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  2. Kalenjin culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalenjin_culture

    Traditional music played on the sukutit drum and the various stringed lyres is quite rare and is played only at cultural events and venues. [9] Contemporary Kalenjin music derives from the benga sound whose defining feature involves playing the guitar principally by plucking as opposed to strumming the strings.

  3. Traditional Kalenjin society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Kalenjin_society

    Traditional Kalenjin medicine recognized both supernatural and technical skills, with male practitioners more associated with the former and female practitioners with the latter. [39] When a person fell ill, it was attributed to an angry spirit, often of a relation, and a cleansing ceremony was performed following which treatment was carried out.

  4. Category:Kalenjin women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Kalenjin_women

    It includes Kalenjin people that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Pages in category "Kalenjin women" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total.

  5. Kalenjin people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalenjin_people

    The Kalenjin are generally not well known for their handicraft's however, though women do make and locally sell decorated calabashes made from gourds. These gourd calabashes known as sotet are rubbed with oil and adorned with small colored beads and are essentially the same type of calabashes that are used for storing mursik .

  6. Nilotic peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nilotic_peoples

    The Kalenjin clans who moved into and occupied the Nandi area, thus becoming the Nandi tribe, came from a wide array of Kalenjin-speaking areas. [ 33 ] Apparently, spatial core areas existed to which people moved and concentrated over the centuries, and in the process evolved into the individual Kalenjin communities known today by adopting ...

  7. Kipsigis people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kipsigis_people

    Among the Kipsigis, and perhaps among all the other Kalenjin, Arap Koilege is believed to have blessed Kenyatta Jomo and handed to him his attire which included a hide, a belt colloquially called 'Kenyatet', a head gear among others after which, Koilege asked Kenyatta to visit a leader of the Maasai who was a Laibon. The attire was worn by Jomo ...

  8. Pokot people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pokot_people

    The Pokot people (also spelled Pökoot) live in West Pokot County and Baringo County in Kenya and in the Pokot District of the eastern Karamoja region in Uganda.They form a section of the Kalenjin ethnic group and speak the Pökoot language, which is broadly similar to the related Marakwet, Nandi, Tuken and other members of the Kalenjin language group.

  9. Nandi people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nandi_people

    The Nandi experience contributes a great deal to commonly perceived Kalenjin heritage as well as to contemporary Kalenjin culture. Many customs are shared across Kalenjin communities though circumcision is absent in some communities. Kalenjin can traditionally marry from within Kalenjin as if it were within each individual's community.