Somalia The Society and Its Environemnt
Somali nomad, symbol of the country's predominantly
pastoral life
THE SOMALIS ARE A CULTURALLY, linguistically, and religiously
homogeneous people, who are divided along clan lines and sparsely
scattered over a harsh, dry land. There are significant
distinctions among sectors of the population, related in part to
variations in means of livelihood. In the early 1990s, roughly 60
percent of an estimated population of more than 8.4 million were
still nomadic pastoralists or seminomadic herders, subject to the
vicissitudes of an arid climate. Twenty to 25 percent of the
people were cultivators, most living in the southern half of the
country, on or between Somalia's two major rivers, the Jubba and
the Shabeelle. The remainder were town dwellers, the vast
majority of whom resided in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu.
With the fall of General Mahammad Siad Barre's regime on
January 27, 1991, and the ensuing internal warfare that resulted
in the disintegration of the Somali state, patterns of residency
changed dramatically. For instance, the population of Mogadishu,
estimated at 500,000 in the mid-1980s, witnessed the influx of
thousands of refugees. As a result, Mogadishu reportedly had
about 2 million inhabitants in early 1992. Throughout the country
the civil war, along with the lawlessness as Siad Barre's regime
collapsed and the absence of functioning governmental and social
institutions, produced a chaotic situation.
Although 95 percent of the population are ethnic Somalis,
sharing a common culture, in traditional society they segmented
themselves into a hierarchical system of patrilineal descent
groups, each said to originate with a single male ancestor. The
most comprehensive of these groups were the six
clan-families (see Glossary). Their constituent units were the
clans (see Glossary), which in turn were made up of
lineages (see Glossary),
which themselves were further segmented. Among the sedentary
interriverine Somalis, however, descent gave way in part to
territoriality as a framework for social, political, and economic
organization.
Membership in clans and lineages shaped the allocation of
individual rights and obligations. The principle of descent,
however, was modified (although rarely overridden) by Somali
heer, or traditional jurisprudence. Contracts or treaties
bound specified descent groups and their individual members
together for the making of war and peace and, above all, for the
provision of compensation in cases of homicide and injury.
The Somali social order has been marked by competition and
often by armed conflict between clans and lineages, even between
units of the same clan-family or clan. Within each unit, Somali
males considered better warriors, wiser arbiters, or abler
speakers commanded greater respect in council. However, pastoral
Somalis looked down on sedentary ones, and both looked down on
non-Somali
clients (see Glossary) of the sedentary Somalis and
members of despised occupational groups such as hunters and
smiths, who made up, however, only a very small proportion of the
population.
The segmented social order, with relatively minor
modifications, was carried into the independence period. In a
very poor country, many Somalis were disaffected by the
competition for power and wealth that often took the form of
shifting alliances and conflicts between greater and lesser clans
and lineage segments. Simultaneously, new cleavages emerged
between educated urban dwellers who had mastered a foreign
language and the less-sophisticated rural Somalis.
Soon after the October 1969 military coup, Siad Barre's
socialist government aimed an attack at the traditional system.
In principle at least, his regime reduced the significance of
clans and lineages, encouraged women to participate in government
and attend school, and sanctioned the social equality of lowstatus groups. The gap that had opened between educated Englishor Italian-speaking Somalis and the rest of the population was
reduced somewhat by the institution of a Somali script and the
designation of Somali as the official language.
Siad Barre's government insisted that socialism was
compatible with Islam, the religion of the overwhelming majority
of Somalis. Although Somalis had not always conformed to the
rigors of orthodox Islam, their identity was bound up with being
Muslim. With few, if any, exceptions leaders of the socialist
regime were Muslims and did not attack religion. However, they
also did not hesitate to institute reforms that displeased
conservative Muslim leaders.
Despite government encouragement of change, clan and lineage
remained important throughout Siad Barre's rule, and Siad Barre
remained in power by manipulating clans and clan leaders. In
fact, soon after the revolution, kinship considerations and
nepotism were evident at the highest levels of the regime.
The workings of the lineage system were predicated on the
solidarity of the segments of the same order with one another and
the relative equality of the members of each segment. The growth
of the state and the development of different degrees of wealth
and access to other private-sector resources caused an incipient
stratification that had the potential to override lineage
solidarity as it diminished equality.
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