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Name the Society. Amish. Operate own schools Do not educate past 8 th grade because only need basic knowledge to prepare for Amish lifestyle Reject pride and arrogance Value humility, calmness and composure Emphasize church and family Only marry those in the faith
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Amish Operate own schools Do not educate past 8th grade because only need basic knowledge to prepare for Amish lifestyle Reject pride and arrogance Value humility, calmness and composure Emphasize church and family Only marry those in the faith New settlements are formed to gain farmland
Dhangar Produce poetry known as ovi inspired by forests and pastures where they graze their flocks Perform DhangariGaja dance Socially isolated due to wandering lifestyle Location: Indian state of Maharashtra Warriors, shepherds, cowherders, buffalo keepers, blanket and wool weavers
Hadza Location: North Central Tanzania Just under 1000 Organize into bands of 20-30 – may grow to 100 in berry season Language is unrelated to any other Follow traditions and methods of ancestors No government hierarchy Value hard work Attempts made by colonial gov’t to force them to adopt farming and Christianity Men forage individually and bring home honey, fruit, and field game when available Women forage in groups for fruit
Spinefex Location: Australia – Great Victorian Desert Little direct contact with people since settlers felt land was not suited for agriculture Received recognition of their native title land rights in 2000 - claim to land made by 21 families Atomic testing on land in the 50s - leaflets dropped informing them to stay away but could not read - believe that 40 Spinefex were hunting in a testing area
Malawi Arranged marriages Larger women favored because strong enough to work in fields and shows family can pay high dowry Dowries in form of livestock given to husbands by bride’s family Land is public domain – settle, build, and grow with neighbors approval Women have 5-6 children – only ½ survive past 5 yrs old Gardens where fruits and vegetables are harvested is the main source of income Homes of stick and mud 90% of exports are agricultural Grows enough food to feed its citizens Even homes in city have small plots of land for corn Those living in cities return home during harvest
Berber Location: North Africa – West of the Nile Valley Leader is appointed to command the tribe Food: couscous, Pastilla (meat pie Men take care of livestock Women take care of family and handicrafts Migrate following natural cycle of grazing to seek water and shelter Grain Storage
Kikuyu • Location: Kenya • Name first boy after paternal grandfather • Name second boy after maternal grandfather • Live on small family plots • Grow bananas, sugarcane, yams, beans, and maize • Boys work with animals • Girls raised to take care of farming
EnaweneNawe • Location: Amazon • 566 people • Isolated • Do not eat red meat • Live in large communal houses • Famous for fishing techniques • Camp in forests for months to catch and smoke fish before returning them to village in canoes • Grow corn in gardens
Zimbabwe • Southern part of Africa • Semi-presidential government with parliamentary system • Plows, oxcarts, cultivators and planters • Key crop is corn • 85% Christian • 37 year life expectancy for men and 34 years for women
Maasai • ½ million people • Most in Southern Kenya • Semi-nomadic • Land arranged in kraals that have fences made of acacia bush built around them to protect cattle from lions • Movement of livestock based on seasonal rotation • Reserve pastures are guarded by warriors • Cattle, goats, and sheep are primary source of income