In Uganda, a parallel universe to the rainforests and humid mountain heights opens up in the north-east of the country. A region of barren plateaus and savannahs, where water is scarce and the local population, dedicated to pastoralism and transhumance, has always had to fight for the supply of ungenerous resources and the maintenance of their herds, their only source of livelihood. This is the boundless and desolate land of Karamoja, inhabited by the people of Nilo-Saharan origin, the Karamojong.
As poor in resources as they are rich in traditions and history, they are peoples who migrated hundreds of years ago from the Nile Valley to escape wars and famine, settling on Uganda’s northern plateaus and savannahs, competing for a vast but arid territory with the neighbouring Pokot people and Turkana tribes, on the border with present-day Kenya, with whom they therefore have some cultural affinities. It’s a different face of Uganda, but equally fascinating in its ruggedness.
Entirely linked to ancestral cults, such as initiation rites, the traditional and complex ethno-sociology of the Karamojong people was studied by an Italian Combonian father, Bruno Novelli, who dedicated his entire life to collecting material on their language and culture, living among them for a long time. While the main camps of the clans are fixed (manyatta), the young men, with their herds of zebu and goats, continue to move incessantly in the seasonal search for pastures in neighbouring areas, building nomadic encampments from time to time, surrounded by fences of brambles to protect the cattle (kraal). This often led to inter-ethnic clashes for supremacy over pastures and the supply of land resources, causing the traditional warrior attitude of the Karamojong, who were also peaceful and hospitable, to reappear, especially in times of famine in past decades.
A people that remained largely isolated and free from colonial influences, it was only in recent times that an amendment by the dictator Amin Dada forced them to dress up, so much so that in the 1970s, the famous Polish journalist Kapuscinski recalls that many of the Karamojong used to carry cloths in their saddlebags to cover themselves in case of control by the army. Particular are the ostrich feather headgear and leopard skins worn on the shoulders of the men-warriors, while the women sported colourful beaded, leather or rubber sets.
A plunge into the everyday life, but also into the traditions of the Karamoja people, is offered by a visit to one of the colourful markets of the region, the main one of which takes place in Moroto. A riot of ostrich feathers, raw tobacco, necklaces and bracelets, and the beautiful traditional textiles called nakatukok. But it is also a crossroads of Pokot women with their beautiful disc necklaces and large earrings, of Tepeth, Jiye, Dodoth tribes and their herds, all subgroups of the large Karamojong family, and of Ik, a small, still little-known people living in small fenced villages with granaries. Hunters by origin, they had to abandon their lands with the creation of the Kidepo National Park, settling in the vicinity of Mount Morungole, where they devote themselves to animal husbandry.
What’s more, this special trip will include a visit to the Karamoja tribal festival.
Day 1:
Outward flight/Entebbe (EBB)
Day 2:
Entebbe/Kampala/Sources of the Nile/Jinja
The Kasubi Tombs, the Gaddafi Mosque and the Sources of the Nile.
Day 3:
Jinja/Nyero/Sipi Falls
The Nyero rock paintings and the coffee plantations.
Day 4:
Sipi Falls/Sebei tribe/Sipi Falls
The mighty Sipi Falls and the caves of the Sebei people.
Day 5:
Sipi Falls/Pian Upe/Pokot tribe/Moroto
A visit to the Pokot people, recognisable by the women’s striking circular necklaces.
Day 6:
Moroto/Karamojong tribe/Moroto
The encounter with the Karamojong: healers and artisanal gold mines.
Day 7:
Moroto/Tepeth tribe/Moroto
Meeting the Tepeth people in their kraal, on the highlands of Mount Moroto.
Day 8:
Tepeth/Kotido/Jiye tribe/Kaboong
Cattle markets, the village of Nakapelimoru and the Jiye people.
Day 9:
Kaboong/Ik tribe/Kidepo National Park
Meeting the Ik people on Mount Morungore.
Day 10:
Kidepo National Park
A safari in Kidepo National Park, among lions, cheetahs, elephants and buffalo.
Day 11:
Kidepo/Ziwa
Transfer southwards, crossing the Nile at Karuma.
Day 12:
Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary/Entebbe (EBB)/Return flight
Walking safari in search of rhinos in the Ziwa Reserve.
Day 13:
Return flight
There are no extensions for this tour, please contact us at info@kanaga-at.com.