Somalia THE SEGMENTARY SOCIAL ORDER
Figure 4. Major Clan-Families and Clans
Design of village huts varies according to ethnic
group.
Courtesy Hiram A. Ruiz
Design of village huts varies according to ethnic
group.
Courtesy Hiram A. Ruiz
Baobab tree, a welcome source of shade, with village huts
nearby,near Luuq
Courtesy Hiram A. Ruiz
Ethnic Somalis are united by language, culture, devotion to
Islam, and to a common ancestor, the Samaale, or Samaal.
Genealogical ties have also provided the basis on which divisions
among Somalis have occurred, division historically being more
common than unity.
The overwhelming majority of Somalis trace their genealogical
origin to the mythical founding father, Samaale or Samaal. Even
those clan-families, such as the Digil and Rahanwayn in southern
Somalia, whose members in many cases do not trace their lineage
directly to Samaal, readily identify themselves as Somalis,
thereby accepting the primacy of Samaal as the forebear of the
Somali people. By language, traditions, and way of life, the
Somalis share kinship with other members of the Eastern Cushitic
groups of the Horn of Africa, including the Oromo, who constitute
roughly 50 percent of the population of Ethiopia; the Afar
(Danakil), who straddle the Great Rift Valley between Ethiopia
and Djibouti; the Beja tribes of eastern Sudan; and the Reendille
(Rendilli) and Boni (Aweera) peoples of northeastern Kenya
(see
The Somalis: Their Origins, Migrations, and Settlement
, ch. 1).
Genealogy constitutes the heart of the Somali social system.
It is the basis of the collective Somali inclination toward
internal fission and internecine conflict, as well as of the
Somalis' sense of being distinct--a consciousness of otherness
that borders on xenophobia.
The major branches of the Somali lineage system are four
overwhelmingly pastoral nomadic clan-families (the Dir, Daarood,
Isaaq, and Hawiye, who are collectively denoted by the
appellation of Samaal), and two agricultural ones (the Digil and
Rahanwayn)
(see
fig. 4). As Israeli political scientist Saadia
Touval noted in his brief study of Somali nationalism, these six
clan-families correspond to the "Old Testament version of the
tribal segmentation of the children of Israel." Like the children
of Israel, the children of Samaale, with minor exceptions, are
politically acephalous and prone to internal schism and
factionalism. Although the modern Somali state, which is largely
a creation of European colonialism, tried vainly to exercise a
measure of centralized authority through the armed forces and the
civilian bureaucracy, most Somalis continued to give greater
political and emotional allegiance to their lineages. In 1992 the
centralized state constructed on the Somali Peninsula had all but
disintegrated into its constituent lineages and clans, whose
internecine wars were drenching the country in bloodshed.
The Dir, Daarood, Isaaq, and Hawiye, which together make up
the Samaal clans, constitute roughly 75 percent of the
population. Most Samaal clans are widely distributed
pastoralists, although a growing minority of them are settled
cultivators. The Digil and Rahanwayn constitute about 20 percent
of the population. They are settled in the riverine regions of
southern Somalia and rely on a mixed economy of cattle and camel
husbandry and cultivation.
Clan-families, too large and scattered for practical
cooperation, in the past had no real political or economic
functions. However, with the renewal and intensification of clan
feuding in the wake of Siad Barre's fall from power in early
1991, the clan-families assumed crucial significance as nascent
political parties pitted against one another along tribal lines
in a disastrous civil war
(see Lineage Segmentation and the Somali Civil War
, this ch.). Membership in clan-families, primary
lineages, and clans was traced through males from a common male
ancestor.
Descent as the basis of group formation and loyalty was
modified, but not overridden, by the principle of heer.
Membership in the same clan or lineage did not automatically
entail certain rights and obligations. These were explicitly the
subject of treaties or contracts. Thus, some clans in a clanfamily might unite for political and military purposes, and some
lineages within a clan might associate to pay and receive blood
compensation in cases of homicide, injury, and other offenses.
These alignments had a kinship base in that members often
descended from a particular wife of a common ancestor, but units
formed by contract or treaty could be dissolved and new ones
formed.
The traditional social structure was characterized by
competition and conflict between descent groups. Among the
Samaal, the search for pasture and water drove clans and lineages
physically apart or pitted them against each other. The Digil and
Rahanwayn (cultivators of the south) had a history of warfare
over trade and religious matters and of fighting the
encroachments of camel-herding nomads.
Whatever their common origin, the Samaal and the Digil and
Rahanwayn evolved differently as they adapted to different
physical environments. With some exceptions, the Samaal lived in
areas that supported a pastoralism based mainly on camels, sheep,
and goats. The Digil and Rahanwayn lived in the area between the
rivers where they raised cattle and came to enslave the nonSomali cultivators who were there when they arrived. After the
demise of slavery in the 1920s, the Digil and Rahanwayn
themselves undertook cultivation.
The Samaal considered themselves superior to settled Somalis.
Lineage remained the focal point of loyalty for pastoral nomads.
The Digil and Rahanwayn developed a heterogeneous society that
accorded status to different groups on the basis of origin and
occupation. Group cohesion developed a territorial dimension
among the settled agriculturists.
Relations between and within groups underwent changes during
the colonial era and after independence. Armed conflict between
descent groups (or in the south, territorial units) became rare
during the two decades (the 1960s and 1970s) following
independence. However, in the 1980s and early 1990s, as President
Siad Barre incited and inflamed clan rivalries to divert public
attention from the problems of his increasingly unpopular regime,
Somali society began to witness an unprecedented outbreak of
inter- and intra-clan conflicts. The basic modes of social
organization and relations persisted, however, particularly among
the pastoral nomads. Moreover, national politics were often
operated in terms of relationships between segments of various
kinds.
Several thousand persons, including some ethnic Somalis, were
integrated into traditional society but were not included in the
six clan-families. Among them were Somali clans descended from
ancestors predating or otherwise missing from the genealogies of
the six clan-families. Others were lineages of relatively unmixed
Arab or Persian descent, often much inbred; most members of these
groups lived in the coastal towns. Such lineages or communities
had varying relationships with local Somalis. Some were clients
subordinate to Somali groups; others were independent entities in
the larger towns. A second category consisted of the so-called
habash, or adoon, cultivators or hunters of preSomali origin who lived among the Rahanwayn and Digil in the
interriverine area. A third category consisted of occupationally
specialized caste-like groups, members of which were attached to
Somali lineages or clans. Finally, until the last were freed in
the 1920s, there was a small number of slaves attached to both
pastoral and sedentary Somali groups, but of greater economic
importance among the latter.
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