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Fear of extinction as the El Molo numbers drop

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El Molo villagers stand outside their shelters at Loiyangalani village in north-eastern Kenya, some 567km from the capital Nairobi. El Molo is Kenya's smallest tribe. REUTERS

El Molo villagers stand outside their shelters at Loiyangalani village in north-eastern Kenya, some 567km from the capital Nairobi. El Molo is Kenya's smallest tribe. REUTERS 

By MUCHEMI WACHIRA
Posted  Friday, March 12  2010 at  21:00

In Summary

  • They have lost their language; speak Samburu and most of their culture is borrowed from their bigger neighbouring community

There is a big riddle about the total population of the El Molo community. While some websites estimate the total population of the El Molo at 200, some observers believe the number could be 300. It is the smallest and certainly one of the smallest tribes in Kenya.

A strange thing about the El Molo people is that none of them will disclose the population of their community. They believe that disclosing their number endangers them more since they have over the years been assimilated by their neighbours – the Samburu, Rendille and the Turkana from intermarriage.

Whatever the case, El Molo is one of the country’s communities threatened with extinction.

They have lost their language and most of their culture through assimilation to influential neighbours, mostly the Samburus. They speak Samburu language and most of their culture is borrowed from the same community.

There are no official records to show the population of this dying community.

In the 1979 census, the El Molos were found to be scattered in Coast, Central, North Eastern and Rift Valley provinces.

Their total number then was 289.

The El Molo live in what is known as El Molo Bay on the south eastern shores of Lake Turkana.

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They live 10 kilometres from Loiyangalani township, which is inhabited by the Turkana, Samburu and Rendille people.

El Molo Bay, which is in Marsabit South District, is a very small area comprising of two villages — Layeni and Komote.

Here, the El Molos, who are hunters and gatherers, survive almost entirely on fishing using nets made from the doum palm fibre.

It is the same fibre or dried woods that they use to build their round grass-thatch huts.

The El Molo are known to hunt the giant Nile Perch. They also hunt animals like hippos and crocodiles in Lake Turkana.

The name El Molo, according to linguistics experts, is a Samburu name referring to people who do not use livestock as their source of income.

There is one theory advanced by people in Marsabit on why there are very few El Molos.

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Add a comment (2 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by archivevan

    It is not the Gibe III dam, El Molo like other groups who have refused to embrace modern life will be extinct soon. And you can be sure they are very fertile given the number of children a woman gives birth to. But where is their population, it declines every day.

    Posted  March 13, 2010 04:38 PM  
  2. Submitted by tuskerbaridi73

    Unfortunately, the construction of the Gibe III dam on the Omo River presents a further threat to the El Molo. It is time to register formal complaints to the Ethiopian government about this ill-conceived "development" project. The only way to fight it is through awareness.

    Posted  March 13, 2010 12:29 AM