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Making a Man: Kenyan Community's Rites of Passage
In an isolated region in Kenya's Rift Valley, young men spear a bull in a ceremony called Sapana that marks a gateway to adulthood.
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Far from the bustling city of Nairobi, Pokot women dance in celebration the day before an initiation ceremony for young men in Baringo County, on Jan. 19, 2016. Following the ritual improves men's marriage prospects, provided they can amass a dowry of livestock for their bride. Initiates can also take part in local decision-making in a region where tradition remains strong and cattle play a central part in daily life.
— SIEGFRIED MODOLA / Reuters



Men take it in turns to drink clotted blood from inside the carcass of a bull which was speared by a young man during the initiation ceremony. As Kenya develops and more people migrate to the cities in search of work, such traditional practices are on the wane. However, in this remote region, ceremonies such as Sapana still hold sway.
— SIEGFRIED MODOLA / Reuters
Men carry a part of a carcass of a bull killed by a young man. Livestock are everything for the Pokots, representing wealth and social status. And in an isolated region with no permanent police presence, elders deal with disputes. Those who have broken the law are often required to pay a fine in the form of animals.
— SIEGFRIED MODOLA / Reuters

A young Pokot man sits on the ground after having been smeared with the contents of a bull's stomach by elders. This is the most important stages of the ceremony. This concluding rite seals the young man’s entrance to adulthood, conferring a new status on him.“Only then will he be able to speak to elders,” says Hassan Tepa, an elder. “In return (he will) be listened to and respected.”
— SIEGFRIED MODOLA / Reuters1/9