Okiek people

Okiek people
Ogiek or Akiek or Okiek
The Ogiek community in Kenya blowing a horn during a procession in Nairobi City.
Total population
 Kenya 52,596 (2019, census)
Languages
Ogiek, Kipsigis, Nandi and Swahili
Related ethnic groups
Kipsigis people and Nandi people

The Okiek (also known as Ogiek or Akiek) are an autochthonous Southern Nilotic tribe of the Kalenjin speaking peoples and are among the oldest aboriginal inhabitants of East Africa. Primarily characterized as hunter-gatherers, they represent a distinct historical and cultural classification within the Kalenjin ethnic group.Inhabiting the highland forests of Kenya, primarily the Mau Forest and Mount Elgon, as well as parts of northern Tanzania, the Okiek are regarded as the foundational inhabitants of the region, predating most modern ethnolinguistic groups. Their presence in these highlands is described as being from time immemorial, with archaeological & historical estimates suggesting a lineage in the area dating as far back as 4000 BCE.

Within the Kalenjin identity, the Okiek are frequently identified as the linguistic and cultural "seedbed" of the Southern Nilotic collective, representing the aboriginal ties to the Mau Forest and Mount Kenya regions before the 17th century.Unlike other Kalenjin subgroups who trace their migrations from the Nile Basin, Egypt, Sudan, or Ethiopia, Ogiek oral traditions suggest they did not migrate from elsewhere but were already present in the highland forests since time immemorial. As one of the oldest surviving indigenous communities in East Africa, the Ogiek are often viewed as the aboriginal ancestors or predecessors of the modern Kalenjin people.

Historically characterized as Southern Nilotic hunter-gatherers and honey-harvesters, the Okiek have maintained a distinct lifestyle centered on forest conservation and beekeeping. While the 2019 Kenya Census recorded their population of 52,596, their Ogiek dialect is highly endangered, with some estimates placing the number of fluent Akiek speakers as low as 500, many of them predominatly speaking Kipsigis. In recent years, the community has secured landmark legal victories in the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights, which officially recognized their status as indigenous owners of their ancestral lands and ordered the full recognition of their language and cultural practices.