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The Colonial Border in Kenya: Maasai leader Meitamei Olol Dapash gives an on-the-ground look at the mass exodus of people from Tanzania after a violent land grab

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Manage episode 367778559 series 3489944
Content provided by Melissa del Bosque and Todd Miller, Melissa del Bosque, and Todd Miller. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Melissa del Bosque and Todd Miller, Melissa del Bosque, and Todd Miller or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Twenty years ago, Maasai leader Meitamei Olol Dapash snuck across the Kenya-Tanzania border to report on what the Otterlo Business Corporation was doing. In today’s podcast he explains what he saw then: The company was capturing animals, sending them to zoos, and starting a trophy-hunting operation. And now, two decades later, this company wants to expand its business into more land. This has led to attempts by Tanzania to violently evict Maasai communities from their ancestral land.

Last week, I wrote about this ongoing crisis. Here, Meitamei gives a firsthand account of arriving on the scene in June after police attacked Maasai communities. Many people were seriously injured and had to run for their lives. And he describes the humanitarian aid effort.

Meitamei is the director of the Dopoi Center located in the Maasai Mara in Kenya and one of the founders of the Institute for Maasai Education, Research, and Conservation. Meitamei has dedicated his life to working for Maasai culture and land rights. His mother was born in Tanzania, across the colonial border, as he calls it. As Meitamei describes, the Maasai are a “transborder” community, and the international boundary itself was and still is an imposition by European powers.

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/border-chronicle/support
  continue reading

54 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 367778559 series 3489944
Content provided by Melissa del Bosque and Todd Miller, Melissa del Bosque, and Todd Miller. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Melissa del Bosque and Todd Miller, Melissa del Bosque, and Todd Miller or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Twenty years ago, Maasai leader Meitamei Olol Dapash snuck across the Kenya-Tanzania border to report on what the Otterlo Business Corporation was doing. In today’s podcast he explains what he saw then: The company was capturing animals, sending them to zoos, and starting a trophy-hunting operation. And now, two decades later, this company wants to expand its business into more land. This has led to attempts by Tanzania to violently evict Maasai communities from their ancestral land.

Last week, I wrote about this ongoing crisis. Here, Meitamei gives a firsthand account of arriving on the scene in June after police attacked Maasai communities. Many people were seriously injured and had to run for their lives. And he describes the humanitarian aid effort.

Meitamei is the director of the Dopoi Center located in the Maasai Mara in Kenya and one of the founders of the Institute for Maasai Education, Research, and Conservation. Meitamei has dedicated his life to working for Maasai culture and land rights. His mother was born in Tanzania, across the colonial border, as he calls it. As Meitamei describes, the Maasai are a “transborder” community, and the international boundary itself was and still is an imposition by European powers.

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/border-chronicle/support
  continue reading

54 episodes

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