The Sapling

The Sapling

S2 E2 - Clans and Totems!

8 min · 15 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio S2 E2 - Clans and Totems!

Descripción

So you want to get married? Be sure to start with: Oret ngwong ko ne? ang tionto? Olinyo ko Soti, asista na ngwan.   Beyond the family unit, the Keiyo people among the Kalenjin tribe, are organized into clans, known as oret, each often linked to a totem which is often an animal or natural symbol that represents the lineage. These totems serve as identity markers, carry taboos such as prohibitions against harming or eating the totem animal, and guide marriage rules by ensuring individuals do not marry within their own clan or closely related clans. Because clans are strictly exogamous, elders play a key role during marriage negotiations by confirming the clans and totems of both families to ensure the union is acceptable.

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episode S2 E1 - Coffee: Behind the bean artwork

S2 E1 - Coffee: Behind the bean

Sip slowly... The Sapling returns for a second season starting this week with Coffee! Coffee’s past is as rich as its aroma, deeply Ethiopian, culturally sacred, and undeniably scandalous. In Ethiopia, coffee isn’t just a drink; it’s a ritual of connection. The bunna ceremony, with its slow roasting, careful brewing, and communal sharing, is a cornerstone of hospitality and identity. But once those magical beans left Ethiopia’s highlands, the world turned them into a commodity wrapped in intrigue. Yemen tried to lock down the trade by forbidding fertile beans from leaving the country, only to have smugglers sneak them out sewn into clothing. European elites whispered that coffeehouses were breeding grounds for rebellion, prompting rulers to ban the drink for being “too stimulating” for the masses. From sacred Ethiopian tradition to global obsession fueled by espionage and attempted bans, coffee has always been a brew with a bold cultural heartbeat and a deliciously scandalous past.

1 de abr de 202611 min