Maasai
The Maasai are made up of about a dozen ethnic groups who live in the Rift Valley of east Africa, primarily in KENYA and TANZANIA. These groups speak a language called Maa and share many cultural characteristics, such as the way they dress. Their social systems are based on clans* and age-sets, groups of people of the same age. The society has no centralized political leadership. In the past, the Maasai had an effective military organization for raiding and warfare, and their warriors were known for great courage and strength.
The Maasai have traditionally been cattle herders with a pastoralist* lifestyle. However, many have also practiced agriculture and engaged in trade. Some have close ties through marriage with various Bantu-speaking groups, including the GIKUYU. Photographers and travel writers often portray the Maasai as a "pure" and "untouched" society of cattle herders and warriors. However, some Maasai now live in towns. Perhaps more than other groups in Africa, the Maasai have shown an unwillingness to accept many aspects of Western culture because of a fierce pride in their traditional ways of life.
* clan group of people descended from a common ancestor
* pastoralist related to or dependent on livestock herding