By Ishbel Matheson in Nairobi | |
In Kenya's ancient Mau forest, a group of Ogiek boys are on their journey to manhood.
In an initiation ceremony marked by secrecy and ritual, their arrival is celebrated using the branches of sacred trees.
As warriors, the young men will be expected to protect their homeland, 200 kilometres northwest of Nairobi.
But Kenya's last forest tribe is under threat.
When the Ogieks see the destruction, they wonder what will become of their people.
"I think it's the end of our lives," says one man. " We are no more."
Voting favours
But powerful forces are at work. It is illegal to farm here. However poor Kenyans are desperate for food, not trees.
The government wants to open up much of Kenya's protected woodland for settlement.
This is an election year and land means votes.
One settler, David Saang, says he is grateful for his plot of land.
Now the Ogieks are fighting back - but on unfamiliar territory.
They are trying to challenge the government in the High Court in Nairobi.
But some have never been to the capital before, let alone a court, and they don't know their way around the system.
Stalling tactics
The government is outwitting these people. Their lawyer tells them the government is stalling. The case has been adjourned again after only half an hour in court.
They will come back in two months but this is virtually the last chance for these people.
If the Ogieks do not win this court case, it is not only the forests which will disappear.
A unique way of life will also vanish