Maasai Safari Guide in Tanzania
FR

Translated into English.

Original post
CA
Hi, I went on a safari with a Maasai guide in several national parks in Tanzania (Serengeti, Ngorongoro, Arusha National Park, etc.). There are very few Maasai guides, so it’s pretty special to be able to do a safari with one of them. He doesn’t just explain the animals but also the Maasai culture and can even take you to villages where the Maasai live—not those where you pay $50 to see three Maasai jumping around.

I’ll leave his contact details here, and you can reach him on WhatsApp: +255 69 219 0474 Just a heads-up: all communication is in English
BL Blesl Veteran ·
Hi Kathryn, Maasai guides aren’t rare. And regarding Maasai customs, you must not have read Puma’s posts—I agree with them 150%—about the excision of young girls… Have a good evening, BL https://safari-tanzanie.net
safari photo en Tanzanie et ailleurs https://safari-tanzanie.fr WILIPI photographie animalière
PU Puma2A Veteran ·
Maasai guides aren’t rare. And regarding Maasai customs, you must not have read Puma’s posts—which I 100% agree with—about the FGM of young girls... BL

Hi Bernard,

Thanks for bringing that up, but my posts reminding everyone that "Maasai = FGM too" are on the other travel forum.... !! 😕

Indeed, Maasai guides or drivers aren’t rare at all.

Puma 2A

I’ll come back to this here.

...
PU Puma2A Veteran ·
Hello,

Many visitors to Tanzania (or Kenya) are amazed after visiting a Maasai village, but few are aware of certain realities of Maasai civilization!!

First, a large number of these villages are tourist-only villages where people pay a lot to be allowed to "enter" and see young women dancing with a smartphone in hand (experienced by friends). No matter, it's just "bizzeness"!

The other reality of Maasai civilization (and other tribes in Africa) is Female Genital Mutilation (FGM), practiced on young girls aged 6 to 8. In Maasai culture, a family won’t marry their son to a girl who hasn’t been cut!! And it’s highly frowned upon by neighbors and acquaintances to have an uncut daughter, who won’t be able to marry a Maasai man...

So, mothers—who have themselves suffered through this horrific mutilation—take their daughters to the village exciser. It’s better to skip the details, but know that the procedure is done with a razor blade or a knife. Of course, under these conditions, severe hemorrhaging is common. The poor girls, who don’t understand what’s happening to them, suffer for days, even their entire lives. Some die from it or can never have children.

I’m viscerally opposed to these outdated practices, based on equally outdated beliefs. To me, this atrocious genital "operation" is first and foremost a sexual assault on a minor and an abominable mutilation, unworthy of our time.

Many people argue that it’s a "tradition." Try to understand the vast difference between tradition and mutilation... in this specific case!

For me, there’s no way I’d visit "humans" who practice this kind of genital mutilation, just because they wear beautiful traditional outfits and dance.... I’d feel like I was condoning and encouraging these excisions!!

And to think that some tourists bring their own daughters (the same age as those being mutilated) to visit these villages.

Of course, this is ONLY my opinion, and I don’t claim to hold any absolute truth in any area.

Everyone does as they please, as long as they’re informed beforehand.

Best regards.

(In Egypt, reportedly, 90% of women have undergone FGM, due to a certain interpretation of the dominant religion...)

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