both sexes of the Maasai are traditionally polygamous and circumcision is widely practiced for both sexes.

The piercing and stretching of earlobes is common among the Maasai. Traditionally, the Maasai diet consisted of meat, milk, and blood from cattle however in more recent times, the Maasai have a more mixed diet as they have been forced to settle into ever decreasing areas of land and adapt to a more sedentary lifestyle which in some cases includes growing or buying cultivated food.

Over the years, many projects have begun to help Maasai tribal leaders find ways to preserve their traditions while also balancing the education needs of their children for the modern world. The Maasai are a fascinating people to meet and to learn more about.







African Jewels Safari Newsletter
LION DOG AFRICAN SAFARIS
www.liondogafricansafaris.com
 
  Toll Free Phone: 1-888-50AFRICA
Phone: 403-613-3043

Newsletter Archives: Link to newsletter archives

Interesting African Facts - DID YOU KNOW? - #00021

The dead of the Maasai common folk are simply left out for scavengers since burial is believed to be harmful to the soil.