In Pictures: Kenya鈥檚 forgotten Yaaku take back their language
UNESCO declared the聽Yaakunte language extinct in 2020, though聽Juliana Lorisho speaks the Kenyan language fluently 鈥 and hopes for its revival.
UNESCO declared the聽Yaakunte language extinct in 2020, though聽Juliana Lorisho speaks the Kenyan language fluently 鈥 and hopes for its revival.
Grabbing the diiche, a prickly cactus bulb, away from my novice hands, Juliana Lorisho expertly uses a leafy branch to remove the spines before splitting the fruit open with her fingers. Unexpectedly bright juice splurts out, staining white fabric fuchsia. It tastes acerbic and fresh. The diiche is just one of the many edible fruits found within the Mukogodo, Kenya鈥檚 sole Indigenous-owned forest.
鈥淚t鈥檚 paradise, isn鈥檛 it,鈥 Ms. Lorisho says, surveying the path lined with goldenrod-colored neeyna flowers.
This place is integral to Ms. Lorisho鈥檚 cultural identity. So are the words she uses to describe it. These are remnants of the Yaaku community, a tiny population of an estimated 4,000 in Kenya that was forced to assimilate with the Maasai ethnic group a century ago.
Ms. Lorisho and her grandfather are the two remaining fluent speakers of Yaakunte. In a last-ditch effort to save the language of her ancestors, Ms. Lorisho left a stable accounting position in urban Nanyuki and returned to the edge of the Mukogodo Forest with a dream of founding a school.
鈥淚 have a great mission towards reviving Yaakunte because many Yaaku are interested in speaking the language,鈥 she says.聽
She was still seeking funds when UNESCO declared Yaakunte extinct in August 2020. With renewed urgency, she sought an interim solution. She launched a 鈥淩evival of Yaaku Language鈥 group on the encrypted messaging application WhatsApp.
Hovering around 33 participants, the group utilizes text and voice messages to learn new words. 鈥淚t is a way for us to practice our culture and be differentiated from other communities we assimilated to,鈥 she says.